But literary journals and magazines have their own set of readers and thrive on them. |
|
The role of medical journals and the media should not be ignored in that debate. |
|
It covers 4300 journals devoted to medicine, nursing, dentistry, veterinary medicine, healthcare systems, and the preclinical sciences. |
|
The practicum students and teachers observed the children as they studied his drawings and as the children recorded entries in their journals. |
|
Imago, a relative newcomer to the league of regional journals, was born at a difficult time. |
|
Installing himself as publisher, he practices the time-honored tradition of stealing the best writers from other journals. |
|
In China, I keep writing Chinese poetry and sending it out to literary journals around the country. |
|
Its popularity dates from the mid-1930s when the term brick veneer first appeared in building journals. |
|
It is based in Exeter, and its experience is largely in publishing heavyweight academic journals in the social sciences. |
|
By virtue of his sergeancy, his name crops up with greater frequency in the journals of Lewis and Clark than that of most others. |
|
If any architects or firms have redundant T squares and set squares, and books and journals they can spare, these would be gratefully received. |
|
The information contained in those journals gave him one surprise after another, he had almost been unable to believe it was true. |
|
Items recorded in the journals included wages paid to carpenters, bricklayers and other construction workers. |
|
Over the next 30 years he contributed 78 papers to international journals, many of them expounding his own theory of molecular attraction. |
|
The most prominent science journals are in the social sciences, which are led by economics and political science. |
|
And after all, most of these high street brands continue to advertise in industry-specific journals or headhunt top sector specialists. |
|
There are thousands who have no access to further education or specialist journals. |
|
Instead of transcriptions of what he wrote, the book is scanned pages of his journals. |
|
There was for a period a constant dialogue between journals, groups, and individual creators. |
|
These partnerships provide access from bibliographic searches to full-text journals for mutual subscribers. |
|
|
The comprehensive citation of critical articles and journals will be extremely useful to scholars. |
|
The review has established itself as the one of the leading authoritative journals for those interested in all aspects of bibliophily. |
|
The journals were labeled with almost unreadably small volume numbers and publication dates. |
|
The correct bobweights are then assembled and mounted on the crankshaft rod journals. |
|
The morality of releasing a dead man's journals is debatable, and the temptation not to buy it will be strong for many. |
|
Magazines and journals are the birthplace, proving ground and launching pad of ideas. |
|
Conferences and journals can contribute by providing forums for debate and information dissemination. |
|
In terms of journals, both weeklies and fortnightlies are published and aimed at general practitioners. |
|
Publishing in research journals requires fortitude, resilience and persistence. |
|
Virtually all the important research continues to appear in the form of papers in journals. |
|
Still, gun-control foot soldiers in organized medicine churn out articles for relatively obscure scientific journals. |
|
Even larger journals with flourishing revenue streams might be adversely affected. |
|
Military history journals have a solid niche in popular and academic publishing. |
|
As sequencing projects had grown larger and larger it had become quite impossible and pointless for journals to publish the sequences in print. |
|
Their work was recently published in Applied Physics Letter and featured in several science journals. |
|
The journals would also publish letters and articles sent in by readers, thus keeping the public actively involved in their content. |
|
The journals publishing the revised statement have waived copyright protection, making CONSORT easily available to all readers and trialists. |
|
The form par excellence for online journals, flash fiction is quickly establishing itself as a form to be reckoned with. |
|
In her journals for 1787 Susan Burney describes Hoole as conversable, entertaining, and fond of children. |
|
Normally, contributions to academic law journals hardly rate a mention in the mass media. |
|
|
He was a talented diagnostician and contributed several articles to medical journals. |
|
A third has more than 250 interviews from radio, television, newspapers, and scholarly journals. |
|
I have had over 200 papers published in the academic journals reporting research in that connection. |
|
My stuff was so hard to pick holes in, however, that almost all of it did eventually get published somewhere in the academic journals. |
|
She left me her journals and memories and pictures, and in 1980 I was not so much hung up as I was a commemorator and an appreciator. |
|
Now, the trend is toward increasingly specialized journals focusing on specific themes. |
|
Already, a couple of journals have brought out articles on the late leader, known for simplicity, incorruptibility and concern for the poor. |
|
By their incorporation into illustrated journals, photographs became a part of middle-class literacy. |
|
His articles on mythology, folklore, fantasy, and science fiction have appeared in a variety of anthologies and journals. |
|
But amongst the books were also handwritten journals, and she even found a delicately drawn out family tree. |
