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Open AccessCopyrightElsevierBiologieAnglais
Publié
Auteur Stephen Curry

For researchers who have never dipped a toe into the debates on open access that surge across the blogosphere it is all too easy to imagine that they need not get involved. For sure, people are increasingly aware that a decision of some sort needs to be made about OA once their paper is accepted for publication but that’s about as far as it goes. The complexity of the issue is off-putting — who has the time?

Open AccessTrends In Plant SciencesBiologieAnglais
Publié
Auteur Stephen Curry

A opinion piece by Anurag Agrawal that was rather skeptical about some aspects of moves toward open access was published in the March issue of Trends in Plant Sciences . I felt several of the arguments advanced by Agrawal were rather weak and was glad to have the opportunity to write a rejoinder which has now been published in the April edition of the same journal.

History Of ScienceTechnologyApollo 11Michael CollinsMoon LandingBiologieAnglais
Publié
Auteur Stephen Curry

After splashdown at 4:51 pm on 24th July 1969 the Apollo 11 astronauts returning from the first moon landing  had to don full-body Biological Isolation Garments before they could leave the conical command module that was bobbing in the Pacific Ocean. Having transferred to the dingy that had come to meet them, Neil Armstrong, Buzz Aldrin and Michael Collins then had to scrub one another’s suits with diluted bleach.

History Of ScienceAtomic BombFat ManNagasakiBiologieAnglais
Publié
Auteur Stephen Curry

I recently came across a film on YouTube called ‘Unedited footage of the bombing of Nagasaki (silent)’. It is one of the dullest and most horrific things I have ever seen. The film shows US servicemen on Tinian island performing the banal tasks needed to prepare the Fat Man bomb before it was dropped on Japan.

Science & ArtArtThe SeaTurnerBiologieAnglais
Publié
Auteur Stephen Curry

I may not know much about art but I know what I like and I like the work of Joseph Mallord William Turner — all the more so now that I have seen the Turner and the Sea exhibition at the National Maritime Museum.

Scientific LifeAgePhilosophyRamblingBiologieAnglais
Publié
Auteur Stephen Curry

I’ve reached that age where my eye is drawn to the obituary column every time I open the newspaper. It hasn’t been a conscious move but, having arrived at my fiftieth year, I am increasingly aware of the hopes of youth shedding and floating away, like leaves from a tree, and find myself more often looking back over the road now travelled than peering into the future at the way ahead.

Open AccessScientific LifeCellImpact FactorsNatureBiologieAnglais
Publié
Auteur Stephen Curry

This is the original version (with the original title) of an article that has been published at The Conversation. Having climbed all the way to the Nobel prize on a ladder made of Nature, Science and Cell papers, biologist Randy Schekman has turned around and declared that he is going to boycott these ‘luxury’ journals in future because of the way that they damage science.

Science & PoliticsGuardianListsNaturePoliticsBiologieAnglais
Publié
Auteur Stephen Curry

There has been a flurry of articles of late listing important things that scientists, politicians and the public should know about each other. I am logging them here because I enjoyed each of the pieces and think it likely that I will want to consult them in future.

History Of ScienceProtein CrystallographyBraggElectronsGeorge ThomsonBiologieAnglais
Publié
Auteur Stephen Curry

The Royal Institution has made a rather lovely film about William and Lawrence Bragg, the father and son Nobel laureates who came up the method of structural analysis by X-ray crystallography around 100 years ago. The film is constructed around an interview with Lawrence Bragg’s daughter Patience, a delightful lady who has very fond memories of her father and some wonderful stories about him.

Open AccessBerlin DeclarationBOAI 10Budapest DeclarationPeter SuberBiologieAnglais
Publié
Auteur Stephen Curry

Tense, nervous headache? Feelings of confusion? Mood swings from warm optimism to a gnawing sense of futility? You’ve been reading about open access again, haven’t you? I know because I have and I recognise the symptoms.  Open access week came and went in the latter part of October and brought with it a plethora of events, publications and blogposts. The worldwide verbiage on this topic increased once again.