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Academic Journals
- 19,431
- 1From:Translational Behavioral Medicine (Vol. 9, Issue 6) Peer-ReviewedClinical and public health translation of genomics could be facilitated by expertise from behavioral medicine, yet genomics has not been a significant focus of the Society of Behavioral Medicine (SBM). SBM convened a...
- 2From:PLoS ONE (Vol. 12, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedWhile behavioral and social sciences occupations comprise one of the largest portions of the "STEM" workforce, most studies of diversity in STEM overlook this population, focusing instead on fields such as biomedical or...
- 3From:Pharmaceutical Technology (Vol. 25, Issue 10) Peer-ReviewedWolfgang Sadee, PhD, will be presented with AAPS's Distinguished Pharmaceutical Scientist award at this year's meeting. He will be recognized for his contributions to advances in analytical chemistry, biotechnology,...
- 4From:The Scientist (Vol. 16, Issue 12) Peer-ReviewedLong before he became a physicist, Rush Holt embraced politics. The son of a US senator from West Virginia, Holt so enjoyed the political scene that in the seventh grade he bought his own subscription to The Washington...
- 5From:Intelligence (Vol. 26, Issue 3) Peer-ReviewedThe personal equation of classical astronomers can be placed into a psychometric context in examining human intellect. Based on individual star transit times, the personal equation posits that there are distinct...
- 6From:OR/MS Today (Vol. 32, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedWard Edwards, internationally known authority on decision analysis and behavioral decision research, died Feb. 1 in Glendale (Calif.) Memorial Hospital. Dr. Edwards retired from the University of Southern California...
- 7From:Science (Vol. 281, Issue 5377) Peer-ReviewedThe number of biomedical research trainees in the United States has expanded dramatically over the past 20 years, but tenured positions--long a traditional destination for Ph.D. biologists--are declining (National...
- 8From:PLoS ONE (Vol. 15, Issue 10) Peer-ReviewedThis study builds upon the literature documenting gender disparities in science by investigating research productivity and recognition among elite scientists in three countries. This analysis departs from both the...
- 9From:Systems Research and Behavioral Science (Vol. 23, Issue 3) Peer-ReviewedMotivation involves needs and resources, decision making, communication and feedback, power and influence. These elements are often considered quite separately both in behavioural research and in teaching. The focus of...
- 10From:Systems Research and Behavioral Science (Vol. 23, Issue 3) Peer-ReviewedI got news of--and became acquainted with--the Systems movement as an indirect result of having read a science fiction novel by A. von Vogt. The novel was titled The Voyage of Space Beagle (a fine case of serendipity!)....
- 11From:Skeptic (Altadena, CA) (Vol. 11, Issue 4)Thanks for taking the time to read the article and to respond. I did realize people would fault the article if I relied solely on the UCS. That is why I listed only a few of the examples noted in their report, and...
- 12From:Nature (Vol. 583, Issue 7818) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): Virginia Gewin Author Affiliations: The career cost of COVID-19 to female researchers, and how science should respond The UK funder Wellcome wants applicants, such as researchers at the Mahidol...
- 13From:Extrapolation (Vol. 39, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedThe novel 'Foundation's Fear' provides a vehicle to investigate several problems related to science, epistemology, politics and narrative as they are portrayed in the works of two distinguished American science fiction...
- 14From:Information & Culture (Vol. 51, Issue 3) Peer-ReviewedThis article tells the story of Ed Fredkin, a pilot, programmer, engineer, hardware designer, and entrepreneur whose work inside and outside academia has influenced major developments in computer science and in the...
- 15From:The Chronicle of Higher Education (Vol. 58, Issue 24)Byline: Mary Ann Mason "The folks at the NSF understand that you shouldn't be penalized or lose a chance to advance in your career because you are taking care of a new child or a mom or dad who's gotten sick," said...
- 16From:Intelligence (Vol. 26, Issue 3) Peer-ReviewedArthur Jensen's theory of the genetic origins of intelligence have fostered many advances in the fields of neuroscience and psychology. By correlating brain processes and design features with levels of intellegence,...
- 17From:Systems Research and Behavioral Science (Vol. 23, Issue 3) Peer-ReviewedAlthough Living Systems Theory (LST) has been widely recognized for its major contributions to scholarship in general and systems theory in particular, the full extent of its contribution has never been explicitly...
- 18From:Systems Research and Behavioral Science (Vol. 25, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedI first met John van Gigch at an ISSS Conference in Asilomar, but this visit was brief and I had no chance to talk to him. Later another ISSS colleague contacted me to ask if I would like to write an essay in Honour of...
- 19From:The Future of Children (Vol. 31, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedWhen it comes to solving problems and measuring impact, public education organizations primarily rely on two approaches--using civil service to hire personnel directly or using competitive procurement to hire outside...
- 20From:The Scientist (Vol. 16, Issue 18) Peer-ReviewedWomen still earn slightly less than men do in the life sciences, though the difference narrows as both advance in their fields, according to a salary survey conducted by Abbott, Langer & Associates and sponsored by The...