|
However, journals are inherently inferior to daily or weekly periodicals in covering fast-moving events. |
|
The smaller companion volume includes more than 100 black-and-white images along with facsimiles of Fay's journals. |
|
During idle moments I read medical journals such as the Australian Women's Weekly. |
|
In the darkness, I clothed myself with a green robe hanging in my old chambers, and slipped my journals into a saddlebag. |
|
Each of us will need to tap the best in her pedagogic resources, be it the use of journals, small group discussions, in class presentations, etc. |
|
Some of these journals are free and some require subscriptions or pay-per-view. |
|
With such a patronization, publishers can price such journals at will, and still sell them. |
|
His photomicrographs have been featured on the covers of seven scientific journals and he has published widely on parasitology. |
|
Unfortunately, this is the threshold used by most journals in medicine, psychology, and parapsychology. |
|
No parapsychologists or authors publishing in parapsychological journals were cited. |
|
|
This has resulted in the library holdings on Canada rising to over 20000 books, journals, manuscripts, paintings and maps. |
|
It is the world's largest medical library with holdings of more than 5 million books, journals, and other materials. |
|
All his spare time goes towards reading police journals, including those from overseas. |
|
Courses can contain activities such as discussion forums, student journals, quizzes, surveys, assignments, chats and workshops. |
|
Remember all those articles, journals, chapters, and books you meant to read about knowledge management? |
|
Many academic disciplines have defined keys journals in their field, but health education has failed to do so. |
|
The task of reviewing academic publications in literary studies has fallen to the more specialized journals. |
|
A small but growing number of businesses are hiring people to write blogs, otherwise known as Web logs, or frequently updated online journals. |
|
Over the intervening years, over 20 research papers have been published in peer-reviewed scientific journals or as research abstracts. |
|
The present review includes a few large and several small trials published as abstracts or full articles in many journals. |
|
The deal we're negotiating is for all universities to have access to all journals electronically. |
|
There is accumulating medical evidence in the journals on the rapid expansion of the HIV infection. |
|
And after all, most of these high street brands continue to advertise in industry specific journals or headhunt top sector specialists. |
|
The kind of people who wrote journals enjoyed the anonymity of blogging their private thoughts to a public audience. |
|
I was reading military journals in bed at night, just to get across the technical detail we needed to know. |
|
These essays aren't the kinds of things that would be published in philosophy journals because they are too essayistic and anecdotal. |
|
He has published essays, reviews and short stories in a number of journals and anthologies and is currently at work on a novel. |
|
Her poetry has been published in variety of journals, magazines and anthologies. |
|
Craft spends her professional hours surrounded by thousands of academic journals, magazines and newspapers. |
|
Our military journals and newspapers could make an important contribution here. |
|
|
The relevance rankings of the journals varied among the different occupational groups. |
|
Edwards approached all the leading liberal newspapers and journals with a copy of the transcript. |
|
Shane Rhodes has published poetry, essays and reviews in magazines, journals and newspapers across Canada. |
|
The exhibition drew more than forty-one thousand people and was reviewed in newspapers and journals across the country. |
|
She reads novels, newspapers, medical journals and science periodicals, and as a writing instructor, she reads teaching books. |
|
Many of the Army's professional journals have ceased publication and more are fading away. |
|
Trade union journals, newspapers, and journalists are an important part of Australian political and cultural history. |
|
Medical journals, newspapers, and popular magazines brim with reports about the adverse effects of obesity. |
|
We dethrone the heroes of the day and exalt new ones in the journals and popular media. |
|
They are commonly published in the popular press and magazines, specialist journals, and the internet. |
|
That's one of the advantages of publishing your studies in newspapers instead of medical journals. |
|
Television, newspapers, magazines, and journals all carried their visions for the future. |
|
My personal journals, the ones that contain the stuff that doesn't appear on here, go through months of being untouched and not-updated. |
|
He kept personal journals in precise Arabic script behind false panels in the ceiling of his library. |
|
During World War Two, military personnel were strictly forbidden to keep journals or diaries. |
|
Interpreting a person's life from journals left behind is a dangerously misguided exercise. |
|
Some people call them journals, or diaries, but to Dylan, they were neither. |
|
In one, a heap of old journals, calendars, and address books, yellowed with age, were piled in a Plexiglas vitrine. |
|
Phelps, who first went to sea as a cabin boy in 1816, worked from original journals and logbooks now mostly lost. |
|
Accounting organizes information in the form of documents, journals, ledgers, and reports. |
|
|
I could dig out old journals and search but that's an activity fraught with danger. |
