Nicole Vasilevsky and Melissa Haendel give an update on the impact of this research, one year after publication, on the PeerJ blog.
…read more, vote or commentNicole Vasilevsky and Melissa Haendel give an update on the impact of this research, one year after publication, on the PeerJ blog.
…read more, vote or commentFrancis Collins and Lawrence Tabak cite this paper in their Nature News story (January 2014).
…read more, vote or commentThis study is mentioned in this article published in The Economist in October 2013.
…read more, vote or commentReproducibility Project: Cancer Biology (https://osf.io/e81xl/wiki/home/) aims to reproduce the key experiments from 50 landmark papers in cancer research. As a follow up to this study, which showed a lack of indentifiability of research resources in the published biomedical literature, we analyzed 6 resource types reported in these papers to determine the identifiability of these resources. The r...
…read more, vote or commentDr. Fabiana Kubke talks about the results published in PeerJ, on Building Blogs of Science.
…read more, vote or commentThe results published in PeerJ are mentioned in The Scientist, by Chris Palmer.
…read more, vote or commentDiscussion at The Chronicle of Higher Education website of the interest and importance of detailed methodology and supplementary material.
…read more, vote or commentNicole Vasilevsky and Melissa Haendel talk about their results, on the Force11 website.
…read more, vote or commentDr. Melissa Haendel talks about her research, and her experience publishing with PeerJ, on the PeerJ blog.
…read more, vote or comment