Katrina Kelner, Science deputy
editor for life sciences, says that it appeared the duplicate panels were not part of the original submission but had been sent in response to a request for high - resolution images after the paper had been reviewed.
Not exact matches
The Secret
Life of the Grown - Up Brain: The Surprising Talents of the Middle - Aged Mind (Viking) is a roundup of the most recent
science on how the human brain ages, as well as a guide to «toning up your brain circuits» to better weather the onset of age — which is itself a relatively new problem
for humankind, writes author Barbara Strauch, The New York Times «s deputy
science and health and medical
science editor, whose earlier book, The Primal Teen, considered the teenage brain.
@Put - up or shut - up, «THE
LIFE SCIENCE PRIZE
FOR EVOLUTIONISTS AND UNETHICAL
EDITORS 374,000 EVOLUTIONISTS SILENCED SINCE 2002» (http://www.josephmastropaolo.com/prize.html)
Sharing clinical data... President Obama pushes
for Zika funding... New
Science editor - in - chief... French budget cuts... Implicit bias in peer review... Working
Life
Join us
for a
live online chat with the
editors of The Best
Science Writing 2012, aka The Open Laboratory 2012
DiChristina: Yeah, I mean I think one of the things we don't realize working on the insides of Scientific American all the time is that the
editor is not just working with the scientists but also they're reporting and going out to meetings and doing other things; they're [scouring] the world
for the best
science that matters
for readers, have a lot of expertise themselves and it just seemed to me that this would be the kind of thing that readers might really find fascinating — what the
editors of Scientific American [are] thinking based on all their conversations with the experts of the day covering the various areas of
science and technology and how it affects our
lives; and this was the genesis of this story.
Before becoming managing
editor, Jeanna served as a reporter
for Live Science and SPACE.com
for about three years.
Well, what if someone told you human
life begins (as Sarah Knapton,
science editor for the Daily Telegraph, put it) as «An explosion of tiny sparks [which] erupts from the egg at the exact moment of conception.»
Richard Wong, former physics teacher and Discovery Education Secondary Development
Editor, will present a session on how video and digital content can be used to bring
science teaching to
life for secondary school pupils.
Oscar, the literary
editor of the newspaper I wrote
for, had sent me The
Science of
Living Forever by Kelsey Newman to review, along with a compliments slip with a deadline on it.
He is currently a senior
editor at the TheDailyTube.com, a contributing
editor at Inc., and has written
for ESPN, Popular
Science, Fast Company, Details, Men's Journal, Desert
Living, Success, Essence, Time Out New York, Budget
Living, Mr. Beller's Neighborhood, Jewcy and Smith.
Before becoming managing
editor, Jeanna served as a reporter
for Live Science and SPACE.com
for about three years.
Editor's note: Once upon a time, political arguments over the content of
science education focused on a single topic: evolution.While it would be wonderful to think that such debates ended with the Scopes Monkey Trial, I
live in Missouri... where some members of our legislature still think our
science classrooms are the proper places
for ideological debates.
Before becoming managing
editor, Jeanna served as a reporter
for Live Science and SPACE.com
for about three years.