|
The LS1 hydraulic roller camshaft has large bearing journals and a large-diameter base circle to minimize torsional twisting and stress. |
|
The driving journals are lubricated by Franklin spreader-type grease cellars. |
|
Sizing the engine for its current displacement meant that the crankshaft lost four pounds, and could ride on smaller bearing journals. |
|
Considered a management guru, his articles have been published in several journals. |
|
A quick glance will show that in 1955 he held editorships of four learned journals. |
|
His desk is a chaotic jumble of books, journals, miscellaneous documents, and baby pictures of his three children. |
|
He reads newspapers and law journals, and would like to improve Grahamstown's public amenities. |
|
He thought and wrote in grandiose terms, in a style that has now gone out of fashion, and that would be censored by our scientific journals! |
|
The circulation rates and readerships of newspapers greatly exceed those of medical journals. |
|
In journals, writers record their experiences and reflect on their value or importance. |
|
What will be our relationship with the institutions that bundle aggregates of electronic journals for distribution to libraries? |
|
The Khedive also supported academic journals, including one that aided the spread of science and scholarship among Egyptians. |
|
On the way out of the chamber afterwards several different party journals were being sold by hawkers. |
|
The High Court case centres on eight travel journals, including one account of the handover of Hong Kong to China. |
|
There are online journals that are older than mine and, heaven knows, there are better ones. |
|
Harris put together journals with worksheets to help students retain information from the books. |
|
A debate over the ethics of labiaplasty and other cosmetic gynecological operations has made its way into several mainstream medical journals. |
|
As such, the system already obviates the need for journals to pay for the work that they publish. |
|
The stab stitch, or edge stitch binding, is a traditional Japanese binding that can be used to make lovely albums and journals. |
|
|
But in field after field, paper journals are becoming like academic caps and gowns, a purely ceremonial relict of an obsolete culture. |
|
Reflective journals have prompted self-regulated or metacognitive ways of thinking in students in graduate and undergraduate education courses. |
|
Currently, industry sales reps can give doctors copies of studies on unapproved uses if the reports appear in peer-reviewed medical journals. |
|
I read the woodworking journals because, while we don't use wood, we do use pultruded fiberglass, which is worked the same way as wood. |
|
This poem and many others have been reprinted in anthologies and journals worldwide. |
|
The 25 articles were reprinted, 9 from book chapters and 16 from 10 different journals. |
|
The literature contains numerous reviews of metachromasy, especially in the histological and histochemical journals. |
|
The few journals of Netherlandish art register the quantitatively productive yet methodologically mellow state of the field. |
|
The publisher of academic journals plans to return to double-digit growth next year. |
|
Skepticism and warnings were mainly expressed in medical journals, indicating a reserved attitude by many health care professionals. |
|
Publication of papers in learned journals is an intrinsic and inevitable component of doing science. |
|
This staves off moral panic and encourages postmodernist academics to write papers in learned journals. |
|
In some cases these hybrid approaches lead to papers being published in learned journals, but not always. |
|
A major chunk of journals in biomedical sciences is brought out by learned societies. |
|
Data from scientists in the field were published in learned society journals. |
|
Articles about democracy appeared in learned journals, books and other academic writings. |
|
He went on to breed cattle and horses, and his schemes were widely publicized in English journals. |
|
He wrote prolifically with over 30 books and publications in peer reviewed journals. |
|
She has had poetry published in several anthologies, and short stories in a range of journals and magazines. |
|
Sir Timothy is the author of many publications and contributes to numerous journals. |
|
|
To some extent the presence or absence of fine writing is even less important to me here than it is with people journals. |
|
Old papers can also be rediscovered when they are cited in articles in review journals. |
|
Nevertheless, journals might become more open about the basis upon which they select books and reviewers. |
|
Both journals could then share the reviewer's reports and one journal's staff could handle the administration. |
|
The researchers sought to highlight the importance of indexing in health education and provide information on where journals were indexed. |
|
Most topics appearing in journals were offered in similar or greater percentages of the curricula. |
|
Some of them were published in a few magazines, including some literary journals. |
|
Numerous literary profiles have been written about splake in journals and newspapers all around the country. |
|
It may be obtained through trade journals, business associations, academic institutions and vocational groups. |
|
He has published about two dozen papers in various astronomy and astrophysics journals. |
|
He enjoyed a physical survival, and wrote short, spiritless articles in Comintern journals. |
|
The 60 Minutes exchange is very familiar to readers of Arab newspapers, college dailies, and liberal journals of opinion. |
