Tag: open access
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Who Writes about Africa: The Definitive Answer
Unpacking the question When people ask, “Who writes about Africa?” they’re really probing the ecosystem behind online knowledge. A well-worn statistic—often cited by tech and policy analysts—suggests that a small share of online content about Africa comes from local voices. The figure, typically framed as 6-8%, hints at underrepresentation, but the story is more nuanced.…
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Who Writes About Africa: The Definitive Online Guide
Introduction: Why Who Writes About Africa Matters For years, tech and media critics have cited a stubborn statistic: a small slice of online knowledge about Africa comes from the continent itself. The oft-quoted figure of 6-8% may be defensible in some datasets, but it misses the nuance behind who is producing, curating, and sharing information…
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AIP Publishing Partners with Hebei University of Technology to Launch Harmonics and Scattering (HAS) Open Access Journal in 2026
Overview of the Partnership and Journal Launch AIP Publishing (AIPP) has announced a strategic partnership with Hebei University of Technology to develop Harmonics and Scattering (HAS), a new open access journal dedicated to the science of harmonics and wave scattering. Slated to begin publishing in 2026, HAS will enter the scholarly landscape as a diamond…
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AIP Publishing Partners with Hebei University of Technology to Launch Harmonics and Scattering: A New Open Access Journal for 2026
Overview of the Partnership AIP Publishing (AIPP) has announced a strategic collaboration with Hebei University of Technology to establish Harmonics and Scattering (HAS), a new open access journal slated for launch in 2026. This partnership combines AIPP’s global publishing expertise with Hebei University of Technology’s strong research ecosystem, creating a dedicated platform for high-quality work…
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Pioneering Personalized Medicine: Dr. Najaf Amin Redefines Depression Genetics with Multi-Omics
Reframing Depression: From Neurotransmitters to a Systemic Disease In a groundbreaking Genomic Press interview published today, Dr. Najaf Amin, Oxford University Associate Professor and a towering figure in genetics, reveals a shift in how the global research community understands depression. Far from being viewed solely as a neurotransmitter imbalance, depression is increasingly seen as a…
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Pioneering personalized medicine: deciphering depression’s complex biology
Pioneering a systemic view of depression through multi-omics Depression has long been treated as a primarily brain-centric disorder, its causes sought in neurotransmitter imbalances and regional brain activity. A ground‑breaking Genomic Press interview with Dr. Najaf Amin, Oxford University Associate Professor and a leader in molecular epidemiology, shifts that narrative. Her team’s work spans genomics,…
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JCU Open EBook Offers Insights Into Rural Health Planning in North Queensland
Free eBook from JCU Guides Rural Health Planning A new, freely accessible eBook from James Cook University researchers offers practical guidance for improving health services in rural, regional, and remote areas of North Queensland. Developed through the Integrating Health Care Planning for Health and Prosperity in North Queensland project, the work emphasizes place-based planning, community…
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JCU Open EBook Offers Insights Into Rural Health
Overview: A Practical Guide for Rural Health Planning James Cook University has released a free eBook developed by researchers to support health system planning in rural, regional, and remote areas of North Queensland. Built from the Integrating Health Care Planning for Health and Prosperity in North Queensland project, the guide emphasizes participatory, place-based approaches that…
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Scientists Race to Digitize Fragile Analog Lectures of the 1970s
Time is running out for a groundbreaking trove of scientific knowledge Thousands of hours of lectures, conferences, and discussions—spanning mathematics, physics, philosophy, and the history of science—are held on fragile analog tapes dating back to the early 1970s. This archive captures the evolution of ideas as they were taking shape, recording not just final theories…

