Blog Buzz: October 1 – October 25

A government shutdown and Open Access week, lots of excitement for this edition of Blog Buzz!

There is/was no shortage of posts on how the government shutdown impacted science and made it harder to find certain types of information. Thankfully, the shutdown itself is behind us, but here are a few of those posts:

And here are a few in honor of Open Access week:

  • Science magazine had a special issue Communication in Science: Pressures and Predators with free news and reviews on the lack of scrutiny at open-access journals, the rarity of published negative studies, and publishing sensitive data. Do you agree?
  • Curt Rice takes issue with one of the pieces in Science Who’s afraid of peer review?, over on the Guardian, saying the peer review system has broken down and that is the real issue. Peter Suber weighs in to dispel six myths about OA also at the Guardian.
  • Sally Gore writes on this year’s OA week theme of altmetrics, and the altmetrics she is waiting for…the ones to help measure and communicate the value of librarians.

And some more about scholarly communication…

  • Nature News reports that on October 22nd, the NCBI launched the pilot phase of PubMed Commons, a platform being designed to let researchers comment on published works under their real names. Will there be enough participation for it be a successful new arena for discussion? Perhaps if it does it can help address the problems below…
  • From the Economist, a brief item about fraudulent academic publishing in China, fueled in part by a distorted ranking system that prizes quantity over quality.

Encyclopedia of Biological Chemistry is Now Available

The Library has recently added the Encyclopedia of Biological Chemistry (second edition) to the ebook collections. The 4-volume reference work represents the current state of a dynamic and crucial field of study.  The Encyclopedia pulls together over 500 articles that help define and explore contemporary biochemistry. Each article provides an up-to-date snapshot of a given topic, written by experts, as well as suggestions for further readings for students and researchers wishing to go into greater depth. Continue reading

Cancer Research News: October 9 – October 22

  • View a video segment from CBS Program 60 Minutes of Jack Andraka, a high school student who at age 15 developed a test that might save lives by detecting early pancreatic cancer. (13.36 min)
  • The October 14 issue (Vol 173, No. 18) of JAMA Internal Medicine features an essay “Academic Medicine in the 21st Century,” by Mark R. Laret, MA, CEO of UCSF Medical Center. The essay is based on his AAMC Chair’s address delivered at the November 2012 AAMC Annual Meeting.
  • A new nanopharmaceutical may help overcome resistance to certain anticancer drugs.
  • A new imaging technique that measures metabolic activity in cancer cells can help identify breast cancer subtypes and early treatment response.