When is a bird not a bird… and then a bird again?
| 19 December, 2011 | Caitlin Cockerton |
|
|
Archaeopteryx reminds us of the tenuous nature of scientific theories.
|
|
| 19 December, 2011 | Caitlin Cockerton |
|
|
Archaeopteryx reminds us of the tenuous nature of scientific theories.
|
|
| 16 December, 2011 | Ed Yong |
|
|
A sugar molecule implicated in cancer and sepsis is now shown to have a higher calling.
|
|
| 13 December, 2011 | Laura Buchholz |
|
|
Lauren Buchholz explains why ‘promiscuity’ in females could lead to better offspring.
|
|
| 5 December, 2011 | Adrienne Burke |
|
|
A paper detailing an exciting technical advance, an RNA sequence-fluorophore complex called “Spinach”, garners 14 evaluations, making it one of the all-time highest rated papers on F1000.
|
|
| 25 November, 2011 | Adie Chan |
|
|
Why do some neurodevelopmental and neuropsychiatric diseases such as autism affect more boys than girls? Tracy Bale explains.
|
|
| 18 November, 2011 | Adie Chan |
|
|
We’re pleased to announce two new sections added to existing F1000 Faculties: ‘Aging‘ in the Developmental Biology Faculty ‘Viral hepatis‘ in the Gastroenterology & Hepatology Faculty In honour of these, here’s a couple of choice picks from these sections: From the Aging section, a study that provides the first demonstration that epigenetic changes can influence…
|
|
| 17 November, 2011 | Adie Chan |
|
|
Nobel prize winner Sydney Brenner talks about why he chose C. elegans as a model organism for the investigation of neural development.
|
|