The blindness of journals and D-Deficiency
23 January, 2015 | Adie Chan |
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Have a great weekend, all!
The blind gatekeeper: evidence that highly innovative science may be being missed by high-impact journals https://t.co/EK7h1INtLT
— F1000 (@F1000) January 20, 2015
D-eficiency and cognitive decline: lower vitamin D levels predict future cognitive dysfunction in the elderly. https://t.co/gKlNyV5Gv6
— F1000 (@F1000) January 19, 2015
Getting to the heart of pulmonary hypertension in left heart disease https://t.co/AQu36RSpUk #F1000PrimeReports #OpenAccess
— F1000 (@F1000) January 16, 2015
And elsewhere on Twitter…
High-speed Cameras Capture the Smell of Rain: https://t.co/ElJJXSvDhd pic.twitter.com/SmUlz1PSUE
— Discovery News (@DNews) January 22, 2015
Here be dragons! #Sydney Underwater Research Group (Dive Club) are tracking individual weedy sea dragons with photos https://t.co/OjZrmyfHbl
— Prof Emma L Johnston (@DrEmmaLJohnston) January 22, 2015
This is a papyrus scroll, carbonized in A.D. 79. Scientists have now worked out how to read it https://t.co/Ht8hVRPTde pic.twitter.com/2T4dhTQCNk
— NYT Science (@nytimesscience) January 22, 2015
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