Gyártó átfúr poggyász brembs nature science sütő legfontosabb Írógép
Replication initiatives will not salvage the trustworthiness of psychology – topic of research paper in Psychology. Download scholarly article PDF and read for free on CyberLeninka open science hub.
Björn BREMBS | Professor | Prof. | Universität Regensburg, Regensburg | UR | Institute of Zoology | Research profile
PDF) Prestigious Science Journals Struggle to Reach Even Average Reliability
File:Poster "Hands-on open science- Bridging scientific knowledge gaps in Wikimedia projects".pdf - Wikimedia Commons
bjoern.brembs.blog » Are Nature's APCs 'outrageous' or 'very attractive'?
The neurobiological nature of free will
PDF] Can scientists and their institutions become their own open access publishers? | Semantic Scholar
Björn Brembs: "What now? https://www.nature.…" - Mastodon
Nature (journal) - Wikipedia
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Bjoern Brembs (University of Regensburg): “The Neurogenetics of Creative Problem Solving” - YouTube
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Evolution of Cellular Networks: Doing away with scientific journals
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PDF) Towards a Scientific Concept of Free Will as a Biological Trait: Spontaneous Actions and Decision-Making in Invertebrates
bjoern.brembs.blog » Are Nature's APCs 'outrageous' or 'very attractive'?
OSR098 Academic Publishing Infrastructures with Björn Brembs [EN] – Open Science Radio
bjoern.brembs.blog » Are Nature's APCs 'outrageous' or 'very attractive'?
bjoern.brembs.blog » How scientific are scientists, really?
High APCs Are a Feature, Not a Bug – The Wire Science
A replication crisis in the making: how we reward unreliable science
PDF] Deep impact: unintended consequences of journal rank | Semantic Scholar
bjoern.brembs.blog » Are Nature's APCs 'outrageous' or 'very attractive'?
Can Science Set Us Free? - John Templeton Foundation
A replication crisis in the making: how we reward unreliable science
Michael Eisen on Twitter: "@brembs @eLife Agree that it's a drop in the bucket, but, as chemists well know, sometimes a drop in the bucket is a catalyst." / Twitter
bjoern.brembs.blog » No need to only send your best work to Science Magazine