Editorial Mission

What we believe. How we work .

Bioletric exists because the most important science happening right now — the science of life’s electrical nature — is almost entirely invisible to the people it will most affect.

This is our operating framework: the principles that guide what we publish, how we verify it, how we write it, and why we think editorial independence matters more than ever in an era of AI-generated content and institutional capture.

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Principle 01

Accuracy before
everything else.

Verification Standard

Every factual claim in a Bioletric article is traceable to a primary source — a peer-reviewed paper, a direct quote, a verified dataset, or an on-record statement from the person making the claim.

We distinguish clearly between what has been replicated, what is a single-study finding, what is a preprint not yet peer-reviewed, and what is informed speculation. These are very different things, and we never let them blur.

When we get something wrong — and we will, because science evolves — we issue corrections prominently, not quietly. We consider the credibility of corrections more important than the optics of admitting mistakes.

Principle 02

Explain without
condescending.

Editorial Voice

There is a failure mode on both ends of science writing. One end is impenetrable jargon that excludes everyone without a relevant PhD. The other is oversimplification that strips out the nuance that makes science meaningful and replaces it with false certainty.

Bioletric aims for a third path: writing that respects the genuine complexity of its subject while finding the best possible language and structure to make that complexity navigable. We write for intelligent adults who are encountering these ideas for the first time.

We use analogies, not because the subject is simple, but because analogy is how human understanding actually works. We use layered explanations — a concept introduced simply, then deepened — so readers can go as far as they want. 

Principle 03

Context makes
discoveries matter.

Editorial Standard

A study finding is rarely meaningful in isolation. What makes it significant — or not — is where it sits in a broader landscape of existing research, competing hypotheses, practical implications, and open questions.

We don’t cover individual studies the way a press release does. We place findings in context, explain what was already known, what this changes, what it doesn’t change, and what questions it opens up. That is the actual value of science journalism.

When a study gets overhyped — and in bioelectricity and neuroscience, this happens constantly — we say so, even if it means pushing back against findings that align with our own interests as a publication. 

Principle 04

Independence is
non-negotiable.

Editorial Independence

Bioletric accepts advertising and sponsored content. This does not affect editorial decisions. The editorial team has full and final authority over what is published, how it is framed, and what conclusions are drawn. No advertiser, funder, or partner has any editorial input, ever.

Sponsored content is always identified clearly with a “Sponsored” label and visually distinct treatment. It is never integrated into editorial content in a way that blurs the distinction. Readers should always know exactly what they are reading.

We do not accept payment for coverage, placement, or favourable treatment. If a company contacts us about covering their product, that contact is disclosed in any resulting article. 

"Good science journalism is harder than it looks. It requires actually reading the paper, understanding the methodology, knowing the field well enough to evaluate the claim, and then translating all of that — accurately — into language that works for a general audience."

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We Read the Primary Sources

Every research article we cover means reading the actual paper — not just the abstract, the press release, or another outlet’s summary.

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We Check Our Own Assumptions

Before we publish, we ask: what would a skeptic say? What’s the strongest argument against this finding? We include that perspective.

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We Link Everything

Every factual claim links to its source. We believe readers should be able to verify anything we write. Transparency is a feature, not overhead.

✏️

We Correct Openly

Corrections appear at the top of articles, dated, with clear language about what changed and why. We never stealth-edit without notice.
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Churn content for search traffic
We publish when we have something worth saying. We don’t produce articles to hit a keyword quota or compete with high-volume content farms. Every article should be the best thing available on its topic.
Publish unverified preprints as fact
Preprint coverage happens, but it is always labeled as pre-peer-review with explicit caveats. We never treat a preprint finding as settled science, no matter how compelling the headline potential.
Sensationalize for engagement
We don’t use “scientists discover cure for X” headlines when what happened was “researchers observe a potentially relevant mechanism in mouse models.” The difference matters enormously and we respect it.
Write AI-generated editorial content
Every editorial article on Bioletric is written and edited by humans with domain knowledge. We may use AI tools for research assistance, but the analysis, judgment, and voice are always human and disclosed if tools were used substantially.

Business Model

Bioletric is supported by display advertising, sponsored content (clearly labeled), and newsletter partnerships. We do not accept venture funding, institutional grants, or money from companies we cover.

Conflicts of Interest

Writers disclose any professional, financial, or personal relationship with companies or researchers covered in their articles. If a conflict exists, the article is reassigned or the relationship disclosed prominently.

AI & Tools Disclosure

If AI tools were used substantially in researching or structuring an article, this is disclosed in the article’s metadata. We believe readers have a right to know how their content was produced.

Hold us to these standards.

If you see us fall short of anything on this page — a missing source, an unlabeled correction, a sensationalized headline — we want to know. Use the contact form or reach us directly. This page is a promise, not a PR document.