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GigaBlog
Data driven blogging from the GigaScience editors
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BiologyDeep SeaGenomicsSea CucumberWhole Genome SequencingBiologieAnglais
Publié

We start the new year with news from the deep, published in GigaScience : The genome of a sea cucumber, collected at a depth of 2400 m during a submarine trip to a hydrothermal vent, helps scientists to understand how marine animals can survive in extreme conditions. Hydrothermal vents are an unlikely environment for animals to flourish.

PublishingBigDataGigaByteGigaScienceOpen DataBiologieAnglais
Publié

It’s December, the festive season and the end of  year are approaching fast –  and it’s time for our traditional look back on the past 12 months at GigaScience Press . Once more, we are pleased with the view in the rear mirror.  In its 11th year, GigaScience again published exceptional “big data” science (read on for examples). And GigaScience’s

PublishingBioRxivOpen Peer ReviewOpen SciencePeer ReviewBiologieAnglais
Publié

Thanks to a collaboration with Sciety and eLife, this Peer Review Week 2023 we can announce new ‘Publish, Review, Curate’ models of peer-review are being showcased by GigaByte.

The post Peer Review Week 2023: GigaByte joins the ‘Publish, Review, Curate’ Revolution using Sciety appeared first on GigaBlog.

PublishingArchivingGigablogOpen ScienceReproducible ResearchBiologieAnglais
Publié

GigaBlog is now archived in Rogue Scholar, a new service that provides what it calls “science blogging on steroids” through including full-text search, long-term archiving, DOIs and metadata for science blogs such as ours. While this July we celebrated the 11 th anniversary of the launch of our first articles at ISMB in Lyon, it was actually the 12 th anniversary of the launch of GigaBlog, the blog of GigaScience

HealthBiodiversityDisease VectorEcologyGigaByteBiologieAnglais
Publié

Field notes of early-20th century entomologist Johanna Bonne-Wepster have been turned into crucial new public health data through digitization, filling data gaps and continuing her legacy in forming Dutch tropical medicine research. Natural history collections contain huge amounts of information on diversity, distribution and ecology of a variety of species; however, much of this valuable information is effectively lost