By Mark Staniland on 23 Oct 2017
This blog comes from Steven Inchcoombe, Chief Publishing Officer, Springer Nature … Read more
Posted in Open acess, Springer Nature | Tagged open access
By Mark Staniland on 14 Sep 2017
At Springer Nature every week is Peer Review Week. Read more
Posted in Springer Nature | Tagged Peer Review Week, Steven Inchcoombe
By Mark Staniland on 09 May 2017
Meeting the open access (OA) requirements of research funders and institutions can prove a real challenge for authors. As the increase in records in the registry of OA repository mandates and policies (ROARMAP) demonstrates, the number of organisations with OA requirements is increasing every year, meaning more and more researchers are subject to such policies. Read more
Posted in Springer Nature
By Mark Staniland on 23 Feb 2017
With over 4,000 primary research papers published every day within the natural sciences, it can be overwhelming to try to keep up-to-date with the literature in a research field. Read more
Posted in Springer Nature | Tagged Recommended
By Lillienne Zen on 21 Oct 2016
Joshua Chu-Tan is a second-year PhD student in the Provis Group at the John Curtin School of Medical Research at the Australian National University (ANU). Read more
Posted in Featured, Science communication and outreach, Springer Nature, Video and podcasts | Tagged 3MT, Three Minute Thesis
By Lillienne Zen on 19 Sep 2016
Peer review is at the heart of the research process. Academics generously dedicate hours of their week, to examine each other’s work, offer much-valued constructive criticism and improve the published science (or maths, or social science, etc.). Reviews take time, but peer review is mostly anonymous, meaning it is difficult for reviewers’ colleagues, publishers, institutions or funders to recognise it properly. Read more
Posted in Featured, Springer Nature | Tagged peer review, Peer Review Week