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Front Matter

Front Matter
The Front Matter Blog covers the intersection of science and technology since 2007.
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NewsInformatique et sciences de l'informationAnglais
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In a blog post last week, Dario Taraborelli officially announced ReaderMeter. ReaderMeter takes the usage data from reference managers (starting with Mendeley) to analyze the impact of publications by a particular author. ReaderMeter is a welcome addition to other metrics of researcher impact, most of which are citation-based. And ReaderMeter was hacked together in a few nights, so the service should improve over time.

FeatureInformatique et sciences de l'informationAnglais
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This week PLoS Computational Biology published another helpful editorial in their 10 Simple Rules collection (https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1000941): Ten Simple Rules for Editing Wikipedia. I have very rarely edited Wikipedia articles myself, and I suspect this behavior is the rule and not the exception among science bloggers.

InterviewsInformatique et sciences de l'informationAnglais
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Citation styles are one of the greater mysteries for the novice manuscript writer. There are numerous ways that authors, title, journal, etc. can be arranged and formatted (see examples below), and in bibliographies citations can be ordered either alphabetically or by order of appearance in the text. Laemmli UK . Cleavage of Structural Proteins during the Assembly of the Head of Bacteriophage T4.

FeatureInformatique et sciences de l'informationAnglais
Publié

Dear Scientist, last week you published an interesting article by Christian Specht about Mutations of citations. Dr. Specht found more than 600 wrong citations for the paper by Laemmli (Laemmli 1970), which has been cited at least 88633 times according to Scopus. Laemmli UK . Cleavage of Structural Proteins during the Assembly of the Head of Bacteriophage T4.

Informatique et sciences de l'informationAnglais
Publié

Dear reader, two weeks ago I moved this blog from Nature Network to PLoS Blogs . I hope that most of my old readers have followed me here, and that I might even have a few new readers. Ed Yong recently talked about how he interacts with his many, many blog readers. One important strategy he uses is to ask his readers for feedback in regular intervals – he calls it delurking.