By nature.com Communities Team on 05 Dec 2014
It’s not an exaggeration to say that we’ve been overwhelmed this week with the response to our announcement that we are enabling sharing of subscription content on nature.com. We anticipated people would be interested, and hoped some of our readers and library customers would welcome it. We want to help researchers share papers they are reading, and our goal was to make that easier. Read more
Posted in Uncategorized
By nature.com Communities Team on 02 Dec 2014
This year marks the twentieth anniversary of my PhD in neurophysiology. Given the pace at which science progresses, this surely means that most of what is known about the brain has been discovered since I left that lab – possibly not by coincidence. It also means that I am, by some official definition, an old fart. So indulge me and allow a brief reminiscence. Read more
Posted in Digital Science, Featured | Tagged digital science, science
By Alex Jackson on 02 Dec 2014
Macmillan Science and Education, the parent group of Nature Publishing Group, has today announced an initiative that will make research articles on nature.com widely available to read and share. Read more
Posted in Events, Featured, Science communication and outreach, Science policy | Tagged Communities Happenings, digital science, macmillan science and education, nature publishing group, research
By Rachel Scheer on 10 Nov 2014
Cancer is a disease that inspires dread in many people. Most of us have had some experience of it or, at the very least, have read one of the myriad articles in the press about the latest cause or cure. George Johnson’s The Cancer Chronicles cuts through all of the noise and confusion, and presents a fascinating, often frightening, but ultimately empowering, account of the history of cancer and the human quest to understand it. Read more
Posted in Uncategorized
By Rachel Scheer on 07 Nov 2014
There are works of non-fiction that focus solely on the subject matter and then there are works of non-fiction that are just as much about the author’s views as about the topic at hand. Seven Elements that have Changed the World falls squarely in the latter category. Read more
Posted in Uncategorized
By Laura Wheeler on 07 Nov 2014
Why you may ask? Read more
Posted in SpotOn London (SoLo)
By Laura Wheeler on 06 Nov 2014
This year’s SpotOn London conference will take place at the Wellcome Trust on Friday, 14 November and Saturday, 15 November 2014. This year’s theme is on the challenges of balancing the public and the private in the digital age. Read more
Posted in Events, SpotOn London (SoLo) | Tagged #solo14
By Rachel Scheer on 03 Nov 2014
Albert Einstein’s general theory of relativity, published nearly 100 years ago, explains the relationship between gravity, space and time. The theory provides “the key to understanding the history of the universe, origin of time, and the evolution of all the stars and galaxies in the cosmos,” according to Pedro G. Ferreira. His book, The Perfect Theory, tells the tale of how the theory was questioned, tested, modified and supported by a range of scientists. It is a book with gravity that pulls you in, describing what the theory has taught us so far, and what we may learn from it in the future. Read more
Posted in Uncategorized
By Rachel Scheer on 31 Oct 2014
Michael’s Musings- Serving the Reich: The Struggle for the Soul of Physics under Hitler … Read more
Posted in Science communication and outreach | Tagged book reviews, Communities Happenings