Sentences with phrase «how authors publish»

We are agnostic as to how authors publish: we want all writers and industry workers to feel comfortable and welcome.
So I felt this was important to share, how sometimes it isn't a person thing against how authors publish but simply a choice that has to be made on the bloggers part in order for them to be able to continue to do their hobby.

Not exact matches

Amazon is causing trouble again, this time by changing how it pays self - published authors via its Kindle Direct Publishing Select program.
Jackson is the lead author of a new study to be published in Psychological Science that tracked nearly 5,000 married Australians for five years and measured how a spouse's personality impacted whether their partner received a promotion, earned a higher salary or experienced higher levels of job satisfaction.
When tracked and tweaked properly, social media can give your startup the marketing muscle it needs to keep up with — and maybe even eclipse — large competitors, says Nichole Kelly, chief executive of Social Media Explorer and author of How to Measure Social Media: A Step - By - Step Guide to Developing and Assessing Social Media ROI (Que Publishing, 2012).
It's never been easier to be a self - published author, but with democratization comes issues of trust: How do you know where to start?
His company takes authors from blank page to published in 90 days, with courses on how to self - publish.
As the CEO of the Author Incubator, Lauria and her team provide aspiring authors with guidance on how to write and publish their own books — whether that's through self - publishing or through her company.
Guy Kawasaki, venture capitalist and bestselling author, encouraged visitors to the site for his book about self - publishing, Author, Publisher, Entrepreneur — How to Publish a Book, to share a link to the site on Twitter or Facebook in exchange for a bundle of free materials, including a book design temauthor, encouraged visitors to the site for his book about self - publishing, Author, Publisher, Entrepreneur — How to Publish a Book, to share a link to the site on Twitter or Facebook in exchange for a bundle of free materials, including a book design temAuthor, Publisher, Entrepreneur — How to Publish a Book, to share a link to the site on Twitter or Facebook in exchange for a bundle of free materials, including a book design template.
Where copyright led to books being priced as luxury goods in the U.K., the threat of piracy forced German publishers to produce cheap editions for the masses alongside their premium - priced editions, resulting in a period that Höffner believes may have been the most lucrative ever for authors — he discovered, for example, that an obscure Berlin chemist earned more in royalties for a tract on how to tan leather than Mary Shelley did for writing Frankenstein — prompting more academics to publish their findings, and encouraging the spread of practical manuals in fields like medicine, engineering and agriculture.
You might know Seth Godin as a sort of marketing legend, the author of books such as Unleashing the Ideavirus, «the most popular e-book ever published,» according to his marketing materials (I have no idea how I'd check that), and Purple Cow, «the best - selling marketing book of the decade» (similar caveat).
Your business may not be profitable for three to five years, so it's important to be realistic about how you'll support yourself financially, says Sharon Lechter, author of Three Feet From Gold: Turn Your Obstacles Into Opportunities (Sterling Publishing, 2009) and a financial literacy expert in Phoenix.
He recently authored The Great Reflation: How Investors Can Profit from the New World of Money published by John Wiley & Sons in 2010 and co-authored The Stock Market and Inflation, published by Dow Jones - Irwin in 1982.
Trevor's mission is to help publish 1000 new authors and help people take their LIFE and their BUSINESS to the next level — no matter how successful they already are.
Anthony is a regular contributor on Bloomberg TV on innovation and technology and is the author of How We Can Win: and what happens to us and our country if we don't published by Penguin Random House Canada in October, 2017.
It seems that ever since Rick Warren published The Purpose Driven Life, every pastor out there is preaching sermons and every Christian author is writing books about discovering who God made you to be and how to live accordingly.
Editor's note: David Hazony is the author of «The Ten Commandments: How Our Most Ancient Moral Text Can Renew Modern Life,» published recently by Scribner.
It will be a while before we'll be able to purchase or download a hand - held truth - o - meter and use it on a would - be lover, says science journalist Judith Horstman, author of the newly published The Scientific American Book of Love, Sex and the Brain: The Neuroscience of How, When, Why and Who We Love.
When the SCAT2 was issued, superseding the original SCAT published in 2005, the authors recommended continued reliance on the SAC until prospective studies could be conducted to assess the SCAT2's sensitivity (how good the test is in identifying athletes with concussion; for example, a test which is very sensitive will have few false negatives, rarely missing those later found to have concussion) and specificity (a test with high specificity will have few false positives, rarely mis - classifying people without concussion as having concussion).
Editor's note: This post was originally published on September 15, 2008, and examines how the author has adapted Attachment Parenting International's Eight Principles of Parenting as her children grew out of the infant / toddler years.
Dr. Laura Markham is the author of Peaceful Parent, Happy Kids: How To Stop Yelling and Start Connecting, published by Perigee in November 2012.
She is the author ofTears Heal, How To Listen To Our Children, which will be published in 2016.
Paul Tough is the author of How Children Succeed: Rethinking Character and Intelligence, to be published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt in September.
In two new studies published online this week in the Journal of Athletic Training, lead author Marc Norcross of Oregon State University documents how women who were asked to undergo a series of jumping exercises landed more often than men in a way associated with elevated risk of ACL injuries.
He is author of «A United Ireland: Why unification is inevitable and how it will come about» published by Biteback
Kevin Meagher is author of «A United Ireland: Why unification is inevitable and how it will come about», published by Biteback
