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» open access and developmental biology

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image: Open Access for All?

Open Access for All?

By | February 14, 2012

New legislation would make all federally funded research publicly available within 6 months of publication.

2 Comments

image: Cell Change Up

Cell Change Up

By | February 9, 2012

Imaging cell cytoskeletons during early embryonic development leads researchers to uncover a new regulator of cell shape

3 Comments

image: Occupy Elsevier?

Occupy Elsevier?

By | February 7, 2012

A boycott of the publishing giant swells, but is the criticism warranted?

100 Comments

image: Cracks Form in Anti-Open Access Push

Cracks Form in Anti-Open Access Push

By | January 18, 2012

Academic and commercial publishers disagree on the legislation that would limit public access to federally funded research findings.

3 Comments

image: JSTOR For Free

JSTOR For Free

By | January 17, 2012

JSTOR, the online archive of scholarly journal articles, is offering free but limited access to its database.

0 Comments

image: Iron Builds a Better Brain

Iron Builds a Better Brain

By | January 9, 2012

Brain imaging and gene analyses in twins reveal that white matter integrity is linked to an iron homeostasis gene.

9 Comments

image: Anti-Open Access Rises Again

Anti-Open Access Rises Again

By | January 9, 2012

A newly introduced bill that aims to block public access to publicly-funded research echoes similar bills that have been tried in the past.

30 Comments

image: Lynne-Marie Postovit: Cancer Modeler

Lynne-Marie Postovit: Cancer Modeler

By | January 1, 2012

Assistant Professor, Department of Anatomy and Cell Biology, University of Western Ontario. Age: 34

3 Comments

image: New Journal for Biology Researchers

New Journal for Biology Researchers

By | December 1, 2011

Scientists unhappy with the power of editors at top tier journals start a new peer-reviewed publication with active researchers at the helm.

12 Comments

image: Astronaut Worms Return from Space

Astronaut Worms Return from Space

By | December 1, 2011

After 6 months in orbit, Caenorhabditis elegans return to Earth—alive and well.

3 Comments

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