Nature is on YouTube now with its Nature Video Channel. If you only know YouTube from mashup videos and kittencams, this may be surprising. If you have previously seen the …
Scholarly communication
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Outreach & engagementScholarly communicationScience CommunicationScience on screen
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Scholarly communicationScience Communication
Hypothesis journal: new and improved!
by Eva Amsenby Eva AmsenThe new issue of Hypothesis journal came from the printer this week. Oooh, shiny! No, really: It’s printed on nicer, shinier paper than before! Of course you can’t see that …
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Community & eventsScholarly communicationScience CommunicationWriting, images, and storytelling
IgNobels announced
by Eva Amsenby Eva AmsenFunnier than the Nobel Prizes, the IgNobels highlight research that makes you laugh. The research itself is completely valid and serious, but the topics can be funny. Among this year’s …
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Scholarly communicationScience Communication
How to get scientists to adopt web 2.0 technologies: reference managers
by Eva Amsenby Eva AmsenI spend quite a bit of time online. I have two blogs and a Twitter account, and through various services you can follow along with what music I’m listening to, …
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Scholarly communicationScience CommunicationScience life and careers
Graph theory: graphs are annoying
by Eva Amsenby Eva AmsenI was away, but now I’m back. Report on trip later, after I’ve been a bit more productive. And there’s the problem. I have spent all day afternoon evening fidgeting …
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Scholarly communicationScience Communication
Interlingua – a lost language found in old journal articles
by Eva Amsenby Eva AmsenMy inner language geek (see also the previous post) is thrilled to bits with the discovery that Blood articles from the fifties and sixties contain a summary written in the …