The study is in line with previous research published by senior author Gratch, whose main interest lies both in how people express these tells — an unconscious action that betrays deception — and using this data to create artificial intelligence to discern and even express these same emotional cues as a person.
NOAA's Seidel is the lead author of a perspective paper published yesterday in Nature Climate Change that examines just how difficult it would be to detect these effects.
«Given our results,» said lead author Manuel Schabus, «one has to question how much of published neurofeeback effects are due to simple expectations on the side of the participants or, in other words, unspecific placebo effects.»
The authors also note that the study's results provide support for the establishment of a uniform health and safety index for investors — which was proposed earlier this year in a white paper published in JOEM («Integrating health and safety in the workplace: how closely aligning health and safety strategies can yield measureable benefits,» May 2015).
In a paper published in EPJ B, the authors study how the crystal periodicity affects the motion of ions whose energy belongs to a 1 to 2 MeV range, as they are transmitted through very thin crystals on the order of a few hundred nanometres, and how it impacts their angular distribution.
Later, as he studied how climate change was impacting vegetative growth as a postdoc at UC Santa Cruz, Ram found that colleagues weren't willing to hand over the raw measurements behind published data, or the algorithms that supported the authors» conclusions.
A new narrative review authored by Carl Streed Jr., MD, at Brigham and Women's Hospital, published in the Annals of Internal Medicine, discusses how more research is needed to better understand cardiovascular disease (CVD) and CVD risk factors in transgender patients receiving long term cross-sex hormone therapy.
The expert is the author of a study published in the «International Journal of Cancer», which reveals the importance of assessing how the circadian system works in order to prevent chronodisruption and to implement measures to strengthen the biological clock in people whose system is damaged.
In a paper published in the 2 November edition of Nature Communications, corresponding author Zhang and his colleagues describe how they used a computer simulation of two types of methane hydrates, monocrystalline hydrates and polycrystalline hydrates, to see what would happen if they were compressed or if pressures on the hydrates were suddenly released.
Xue is the lead author on a paper being published Jan. 7 in Nature Communications that details how PSR - 1 recognizes and removes cells that are pre-programmed to die or damaged.
«The details of the flow of air around the ball are complicated, and in particular they depend on how rough the ball is,» says John Bush, a professor of applied mathematics at MIT and the author of a recently published article about the aerodynamics of soccer balls.
In a novel study, «Personality Development through Natural Language,» published in the international journal, Nature: Human Behaviour, Kevin Lanning, Ph.D., lead author of the study and a professor of psychology in Florida Atlantic University's Harriet L. Wilkes Honors College, together with FAU Wilkes Honors College alumna Rachel (Evans) Pauletti, and collaborators Laura A. King, Ph.D., University of Missouri, and Dan P. McAdams, Ph.D., Northwestern University, examined how personality maturation or development was reflected in natural language.
These objects can tell us how galaxies merge and collide,» says Chris Ahn, doctoral candidate in the Department of Physics & Astronomy, and lead author of the international study that published Monday in The Astrophysical Journal.
In a book to be published in the US next week called Darkness in El Dorado: How scientists and journalists devastated the Amazon, author Patrick Tierney presents the case that anthropologist Napoleon Chagnon...
In an interesting gauge of how fast the ranks of scientists are growing, the authors determined that in 1997, 16,877 scientists entered the scientific literature who would then maintain UCP — would continue publishing at least one new paper per year — through 2012.
«This study highlights how the many elements of the system are working together,» says Marco Tedesco, a glaciologist at Columbia University and the first author of the study, published today in Nature Communications.
In their article, published in the journal Zootaxa, the authors describe how the Hypleurochilus brasil lives at depths of between three and fifteen metres, either alone or in small groups of up to ten.
They offer a clear - cut example of how natural selection can influence cultural change, argue the authors of a paper published in March in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
«If we could build a «family tree» of all cancer nodules in a patient, we could determine how different tumors are related to each other and reconstruct how the cancer evolved,» says Kamila Naxerova, PhD, of the Steele Laboratory for Tumor Biology at Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH), corresponding author of the report being published in PNAS Early Edition.
In a paper published in Genome Biology, the authors show how their algorithms can be applied to develop new treatments for serious diarrheal infections, including Clostridium difficile, and inflammatory bowel disease.
This theory is exploring what ultimately makes us human — how we make decisions based on partial information affects all aspects of our lives,» says Tatyana Sharpee, associate professor of Salk's Computational Neurobiology Laboratory and senior author of the paper, which was published in eLife on December 9, 2014.
In April 2000 Joy published a bombshell article in Wired entitled «Why the Future Doesn't Need Us,» which described how the author had come to the realization that advances in genetics, nanotechnology and robotics will eventually pose grave threats to human survival.
Published in eLife today, the research provides a missing link in our understanding of how changes in our diet can trigger insulin resistance, said co-lead author Professor David James, Leonard P. Ullmann Chair of Metabolic Systems Biology at the University of Sydney's Charles Perkins Centre.
A study published in the 27 September edition of JAMA, the Journal of the American Medical Association, examined how bias impacts the peer review process of medical journals by comparing what happens when study authors are identified for reviews, known as a single - blind review, and when the identity of study authors is kept from reviewers, known as double - blind reviews.
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