Neuroscience
Free full-text access to Sage psychology journals
Any Digest readers who don't enjoy the benefit of institutional access to full-text journal articles might be interested to know that, from today until the end of Sept. this year, the publishers Sage are offering free online full-text access to all 36 of their psychology journals (registration required).
Online access to the International Journal of Behavioural Development, Group Processes and Intergroup Relations, Applied Psychological Measurement and Personality and Social Psychology Review is free for that period even without registering.
Happy browsing...
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The Special Issue Spotter
We trawl the world's journals so you don't have to: Siblings as agents of socialisation (New Directions for Child and Adolescent Development). Serotonin: New Aspects of its Functions in the Brain (The International Journal of Neuropsychopharmacology)....
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This Message Has Been Sent To You Because Of Your Eminence In The Field.
More Obsequious Science Spam... This one's from Bentham Open. Maybe you or one of your friends have gotten a similar pitch. First, the story circa early 2007. The Open Neuroscience Journal Dear Scientist. Bentham Science Publishers have gained...
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A Bit Of Unscientific (library) Research
I'm taking a very informal, unscientific poll for the Simmons Continuing Ed. class I'm teaching next week: Is your library making "open access" journals available to your patrons? These are things like articles in the Directory of Open Access...
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Events I Will Be Leading
I thought some of you might be interested in this Continuing Ed class I'm co-teaching with Terry Plum in November about open access journals: "Open Access and Free Scholarly Resources: What Are They and How Can You Find Them?" Terry will answer these...
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Content -- Tv & Scholarly Articles
Two seemingly-unrelated articles in the New York Times in the last two days. The first, Digital Domain: Someone Has to Pay for TV. But Who? And How?, from the Sunday Times (May 7), talks about technology that prohibits TV viewers from skipping through...
Neuroscience