by PeerJ Staff | May 15, 2014 | regular
Today’s Interview with an Author is with Nathan Lemoine, PhD candidate in Biology at Florida International University and corresponding author on “Variable effects of temperature on insect herbivory”, an article that we published last week. We were...
by PeerJ Staff | May 14, 2014 | regular
A few months ago, we published “On the reproducibility of science: unique identification of research resources in the biomedical literature”, an important article which received good attention from the community. As you can see, this article has already...
by PeerJ Staff | May 12, 2014 | regular
‘Living fossils’ are defined as species with limited recent diversification and high morphological stasis over long periods of evolutionary time. Charles Darwin first coined the term in his On the Origin of Species. In a well-received PeerJ study...
by PeerJ Staff | May 9, 2014 | regular
Earlier this month, we published ‘The spectacular human nose: an amplifier of individual quality? ‘. In this article, a group of Norwegian researchers show that small decentralizations of the nose tip on facial images have a large impact on attractiveness...
by PeerJ Staff | May 6, 2014 | regular
Please be seated… Transcranial Doppler ultrasound (TCD) allows measurement of blood flow velocities in the intracranial vessels, and until last year’s publication in PeerJ of “Transcranial Doppler ultrasound to assess cerebrovascular reactivity:...
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