|
The building also houses a library stocking over 130,000 items including journals and audio-visual materials. |
|
There is currently no widely accepted, concise, definitive list of key health education journals. |
|
Cases of deafness were reported in medical journals, as well as aural cavity damage from the insertion of mini headphones. |
|
She is the author of numerous research articles in scholarly journals and has co-authored a book chapter. |
|
He has authored four books and published more than 500 articles on armor in various military journals. |
|
In four volumes of autobiography and three books of journals he distilled much of the flavour of each decade of a remarkable century. |
|
As compulsive improvers, they perused agricultural journals for more productive seeds and bettered their herds with blooded stock. |
|
Estimates suggest that almost half of all articles published in journals are by ghostwriters. |
|
|
Important aspects of this public sphere were newspapers, literary journals, reading societies, and salons. |
|
Patrons can access large print books, talking books, audio and video recordings and use the internet in addition to journals and media. |
|
Logically, then, nearly every non-clinical and clinical diet program uses food journals, including Weight Watchers and Jenny Craig. |
|
Over the years I have read with avidity various intellectual disputes in The New York Review of Books and other literary journals. |
|
Digital journals have meant a reduced dependence on commercial publishing houses or academic presses. |
|
The Journal is the most widely cited of all malacological journals and publishes papers dealing with all aspects of the study of molluscs. |
|
The latest trend among technophiles is to communicate through video logs online journals replete with film clips shot on digital video cameras. |
|
These research partnerships provide managerially relevant research that is academically sound and publishable in leading journals. |
|
He gathers information from a variety of sources such as newspapers, trade journals, and books on the latest topics and trends. |
|
Already, in the 1940s, a scattering of articles began to appear in professional journals, providing us with bits and pieces of our history. |
|
You may also review back issues of journals that are not indexed within these databases. |
|
I've written a fair number of articles in both policy and scholarly journals. |
|
He is the author of several books and has written several articles in scholarly journals in his field. |
|
Most scholarly journals do not pay authors, and many actually impose page charges on scientists who contribute. |
|
His articles and case studies on these topics have appeared in numerous scholarly journals and books. |
|
At university, he takes pre-med courses, reads a lot of medical journals, volunteers at a local hospital, and makes friends with doctors. |
|
But they also Balkanised the research, dividing it up into many different journals, most of which charge for access. |
|
Up until now, he has written more than twenty books and hundreds of texts or contributions to volumes, catalogues and journals. |
|
Before that I made these dream journals and they were filled with poetry and scribbles. |
|
He supplied Glasgow coffee houses where the stockbrokers and bankers met to talk business and read the journals of the day. |
|
|
I've written for specialist cinephile and academic journals and for the mass media. |
|
The history of upper-class folk in the Old South is documented through journals, diaries, daybooks, and material possessions. |
|
Their subsequently published journals emphasized, in particular, the remoteness and sparse populations of the two regions. |
|
He has written reports on third sector and recycling issues, and for various housing journals. |
|
From the beginning the emphasis in these journals has been mainly on organismic genetics in a wide variety of animals and plants, and in the early years, on eugenics. |
|
Her poems have appeared in numerous chapbooks as well as in journals. |
|
These libraries concentrated on British and European publications, though most included local books, journals, and newspapers among their accessions. |
|
Both journals are international weeklies, but Science has a higher circulation within the United States and so is often preferred by United States scientists. |
|
Wilson has written many articles for magazines and medical journals. |
|
She has also published in journalism magazines and academic journals. |
|
Her work was published in newspapers and journals as well as her books. |
|
Hollow rod journals are a real asset for a long-stroke crankshaft. |
|
His lifelong obsession with elegance and order, he said, led him to concoct sexy results that journals found attractive. |
|
I opened one box of journals and keepsakes and there I found an old autograph book that was given to me when I moved from the Midwest at eight years old. |
|
In fact, there are now many empirical studies, both clinical and nonclinical, on religiousness and spirituality that are being published in top-tier research journals. |
|
I enjoy this because, as any cursory glance through my journals will attest, I use squashy, amorphous ampersands with abandon when I'm writing for no one but myself. |
|
A string of useful books, particularly The English Flower Garden, compiled mostly from articles published in his journals, further buoyed his repute in gardening circles. |
|
Under the four-leg bookkeeping method all transactions, both cash and non-cash, were recorded in the journals and posted to the ledgers using double-entry procedures. |
