A single-celled relative of animals forms colonies when exposed to a bacterial product, hinting at the possible origins of multicellularity.
A single-celled relative of animals forms colonies when exposed to a bacterial product, hinting at the possible origins of multicellularity.
Open-access journals are reaching the same quality levels as their subscription counterparts.
A researcher from the John Wayne Cancer Institute has settled his scientific misconduct case with the Office of Research Integrity.
August 1, 2012
Meet some of the people featured in the August 2012 issue of The Scientist.
Lymphatic vessels grow towards two chemokines, revealing signals that could be important in cancer metastasis.
Overzealous open-access advocates are creating an exploitative environment, threatening the credibility of scholarly publishing.
Science publishing is locked in an evolutionary arms race as it edges further into the digital age.
As we stand on the brink of a new scientific age, how researchers should best communicate their findings and innovations is hotly debated in the publishing trenches.
Like commensal gut organisms, skin microbiota appear to help the mammalian immune system mature and stay regulated.