Post by account_disabled on Aug 30, 2023 8:32:11 GMT 5
Inhumane practice by Renaissance standards. Therapeutic nihilism prevailed among the vast majority of Renaissance surgeons resulting in high numbers of visible, advanced breast cancers.
Featured image of Night and Day by Michelangelo Buonarroti courtesy of Miles Berry.
Preprints are part of a growing interest in sharing early stage research.
The amount of early stage research like preprints, data, and negative Switzerland Mobile Number List results uploaded yearly to ResearchGate has increased fivefold since 2008.
It’s not hard to see why. When you share a preprint, you make your own draft version of a paper available before any peer review process. Preprints accelerate science by getting results in front of more people faster, giving your peers an opportunity to provide you with rapid feedback.
What’s more, when you get your work out quickly, you’re giving your peers an insight into what you’re working on now, helping build an audience for your work before it’s published.
To help your readers keep track of which version of your article they’re reading, we now offer a feature that allows you to link your preprint with the publication page for the final version published in a journal (here’s how it works).
Once your article is published, we will then notify the researchers who were interested in your preprint. This way, if the full text is allowed, they can check for updates and see how their feedback may have contributed to your final version.
Here are three more reasons to consider sharing your preprints:
1. Get feedback on what you’re working on now (when it matters)
If you upload your preprint to ResearchGate, you can easily request feedback from your peers. Just click the little arrow next to the share button, and choose “Request feedback” from the dropdown menu.
Featured image of Night and Day by Michelangelo Buonarroti courtesy of Miles Berry.
Preprints are part of a growing interest in sharing early stage research.
The amount of early stage research like preprints, data, and negative Switzerland Mobile Number List results uploaded yearly to ResearchGate has increased fivefold since 2008.
It’s not hard to see why. When you share a preprint, you make your own draft version of a paper available before any peer review process. Preprints accelerate science by getting results in front of more people faster, giving your peers an opportunity to provide you with rapid feedback.
What’s more, when you get your work out quickly, you’re giving your peers an insight into what you’re working on now, helping build an audience for your work before it’s published.
To help your readers keep track of which version of your article they’re reading, we now offer a feature that allows you to link your preprint with the publication page for the final version published in a journal (here’s how it works).
Once your article is published, we will then notify the researchers who were interested in your preprint. This way, if the full text is allowed, they can check for updates and see how their feedback may have contributed to your final version.
Here are three more reasons to consider sharing your preprints:
1. Get feedback on what you’re working on now (when it matters)
If you upload your preprint to ResearchGate, you can easily request feedback from your peers. Just click the little arrow next to the share button, and choose “Request feedback” from the dropdown menu.