|
This is the most recent instalment of the veteran British left-winger's journals, covering everything from the rise of New Labour to the war in Afghanistan. |
|
Following retrospective exhibitions at the Whitney Museum and Corcoran Gallery in 1974, she began keeping journals documenting her life as an artist. |
|
|
To that end we will, within our own journals, audit the quality of peer review on a continuous basis and where possible provide training to enhance the quality of peer review. |
|
He read technical journals about film and haunted the theaters and film production companies. |
|
Indeed, these adolescent, spinster, perhaps sapphic women wrote journals, lyrics, fantastic tales, and stories mediated by the spirits who guided their pens. |
|
To test whether such bafflegab also pays in print, Armstrong asked 20 management. professors to rank the academic prestige of 10 management journals. |
|
In the past, health correspondents have been criticised for simply parroting Department of Health press releases and recycling articles from the medical journals. |
|
The readers of journals of opinion constitute nongeographical communities, whose self-identification and links with people they have never met are no less real for that. |
|
I do a lot of self-study through journals and discussions with my peers. |
|
When they examined the explorers' journals, they found recorded a classic progression of the symptoms of thiamine deficiency, or the disease known as beriberi. |
|
Students occasionally show the school psychologist their journals, pulling up posts on her computer or sharing printed transcripts of instant messages. |
|
Apart from criticizing the contents, he discovered that eight key references in the bibliography referred to nonexistent papers in nonexistent journals. |
|
Finally, all reputable journals undergo peer-review of all submitted papers before final publication. |
|
The phenomenon has caught the attention of Nature, one of the most competitive and well-regarded scientific journals. |
|
You see these reports hyped in various neocon journals, so there is still some sentiment to go back to try and get something going militarily against Iran. |
|
Five-paragraph essays aren't like term papers, which aren't like journals, which aren't like research papers, which aren't like short stories, which aren't like novellas. |
|
Scientific developments in other nations were written up in refereed journals and became universally available. |
|
Sometime during the years that followed, a canvass was taken by specialists in economics that showed there were about 350 economic journals in the world. |
|
This began as a card index and evolved into abstract journals. |
|
Given my feeling about my own journals, when I ran across those kept by my friend's 89-year-old mother after her death, I would not hear of throwing them away. |
|
This environment fostered new regional journals and a growing range of specialist journals catering to the interests of historians working in the branches of the discipline. |
|
Unfortunately, the prices for an online subscription to most of the journals is just as high as their print version, making it impossible to subscribe to them all. |
|
|
Through correspondence courses, university extension, journals like The Chautauquan, and especially reading circles, Chautauqua's influence spread widely. |
|
Our allegiances are divided between protozoology, phycology, parasitology, mycology, protistology, plant pathology and myriad other professional societies and their journals. |
|
The few reviews written in a public idiom whether in literary journals or the general press are increasingly characterized by their blandly uncritical quality. |
|
Citation-based measures have been used to evaluate the impact of journals and research institutions, including universities, faculties, and departments. |
|
So anyway, as I'm a bit of a photo freak who likes to chronicle his sad life when I'm feeling down in the dumps, I often look at my Caribbean journals. |
|
I've always fought shy of putting up old journals, written prior to the start of the on-line version, mostly because of the enormous amount of labour required. |
|
In London and Paris there were journals for merchants and financiers. |
|
I remember my first few assignments analyzing journals written by conquistadors and sixteenth-century mariners involved in the African slave trade. |
|
Bloggers, who post daily journals consisting mostly of links to and brief commentaries on TV and newspaper coverage, tend to carry contrarian viewpoints. |
|
Nevertheless, he did good work on their behalf by editing a succession of antirent propagandist journals as a counterblast to the generally hostile popular press. |
|
The last of his volumes of journals, published in 1997, marked the close of his writing career, although a volume of pithy jottings from a notebook appeared posthumously. |
|
At the same time we're being encouraged to publish stuff in hard copy in journals, refereed journals and refereed books, which is my line of country. |
|
The crown jewels of the exhibit are the two original journals. |
|
Answering ads in professional or trade journals can be just as fruitless. |
|
This trend will gain further strength if the journals that make preprints available on the internet or publish internet-only versions of reports are taken into account. |
|
Our journals were among the first in the geosciences to be made available electronically, but we should continue to publish in paper for as long as we can. |
|
Now we have had offers but have rejected them because we like being one of the few medical journals not prostituted by the pharmaceutical industry. |
