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Journal Club

Present Your Paper in The Scientist’s Journal Club

Apply today to share your cutting-edge research in The Scientist’s Journal Club.

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Apply today to share the results from your recent publication with The Scientist. If chosen, you will record a 15-minute presentation with the help of The Scientist’s webinar team. Your presentation will appear as part of an upcoming Journal Club webinar series attended by a diverse audience of life scientists. We will provide you with everything you need to invite your colleagues to attend your talk, and we will invite The Scientist’s readers to attend as well.

Details

  • 15-minute journal club-style talks geared toward an audience of life scientists
  • Talk recordings done in collaboration with The Scientist team
  • Paper topic must be life science/molecular biology
  • Paper must be less than six months old at the time of application

Application deadline is January 31st, 2024

Top Image Credit:

The Scientist Creative Services Team

Image of a woman with her hands across her stomach. She has a look of discomfort on her face. There is a blown up image of her stomach next to her and it has colorful butterflies and gut bacteria all swarming within the gut.
November 2025, Issue 1

Why Do We Feel Butterflies in the Stomach?

These fluttering sensations are the brain’s reaction to certain emotions, which can be amplified or soothed by the gut’s own “bugs".

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Olga Anczukow and Ryan Englander discuss how transcriptome splicing affects immune system function in lung cancer.

Long-Read RNA Sequencing Reveals a Regulatory Role for Splicing in Immunotherapy Responses

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Research Roundtable: The Evolving World of Spatial Biology

Research Roundtable: The Evolving World of Spatial Biology

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Exploring the State of the Art in Gene Editing Techniques

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Simplifying Early Alzheimer’s Disease Diagnosis with Blood Testing

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