A conversation about neuroscience

Nature research journal editors speak with Eric Nestler and Robert Greene about neurobiology and the Society for Neuroscience (SfN) 2017 annual meeting.

A conversation about neuroscience
presented by Nature Methods, Nature Neuroscience & Nature Communications

Sachin Ranade and Jean Zarate

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In advance of the 2017 annual meeting of the Society for Neuroscience, Jean Mary Zarate, an editor at Nature Neuroscience and Sachin Ranade , an editor at Nature Communications (photo, upper left) had the opportunity to speak with Eric Nestler, President of the Society for Neuroscience and researcher at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mt. Sinai and Robert Greene, a scientist at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center (photo, upper right).

Watch the video here

Statistics for biologists – A free Nature Collection

Guest blog by Veronique Kiermer, Director, Authors and Reviewers services, Nature Publishing Group.

Irreproducibility issues affecting basic research in biology can be traced to a variety of common causes. One of them is the misguided use of statistics.

As new experimental technologies and approaches increasingly allow biologists to probe their model systems in quantitative ways, biological disciplines that have traditionally relied on qualitative observations are turning to number crunching. Yet many practising biologists complain that the formal statistics instruction in their curriculum has been inadequate. Poorly focused statistical training, mostly theoretical and centred on examples foreign to their discipline of study, has left biologists ill-equipped to apply statistics in their everyday experimental work.

In the past couple of years, the Nature journals publishing biological research have started paying much more attention to statistics. We have appointed a statistical advisor, Terry Hyslop from Duke University, who has helped us assemble a panel of statisticians who act as consultants on certain papers.

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