2013 in Genome Biology… according to F1000 reviewers
In 2013, BioMed Central's blog and Biome magazine have dedicated quite some space to considering alternative models of peer review. One emerging approach… Read more »
In 2013, BioMed Central's blog and Biome magazine have dedicated quite some space to considering alternative models of peer review. One emerging approach… Read more »
Two rarities seldom seen by Bostonians are the American Society of Human Genetics Annual Meeting (aka ASHG) and the baseball World Series. The former was last… Read more »
The writers of popular forensics drama franchise CSI would be well advised to read Genome Biology today, as we publish an article that employs a widely used… Read more »
Nobel prizes can sometimes set me a-wondering what the point in journals is. One of the most well-known Nobel-winning papers, that of Watson & Crick, was… Read more »
With great fanfare comes great cynicism, and so it should: science is built on a tug-of-war between novel claims and kneejerk skeptism, and the probity that… Read more »
On April 25, Genome Biology published an interview with Raymond Gosling, who took the famous Photo 51 upon which Watson & Crick's model of DNA's… Read more »
You may recall that June's issue of Genome Biology was dedicated to the field of plant genomics (more info on the issue can be found in this blog post).… Read more »
Genome Biology recently published a Correspondence article that argued for a bigger uptake of PacBio's SMRT sequencing platform. We debated the issues arising… Read more »
Tomorrow (July 31), Genome Biology will host the #SMRTseq Tweet chat on PacBio's SMRT sequencing platform, as discussed in detail in this earlier blog… Read more »
If you are reading this, then the chances are you have an internet-enabled computer. And if you have an internet-enabled computer, then in all probability (in… Read more »