Sentences with phrase «much smaller journals»

With much smaller journals, we found in a study of journals across the disciplines that article processing expenses were running under $ 200 on average.

Not exact matches

Much more typical is for a single production editor to work on a number of smaller journals.
However, evidence from the Linköping team, presented in the journal Amyloid show that their new probe is much more sensitive, being able to detect small amyloid deposits in samples that were previously determined to be amyloid - free.
To carry out the study, which is published as two articles in the journal «Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society Letters», the researchers have analysed the effects of the so - called «Kozai mechanism», related to the gravitational perturbation that a large body exerts on the orbit of another much smaller and further away object.
In the early days most Open Access journals were small - scale individual operations run by groups or individual scientists, much in the same spirit as Open Source Software projects [4].
But several types are wiped out by a course of Cipro, or they survive only in much smaller numbers, reports Stanford University's Les Dethlefsen, PhD, and his colleagues in this month's issue of the journal PLoS Biology.
A small systematic review published in the Journal of the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics showed that there wasn't much differences between these diets and that it was weight loss that improved PCOS.
Truth: Americans consume far too much of one kind of EFA (omega - 6 EFAs found in most polyunsaturated vegetable oils) but not enough of another kind of EFA (omega - 3 EFAs found in fish, fish oils, eggs from pasture - fed chickens, dark green vegetables and herbs, and oils from certain seeds such as flax and chia, nuts such as walnuts and in small amounts in all whole grains)(American Journal of Clinical Nutrition 1991 54:438 - 63).
Of my writings published online on this blog and The Huffington Post since last April 2010, the ones that have in any small way gone viral, very relatively speaking, were those in which I wrote fast enough about current hot news items or ones relating or engaging with artworld celebrities: as one example, «My Whole Street is A Mosque,» written within 24 hours of the news cycle surrounding the proposal for a Islamic cultural center near Ground Zero, was picked up by various web aggregators; «Looking for Art to Love, MoMA: A Tale of Two Egos» also did very well because of my speculation about how or whether Marina Abramovic peed during her performance «The Artist is Present» at MoMA, a subject of much prurient curiosity (interesting speculation was illustrated online at New York Magazine and resolution of the mystery came in the Wall Street Journal's blog, «Speakeasy»); «Anselm Kiefer@Larry Gagosian: Last Century in Berlin,» where I tucked a critical response to Kiefer's recent show into a bit of reporting about how Gagosian Gallery was using the NYPD as its private police force, also created a spike on my Google analytics; more recently I could perceive a noticeable uptick in my readership as well as in the number and enthusiasm of my Facebook friends» comments for «Should we trust anyone under 30?
Shaviv and Veizer (2003) published a paper in the journal GSA Today, where the authors claimed to establish a correlation between cosmic ray flux (CRF) and temperature evolution over hundreds of millions of years, concluding that climate sensitivity to carbon dioxide was much smaller than currently accepted.
Small houses require less fuel for heating and cooling, fewer building resources and are much easier to clean.:: Wall Street Journal
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