Results 271 to 280 of about 1,298,177 (313)

Mesoporous Silica Nanoparticles in Biomedicine: Advances and Prospects

open access: yesAdvanced Materials, EarlyView.
Mesoporous silica nanoparticles offer unique properties like high surface area, tunable pores, and functionalization. They excel in drug delivery, tissue engineering, and stimuli‐responsive therapies, enabling targeted and controlled treatments. With roles in cancer therapy and diagnostics, their clinical translation requires addressing challenges in ...
Miguel Manzano, María Vallet‐Regí
wiley   +1 more source

Opportunities of Semiconducting Oxide Nanostructures as Advanced Luminescent Materials in Photonics

open access: yesAdvanced Materials, EarlyView.
The review discusses the challenges of wide and ultrawide bandgap semiconducting oxides as a suitable material platform for photonics. They offer great versatility in terms of tuning microstructure, native defects, doping, anisotropy, and micro‐ and nano‐structuring. The review focuses on their light emission, light‐confinement in optical cavities, and
Ana Cremades   +7 more
wiley   +1 more source

Communication in Science

2002
Science must have a common language. For centuries, Latin language carried out this job, but the progress in computer technology and internet world through the last 20 years, began to produce a new language with the new century; the computer language.
H, Deda, H, Yakupoglu
openaire   +2 more sources

Science communication

Science Communication: The Basics is an accessible yet critical introduction to science communication, which is viewed as the social conversation around science. It addresses why science communication matters, examines the evolution of theories and practices and explains concepts, myths, misunderstandings and challenges.
Davies, Sarah, Horst, Maja
openaire   +4 more sources

Science Communication

2015
If “science made the modern world,” a claim espoused at the end of the nineteenth century and repeated until accepted as a truism by the twenty-fi rst century, what made science? A part of the answer to this question is communication (Shapin 2007).
openaire   +3 more sources

Science communication reconsidered

Nature Biotechnology, 2009
As new media proliferate and the public's trust and engagement in science are influenced by industry involvement in academic research, an interdisciplinary workshop provides some recommendations to enhance science communication.
Bubela, Tania M.   +23 more
openaire   +3 more sources

Science Communication: Power of Community

Science, 2013
J. Bohannon's News story “Who's afraid of peer review?” (special section on Communication in Science, 4 October, p. [60][1]) incriminates many open-access (OA) journals. Our journal, PLOS ONE , was not implicated. It rejected the fraudulent paper promptly and for the right reasons, as Bohannon acknowledges.
openaire   +2 more sources

Capably Communicating Science

Science, 2012
There is no shortage of topics where policy-makers or other members of the public seem to persistently misunderstand, misrepresent, or disregard the underlying science: climate change, genetically modified foods, vaccines, or evolution, among others. Consequently, the call for scientists to do a better job of communicating both the meaning
openaire   +2 more sources

The Science of Communicating Science

2019
Are you wishing you knew how to better communicate science, without having to read several hundred academic papers and books on the topic? Luckily Dr Craig Cormick has done this for you! This highly readable and entertaining book distils best practice research on science communication into accessible chapters, supported by case ...
openaire   +1 more source

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