58,940 results
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202. Publishing: Handful of papers dominates citation
203. MATERIALS: Drawing a sensor on paper
204. Local dispersal promotes biodiversity in a real-life game of rock-paper-scissors
205. Twelve scientist-endorsed tips to get over writer's block.
206. ECOLOGY: Equations in papers = fewer citations
207. Research accountability: Mandate ethics methods in papers
208. Mutant-flu paper published: Controversial study shows how dangerous forms of avian influenza could evolve in the wild.
209. Post-mortem on mutant flu: Virus papers get green light but controversy highlights lack of global rules on biosafety.
210. Bolstering the link: Two papers in Nature this week highlight the extent to which human activity is influencing global climate, and underline the need for continued scrutiny of the problem.
211. A voyage round Newton: Mordechai Feingold savours a study on how the fitful release of the scientist's papers shaped his reputation
212. Flu papers warrant full publication: Although more debate is needed, the benefits of publishing sensitive data outweigh the risks that have so far been made public.
213. Q&A: Reasons for proposed redaction of flu paper: US National Science Advisory Board for Biosecurity explains recommendation to publish H5N1 work in a form that withholds essential data.
214. Cognition: Your face looks familiar: Paper wasps of the species Polistes fuscatus live in strict hierarchical societies in which the ability to identify superiors and subordinates is crucial. Like humans, these insects have a cognitive tool kit for recognizing familiar faces.
215. Need a paper? Get a plug-in
216. Science publishing: The paper is not sacred
217. Lost in translation: Mystery of the missing text solved: A discovered letter explains the loss of key paragraphs during the translation of one of Georges Lemaîtreʼs papers about the expanding Universe, shows Mario Livio.
218. Uncharted territory: Political maps that seek to advance disputed territorial claims have no place in scientific papers. Researchers should keep relationships cordial by depoliticizing their work.
219. DOWNLOADS: Stats for papers let authors track impact
220. ‘Flawed’ infant death papers not retracted
221. Rule on papers puts Chinaʼs PhDs at risk
222. Trial by Twitter: Blogs and tweets are ripping papers apart within days of publication, leaving researchers unsure how to react.
223. Non-English papers decrease rankings
224. Video-speed electronic paper based on electrowetting
225. Love thy lab neighbour: Getting closer to your collaborators boosts a paperʼs citations.
226. Transparency showcases strength of peer review: Bernd Pulverer reflects on his experience at The EMBO Journal of publishing refereesʼ reports, authorsʼ responses and editorsʼ comments alongside papers, as other EMBO publications adopt the same policy.
227. A painful remedy: The number of papers being retracted is on the rise, for reasons that are not all bad.
228. Science panel gives hope in river-pollution dispute: Environmental monitoring set to resolve arguments over paper mill.
229. US charges scientist with economic espionage: Could publishing a paper make you a spy?
230. Retraction recommended for enzyme-chip paper: Reactome array study should not have been published, says ethics committee.
231. Metrics: journalʼs impact factor skewed by a single paper
232. Biology: A paper submarine
233. German paper chase to end
234. Making the paper
235. Making the paper
236. Making the paper
237. Making the paper: Wealth of data cuts uncertainty in climate-warming predictions.
238. Making the paper
239. Making the paper
240. MAKING THE PAPER: Elizabeth Phelps: Training helps people forget some fearful memories.
241. Standards for papers on cloning
242. Extortion attempt involved retracted papers: E-mail made threats and demanded money.
243. Making the paper
244. Making the paper
245. Making the paper
246. Making the paper
247. Making the paper: A study to ascertain glass formation needed the right blend of people.
248. MAKING THE PAPER: Physicists push excited neutral atoms to ultrafast speeds.
249. MAKING THE PAPER: New fish sex chromosome holds key to aggressive mating.
250. Key protein-design papers challenged: Chemists question stability of proteins from 2003 Nature study.
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