Results 341 to 350 of about 6,584,582 (379)
To Publish or not to Publish - and what to publish - that is the Question!
openaire +1 more source
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.
Related searches:
Related searches:
Learned Publishing, 2023
Academia is already witnessing the abuse of authorship in papers with text generated by large language models (LLMs) such as ChatGPT. LLM‐generated text is testing the limits of publishing ethics as we traditionally know it.
G. Kendall, Jaime A. Teixeira da Silva
semanticscholar +1 more source
Academia is already witnessing the abuse of authorship in papers with text generated by large language models (LLMs) such as ChatGPT. LLM‐generated text is testing the limits of publishing ethics as we traditionally know it.
G. Kendall, Jaime A. Teixeira da Silva
semanticscholar +1 more source
Nothing but publishing: the overriding goal of PhD students in mainland China, Hong Kong, and Macau
Studies in Higher Education, 2022Publication pressure is perceived to be filtering down into doctoral education worldwide. We explore the causes and effects of the perceived centrality of publishing among doctoral students, emphasising the impact of publication pressure on students ...
H. Horta, Huan Li
semanticscholar +1 more source
Social Epistemology, 2010
As there is a moral significance of birth, there is a moral significance of publication, thus self-correcting publication is a ...
openaire +2 more sources
As there is a moral significance of birth, there is a moral significance of publication, thus self-correcting publication is a ...
openaire +2 more sources
IEEE Transactions on Professional Communication, 1983
A blanket policy against publishing technical papers is as much a mistake as a policy of approving virtually all potential papers for publication. Companies adopting either extreme may be costing themselves money. Accordingly, management must evaluate the merits of each technical paper.
openaire +2 more sources
A blanket policy against publishing technical papers is as much a mistake as a policy of approving virtually all potential papers for publication. Companies adopting either extreme may be costing themselves money. Accordingly, management must evaluate the merits of each technical paper.
openaire +2 more sources
The Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery-American Volume, 2006
In 2004, two of us (R.A.B. and J.D.H.) along with Mr. James Scott, the Editor-in-Chief of the British volume of The Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, jointly published an editorial, “Changing Ethical Standards in Scientific Publication,”1-3 in which we outlined various elements of publishing ethics, including plagiarism and redundant publication.
Richard A, Brand +2 more
openaire +2 more sources
In 2004, two of us (R.A.B. and J.D.H.) along with Mr. James Scott, the Editor-in-Chief of the British volume of The Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, jointly published an editorial, “Changing Ethical Standards in Scientific Publication,”1-3 in which we outlined various elements of publishing ethics, including plagiarism and redundant publication.
Richard A, Brand +2 more
openaire +2 more sources
Journal of Laboratory and Clinical Medicine, 2005
Alan N. Schechter, Franklin G. Miller
+4 more sources
Alan N. Schechter, Franklin G. Miller
+4 more sources
Jupyter Notebooks - a publishing format for reproducible computational workflows
International Conference on Electronic Publishing, 2016T. Kluyver +14 more
semanticscholar +1 more source
Electronic publishing and publishing
The Electronic Library, 1996The first journals appeared in 1665: Le Journal des Scavans in Paris and Philosophical Transactions in London. They were the first publications with quality control, introducing concepts like approbation and imprimatur. Today we can see approximately 70 000 regular primary publications.
openaire +1 more source
Are women publishing less during the pandemic? Here’s what the data say
Nature, 2020G. Viglione
semanticscholar +1 more source

