Category Archives: PLOS SciComm
Running Laboratory Meetings
Posted by featured, PLOS SciComm, scicomm
inFive Kinds of STEM-themed Nonfiction Books for Kids
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inUsing Evidence to Restructure Healthcare: Lessons for US Lawmakers from the UK
Posted by featured, Health, health care, PLoS Medicine, PLOS SciComm
inWhen Open Access is the norm, how do scientists work together online?
The Web was invented to enable scientists to collaborate. In 2000 the Los Alamos National Laboratory commissioned me to write a progress report on web-based collaboration between scientists, Internet Groupware for Scientific Collaboration. Blogs, social media, and Open Access publishing of … Continue reading
The post When Open Access is the norm, how do scientists work together online? appeared first on PLOS Blogs Network.
Posted by Bryan Jones, citizen science, Collaboration between scientists, GitHub, Grant Miller, internet history, Jon Udell, Karthik Ram, MathOverflow, open access, open data, PLOS SciComm, polymath, reproducibility, research communication, scicomm, science blogging, science collaboration, science communication, Scott Morrison, Social Media, software development, Tressie McMillan Cottom, twitter, Webvision, Zooniverse
inWhen Open Access is the norm, how do scientists work together online?
The Web was invented to enable scientists to collaborate. In 2000 the Los Alamos National Laboratory commissioned me to write a progress report on web-based collaboration between scientists, Internet Groupware for Scientific Collaboration. Blogs, social media, and Open Access publishing of … Continue reading
The post When Open Access is the norm, how do scientists work together online? appeared first on PLOS Blogs Network.
Posted by Bryan Jones, citizen science, Collaboration between scientists, GitHub, Grant Miller, internet history, Jon Udell, Karthik Ram, MathOverflow, open access, open data, PLOS SciComm, polymath, reproducibility, research communication, scicomm, science blogging, science collaboration, science communication, Scott Morrison, Social Media, software development, Tressie McMillan Cottom, twitter, Webvision, Zooniverse
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