Neuroscience
A Modest Appeal to Research Bloggers
ResearchBlogging.org is having a contest to determine the Best Blogging on Peer Reviewed Research. The Neurocritic has been chosen as a finalist in the
Best Blog -- Neuroscience category.* I kindly thank the judges for nominating my blog for this award.
Voting is limited to those who are registered with ResearchBlogging.org. If you do fall into that category, dear reader, your vote will be greatly appreciated. If I win, I will donate the entire $50 windfall to earthquake relief efforts in Haiti and Chile.
Good luck to all the nominees. Thank you for reading!
* I started this blog in January 2006 as an escape from the vicissitudes of peer review. So no matter what the outcome, I'll keep on doing what I'm doing...
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Please Vote For The Research Digest
Friends, please consider voting for the BPS Research Digest in the inaugural Science Seeker Awards. Science Seeker is a fantastic website that aggregates all the world's science blogs in one place and organises them by topic. A panel of judges will...
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Bloggers Behind The Blogs: Dave Munger
This is part of an ongoing series of interviews with some of the world's leading psychology and neuroscience bloggers. Next up, Dave Munger of the Research Blogging consortium and the hugely popular, but now discontinued, Cognitive Daily. How did...
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Nominees For The 2009 3qd Prize In Science
3 Quarks Daily 2009 Science Prize: Vote HereFor details of the prize you can look at the announcement here, and to read the nominated posts you can go here for a complete list with links. Voting ends at midnight on June 8, 2009. Four posts from The Neurocritic...
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Dear Reader
Dear Reader, If you are reading this blog and find that there are pop-up ads or framed ads around the edges or in a different format than you see if you were to use the blog's direct URL, then you might be viewing the blog through some cookie-directed...
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Blog- Or Print Publishing?
Which is better in library-land (or scientific-land), blogging or print publishing? I seem to remember that Jim Rettig, vice-president/president-elect of ALA, wondered in a campaign statement if librarians were blogging or writing in the print library...
Neuroscience