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The Editor-in Chief of the New England Journal of Medicine and many others attended the 2013 Council of Science Editors (CSE) annual meeting. This meeting report…
This year’s Shaw Prize is especially noteworthy. It will be the first ceremony of this prestigious international award to be held since the passing of its founder Mr…
Since the late 1960s, Prof. J. Patrick Barron served as a consultant to medical researchers in Japan. Revisiting early experiences of Japan's "vibrant and…
Editing is an art that follows a strict scientific process. Authors can learn from the process and, in the absence of an edit, can at least survive if not succeed as…
Caroline Banton is a professional writer and editor with 15 years of experience in the field of scholarly writing. She has served as an Assistant Editor for the in-house…
"The best papers don't try to tackle too many issues at once; they choose to simplify the findings."
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Anuradha Alahari holds a PhD degree in microbiology and has 20 years of diverse post-doctoral research experience in biochemistry, infectious diseases and neurobiology…
Researchers facing challenges with funding and infrastructure may stand to learn from the region's recent events.
Innovation in academia in the Middle East
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With digitalization and open access being the order of the day, science is becoming increasingly collaborative in nature. This article discusses authorship and how the…
Defining authorship: A taxonomy to assign contributor roles in multi-author papers
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Learn about the journal Cell in this brief profile of key facts, requirements, and suggested links.
This chapter, published as part of the Science Editors' Handbook by EASE, touches on the concerns of science editors but focuses mainly on what scientific copy-editors…