This week’s round-up of the most popular Recommendations on @F1000 feature the mighty plankton, mutant spiders and the health-risks of even a small alcoholic drink… Ten-legged freaks: inactivation of just one gene gives spiders an extra pair of legs! ow.ly/efPAe — Faculty of 1000 (@F1000) October 12, 2012 The trouble with a tipple: even light…
This week, @F1000 was buzzing with the news of this year’s Nobel prize winners, and we’re honored to be congratulating two F1000 Faculty Members who were among the awardees. Elsewhere on the Twitternet, it seems we weren’t the only ones who had caught the ‘Nobel’ bug…
*Another* F1000 Faculty Member wins a Nobel Prize! To celebrate, we’ve made our Nobel Laureates’ evaluations free to view for all readers.
Another F1000 Faculty Member on the Nobel laureates list.
This week’s most popular Recommendations from the @F1000 Twitter feed continue the theme of healthy living (the good news is that it involves coffee and chocolate), while our other interesting picks include some altogether odder beverages…
Recently, the US National Institutes of Health announced the winners of the NIH Director’s Pioneer Award. This award is aimed at “supporting individual scientists of exceptional creativity, who propose pioneering – and possibly transforming – approaches to major challenges in biomedical and behavioral research”. These ‘awards’ are not for past achievements, but function as a…
We have been pleased to see that our novel referee process on F1000 Research generally seems to be working well (and fast), with many authors now revising their articles (see our first two revisions from Frederick Morfaw and Gavin Oliver). We have made a number of changes to our refereeing process over the past few…
The most popular Recommendations from this week’s @F1000 Twitter feed, and other interesting picks.
The most popular Recommendations from this week’s
@F1000 Twitter feed, and other interesting picks.
We recently guest-posted on Terrapinn’s Total BioPharma blog about a paper demonstrating how ivermectin treatment interferes with genetic experimentation in transgenic mice. Here is the full post.