• Nature Precedings: notice board

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      • Comment notifications, watermarks, thumbnails, and other enhancements

        11 Mar 2008
        1 comment

        If you’ve visited Nature Precedings recently, you might notice that we’ve made some tweaks and improvements to the site.

        Comment notifications
        Authors can now opt to receive notification when new comments are added to their document by checking a box during the submission process. Commenters can also opt to receive notification of when someone responds to their comment.

        Watermarks on PDFs
        The DOI (or Handle) and date of posting are now embedded in all PDFs on Nature Precedings. By embedding the identifier in the document, readers of the PDF will be able to correctly reference or cite the document, even when they have received the document via email or accessed the document via a “deep-link”.

        Document thumbnails
        Document thumbnails are cute, but also serve as a memory aid and preview. Plus, they can be embedded in blogs and webpages.

        Reducing Greenhouse Gas Emissions: Geological Storage of CO2
        Tara LaForce1
        1. Imperial College London

        We’ve also made a number of under-the-hood improvements which will help with performance and usability. Please let us know what you think.

      • Links, Italics, Lists and more!

        22 Jan 2008
        0 comments

        On Nature Network, one can use a simplified markup language called Textile to add formatting to comments and forum posts. Nature Precedings now supports the same markup in comments and document abstracts.

        A guide to using Textile can be found on Nature Network, here, and a more comprehensive reference can be found here. The preview function for comments on Precedings will let you make sure your comment will look as you intended.

        For an example of this formatting in use on Precedings, check out Cesar Sanchez’s comment on Streptomyces sp. as predators of bacteria on Nature Precedings.

      • Precedings now using CC-by 3.0 licenses

        14 Nov 2007
        2 comments

        Last week, Nature Precedings switched to using the 3.0 version of the Creative Commons Attribution License. The human readable version and the legal version are both available from the Creative Commons website. Details about changes in the 3.0 licenses are here.

        New submissions will be licensed under the CC-by 3.0 license. Documents posted under the CC-by 2.5 license will continue to be licensed under the 2.5 version. Please contact us if you are a Precedings author and wish to upgrade a previous submission to use the 3.0 version.

        The Creative Commons FAQ is also a great resource for anyone who has questions about CC-licensing.

      • Wired on Dark Data (and Precedings)

        25 Sep 2007
        0 comments

        Thomas Goetz has a brief essay in this month’s issue (October) of Wired on what he calls ‘dark data’:

        It’s Time to Free the Dark Data of Failed Scientific Experiments

        Goetz argues that the “vast body of squandered knowledge” produced by experiments that failed to produce the hoped for results needs to be shared. Nature Precedings is described as an “island of innovation”, along with the Journal of Negative Results in BioMedicine and JC Bradley’s open notebook science project (which he describes in a Precedings post)

        Goetz’s article follows a blog post by his Wired colleague Brandon Keim:

        Nature’s Controversial New Non-Journal: Bazaar, not Cathedral

        Keim describes Precedings as a space for “not only unpublished manuscripts, but the assorted notes, presentations, white papers and other effluvia that would never appear in a journal, but could be useful for researchers” and “the wealth of scientific materials generated during research, of which peer-reviewed journal articles are only the iceberg’s tip”.

        Since the launch of Nature Precedings, we’ve been encouraging researchers to submit manuscripts or posters describing negative or null results in addition to documents describing preliminary positive findings. Precedings is designed as a space for “pre-publication research”, which includes all pieces of research generated during the scientific process. Experiments that generated negative or null results are definitely part of this process.

      • Nature Precedings now included in BASE

        20 Sep 2007
        0 comments

        BASE, the Bielefeld Academic Search Engine, is now indexing Nature Precedings content. BASE uses DC-embedded metadata to populate its database and provides filtering tools to help searchers refine their queries.

        Try it out

        To limit your search to Nature Precedings documents only, enter the parameter dccoll:webnaturepreced. Or you can use the advanced search to search by author or title.


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