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Bio-IT World
November 19, 2004
Kevin Davies
The Book on Bioinformatics Research director David Mount talks about his new book "Bioinformatics: Sequence and Genome Analysis," sequence analysis, and teaching bioinformatics mark for My Articles similar articles
Bio-IT World
Jul/Aug 2006
Deb Janssen
Managing the Microarray Data Mountain Genomic studies often involve thousands of samples and require hundreds of thousands of assays per sample. Microarray manufacturers are scurrying to satisfy researcher demands for increased array density, sample number, and content flexibility. mark for My Articles similar articles
Bio-IT World
Dec 2006/Jan 2007
Kevin Davies
The NextBio Thing in Bioinformatics NextBio, which this fall officially introduced its platform after a year of beta testing by a handful of select organizations, aims to provide high-throughput information to researchers without them having to learn anything. mark for My Articles similar articles
Searcher
January 2002
Myer Kutz
The Scholars Rebellion Against Scholarly Publishing Practices: Varmus, Vitek, and Venting In the decades-long arguments over STM (scientific/technical/medical) journal publishing, mainly about subscription price increases and intellectual property and accessibility issues, one thing has changed in the last few years. Scholars have become involved... mark for My Articles similar articles
Bio-IT World
September 2006
Robert M. Frederickson
Assays and Knowledgebases for Genomic Analysis An important aspect of any genomic analysis -- whether expression profiling or analysis of DNA-binding elements as above -- is the integration of the data with existing knowledge. mark for My Articles similar articles
Information Today
March 26, 2007
Thomson Scientific Acquires Unleashed Informatics Thomson announced that it has acquired Unleashed Informatics, a life sciences data-management company that owns the largest repository of value-added bioinformatics records -- a significant area for target-based drug discovery. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
April 2012
Opening the Doors of Knowledge Should all journal articles be free to access online? mark for My Articles similar articles
Bio-IT World
October 2005
John Russell
VizXLabs' Incremental Victories How this small informatics software company is succeeding in the mainstreaming of microarrays. mark for My Articles similar articles
Geotimes
December 2005
Naomi Lubick
Open Access Wide Open Open-access publishing has been heralded both as the savior of scientific literature and the death of publishing, but after less than a decade of the practice, its impact remains uncertain. mark for My Articles similar articles
D-Lib
Sep/Oct 2010
Changqing & Xiaodong
Development Strategy for High-Quality Science and Technology Journals in China The Ministry of Science and Technology of China has planned and executed a development strategy for high-quality ST journals in order to advance the international competitive capacity of China's journals. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
February 19, 2015
Francois-Xavier Coudert
Setting the record straight It is every scientist's duty to add knowledge to this record, but also to safeguard its integrity by checking that others' work is reproducible. mark for My Articles similar articles
Information Today
March 2001
Paula J. Hane
bepress.com Introduces Innovative Scholarly Publishing Model A new electronic publishing venture has launched that is taking on the scholarly publishing establishment. bepress.com (The Berkeley Electronic Press) was started by three University of California-Berkeley professors and a programmer from the Inktomi team... mark for My Articles similar articles
Bio-IT World
Dec 2006/Jan 2007
Resolute in the New Year Industry leaders in areas from pharmacogenetics to cheminformatics found 2006 to be a year of important steps forward, but looked with even more anticipation to 2007: Allen D. Roses, SVP, Pharmacogenetics GlaxoSmithKline... etc. mark for My Articles similar articles
Bio-IT World
October 10, 2003
Donna Mendrick
Microarrays That Make Drugs Safe Using DNA chips to discover potential toxicity in new drug compounds -- a key application of toxicogenomics -- can predict adverse effects before they occur, enabling safer clinical trials. mark for My Articles similar articles
Bio-IT World
May 7, 2002
Eric Fairfield
Bridging the Language Barrier In the market segments where biologists and IT professionals have primarily interacted to date, there has been little need for common definitions. But the next generation of bio-IT products will require some shared definitions between IT and biology -- simplified cross-disciplinary languages. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
March 7, 2012
Mico Tatalovic
Croatia to slim down funding for science journals Science journals in Croatia face an uncertain future, with their main funder, the science ministry, announcing changes that will see only the best journals funded. mark for My Articles similar articles
Bio-IT World
June 17, 2004
Robert M. Frederickson
Microarray Analysis Reaches the Desktop Various commercial solutions exist to analyze microarray data, from enterprise-level solutions designed primarily for large companies and institute-based support facilities to the more recently emerged desktop solutions for individual research labs. mark for My Articles similar articles
CIO
October 15, 2001
Stephanie Overby
Drug Companies on speed The marriage of IT and medical research may be just what traditional pharmaceutical companies need to survive in an increasingly competitive field. Learn how IT is bringing the pharmaceutical industry into the information age... mark for My Articles similar articles
ONLINE
July 2001
Peter Jacso
Electronic Shoes for the Cobbler's Children Treatment of digital journals in library and information science databases... mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
January 31, 2013
Mico Tatalovic
Citation cartel uncovered in Bosnian journals A Serbian study claims to have uncovered a 'citation cartel' in which two Bosnian journals listed by Web of Science and Journal Citation Reports are practicing an alarming level of misconduct with substantial involvement of large groups of authors from Serbia. mark for My Articles similar articles