In a feature article published in the open
access journal eLife, an international team of experts led by Dr Bonnie Wintle and Dr Christian R. Boehm from the Centre for the Study of Existential Risk at the University of Cambridge, capture perspectives of industry, innovators, scholars, and the security community in the UK and US on what they view as the major emerging issues in the field.
He also supports open access publishing as one of the senior editors of the open
access journal eLife.
«Our original hypothesis was that cancer cells were modifying their metabolism based on communications they were receiving from cells in the microenvironment near the tumor,» said Nagrath, assistant professor of chemical and biomolecular engineering at Rice and co-author of a new study describing the research in the open -
access journal eLife.
But in a new paper published in the open -
access journal eLife, scientists from the University of Michigan Medical School and Howard Hughes Medical Institute and colleagues have captured the action like battlefield reporters.
At last month's Lindau Nobel Laureate Meeting — an annual gathering of laureates and young scientists — Nobel prize - winner Randy Schekman, founder of open -
access journal eLife, insisted that researchers should be judged on the quality of their research, rather than the impact factor of the journal in which they publish or the reputation of their institution.
Not exact matches
The research was published July 16 in
eLife, a new open -
access science
journal backed by the Howard Hughes Medical Institute, the Max Planck Society and the Wellcome Trust.
The study was published this week in
eLife, an open -
access journal published by the Howard Hughes Medical Institute, the Max Planck Society, and the Wellcome Trust.
Q: When you started
eLife 3 years ago [with the Wellcome Trust and the Max Planck Society], people wondered if it would be just another open -
access journal.
Tjian also oversaw new collaborations with other foundations, including a plant science program and the startup of
eLife, an open
access journal that, for now, charges no author fees.
In a study published in the open
access scientific
journal eLife, Roberto A. Keller and Patrícia Beldade from the Instituto Gulbenkian de Ciência (IGC, Portugal), in collaboration with Christian Peeters from Université Pierre et Marie Curie (France), showed that ants grow the size of their thoracic segments differently according to the specialized tasks they will perform as adults.