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How to get your paper published

begin again in earnest - photo br flickr.com user found_drama, Rob Friesel, CC-licensed

begin again in earnest - photo br flickr.com user found_drama, Rob Friesel, CC-licensed

Dipping your toe into academic publishing can be a daunting experience. Rob Weir offers some practical tips for researchers who want to publish without perishing.

Many of Weir’s tips are the stuff of common sense: have something substantial to say; pay attention to grammar and punctuation; write clearly; avoid waffling.

Another useful tip: beware the curse of knowledge. Understanding too much about your subject can sometimes get in the way of good communication. It’s less likely to happen when you are writing for a peer-reviewed journal in your academic field; writing an opinion piece for a daily newspaper requires more care for clarity and explanation.

Categories: communication, writing.

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Cross-disciplinary research difficult to evaluate

Activity-independent nuclear position of cancer genes (green and purple) in cells of a model breast tumor. (JCB 180(1) TOC1)  This image is available to the public to copy, distribute, or display under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 Unported license.  Reference: Meaburn and Misteli (2008) J. Cell Biol. 180:39-50. Published on: January 14, 2008. doi: 10.1083/jcb.200708204.  Read the full article at: jcb.rupress.org/cgi/content/full/180/1/39 Image published on flickr.com by The JCB http://www.flickr.com/photos/thejcb/4116191918/

Activity-independent nuclear position of cancer genes (green and purple) in cells of a model breast tumor. See footnote for details.

Sarah A Webb profiles Franziska Michor’s work in applying mathematical modelling to gain a better understanding of cancer.

Based at Memorial-Sloan Kettering Cancer Center in New York, Michor is using mathematics, computer science, biology, and medicine to investigate the origins of cancer, relationships among cancer types and the emergence of drug-resistant tumors.

“While her work has attracted the attention of collaborators and funders, publishing her research has proved less straightforward, she says. Even though computational work can be done relatively quickly, Michor’s work relies on experiments done by her collaborators to verify that models are biologically or medically relevant. Because of these cross-disciplinary methods, a paper can include sequencing data, gene expression data, and growth data alongside the mathematical models. As with some other interdisciplinary fields, it’s often difficult to find the right journal or reviewers who can evaluate the combination of mathematics and biology as a cohesive whole rather than as individual components.” [my emphasis]

Consider how such a research paper could be published in an open-access repository along with original datasets and mathematical models. Identifying appropriate data storage, metadata and effective cross-linkages would be an interesting challenge.

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Footnote: The image above shows activity-independent nuclear position of cancer genes (green and purple) in cells of a model breast tumor. (JCB 180(1) TOC1) This image is available to the public to copy, distribute, or display under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 Unported licence. Reference: Meaburn and Misteli (2008) J. Cell Biol. 180:39-50. Published on: January 14, 2008. doi: 10.1083/jcb.200708204. Read the full article at: jcb.rupress.org/cgi/content/full/180/1/39 Image published on flickr.com by The JCB

Categories: analytics, communication, data management.

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Five ways to hide inconvenient data

If there really is an upward trend, how can we explain the result from Convenienceville?

If there really is an upward trend, how can we explain the result from Convenienceville? (Graph by Chris Lawson)

Chris Lawson demonstrates five ways to emphasise the positive.

Categories: analytics, communication.

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Even for an established brand, mobile success builds slowly

As self-publishing became easier on the web, and browsers got better at displaying images, writers and artists started creating web-native comic strips.

Because of their inherent structure — small panels of art presented sequentially to tell a story — comics are a natural fit for new technologies like phones and iPads.

Creators and publishers are already finding ways to provide an enriched reading experience through these devices. What hasn’t yet emerged is a business model that will pay for the sustained development and production effort — unlike a novel, a strip comic never reaches “The End”.

This unusually candid blog post describes the process and the financial returns of expanding one of the web’s most popular strips into new mobile apps.

Categories: communication, design, strategy, writing.

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Different roads to posterity

Archives stacks - photo by flickr.com user dolescum, CC-licensed

Archives' stacks - photo by flickr.com user dolescum, CC-licensed

Not every writer’s personal papers end up preserved forever  in a library or archive.

The personal library of US novelist David Markson has found its way into a bookshop. Markson’s heavily annotated hardcovers are scattered among the shop’s stock, sorted by subject and all available for sale.

“There are too many inscribed books for any one civilian to buy; most have notes, check marks, underlined passages. I’d guess that a few of them – especially the more heavily annotated ones – belong in a proper archive. And yet, here they are: hundreds of hardbacks …, some of them with price tags covering Markson’s name, as if the buyers were afraid that his signature would somehow diminish their value.”

Bookshop owner Fred Bass said, “David wanted the books recirculated at the Strand. And really, if you face it, a university library, what are they going to do with them? They end up storing them. I think he realized that. This way, his books are in circulation.”

Categories: libraries museums galleries.

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