|
In 1991 in the Directory of Electronic Journals and Newsletters, there were about 30 electronic journals and over 60 newsletters and digests published over the Internet. |
|
Beth was careful to explain to parents that writing and drawing were optional activities, but that she would be eager to see what children chose to do with the journals. |
|
This definition includes periodicals, newspapers, annuals, journals, memoirs, proceedings, transactions of societies, monographic series, and unnumbered series. |
|
|
Since the early 1990s, licensing of electronic resources, particularly journals, has been very common. |
|
There is also a tendency for existing journals to divide into specialized sections as the field itself becomes more specialized. |
|
Two other journals, Simplicissimus, published in Munich, and Pan, published in Berlin, proved to be important proponents of the Jugendstil. |
|
This time of rising status for biochemistry also saw increased acceptance of biochemistry papers in the prestigious multiscience journals. |
|
Day includes details of an alleged description of the Frankenstein castle that exists in Mary Shelley's 'lost' journals. |
|
The first scientific and literary journals were established during the Enlightenment. |
|
Coffee houses commonly offered books, journals and sometimes even popular novels to their customers. |
|
Some chapters, however, cannot keep up with the currentness of the scientific discussion in pertinent journals. |
|
Her habit of intensive reading and study, revealed in her journals and letters and reflected in her works, is now better appreciated. |
|
New journals like The Spectator and The Tatler at the beginning of the century had reviews of novels. |
|
Also gone now are long explanations to students about continuously paginated journals. |
|
Starting in the 1980s, the journal underwent a great deal of expansion, launching over ten new journals. |
|
He also wrote for several journals, including The Northern Star, Robert Owen's New Moral World, and the Democratic Review newspaper. |
|
Leiter's rankings tend to emphasize the quality and quantity of faculty scholarship, as measured by citations in a select group of journals. |
|
He is on the editorial boards of the academic journals Glossator and Post-medieval. |
|
Gray's writings were so influential that they are still used in American law schools and cited in law journals to this day. |
|
I have kept dream journals for most of my life and have always used dreams and synchronicity for guidance on an everyday basis. |
|
I publish in a variety of different disciplinary journals, and I often coauthor projects with nonsocial work academics and practitioners. |
|
He examines journals, books, pamphlets, rabbinic sermons, consistorial documents, and correspondence. |
|
To show trustiness of our theme, we create fake CV and submitted it to 10 journals. |
|
|
He maintains his journalism with regular contributions to newspapers and journals such as The Guardian and The London Review of Books. |
|
A complete list of the firm's 60 journals, books, and newsmagazines is available at www. |
|
Trade pubs, business journals, even network television are rhapsodizing about the glories of Cloud Computing. |
|
Finding the right expert witness is a how-to staple of bar journals and other trade magazines, and why not? |
|
Scientific journals produced in the UK include Nature, the British Medical Journal and The Lancet. |
|
Apart from maps, he published journals and navigational guides and developed a new method for determining longitude. |
|
Some journals request that the experimenter provide lists of possible peer reviewers, especially if the field is highly specialized. |
|
Tahat contributed to several journals and conference proceedings in the area of software engineering, wireless technology, and Business Ethics. |
|
None of the users are using journals, Chemical Research in Toxicology and Electroanalysis. |
|
In scientific studies and medical journals, the key ingredients in Airborne products have been shown to help support a healthy immune system. |
|
He is author or co-author of more than 60 papers in referred international conferences and journals. |
|
The historian, epigraphist and numismatist has five books and more than 40 art-icles in academic journals and edi-ted volumes to her credit. |
|
A member of ENT-UK and the British Rhinological Society, Mr Singh has published in medical journals nationally and internationally. |
|
Several articles in other scientific journals were withdrawn following the withdrawal in The Lancet. |
|
Add to this that the process of hydrolyzation was well documented in scientific journals. |
|
Linschoten was one of the two crew members to publish journals about the Barentsz expedition. |
|
The Museum's various libraries hold in excess of 350,000 books, journals and pamphlets covering all areas of the museum's collection. |
|
As Aina describes, references cited are systematically analysed to discover what journals are cited by researchers in a discipline. |
|
I discussed Soviet movies with expatriates. I sat with uranists in the Deux Magots. I published tortuous essays in obscure journals. |
|
The early journals were similar to those for the physical sciences, and were seen as a means for history to become more professional. |
|
|
It adds to the trend that law schools and law journals are no longer content to count angels on pinheads. |
|
The collections encompass over one million printed books, as well as thousands of journals and electronic resources. |
|
Many journals will unsubmit and send back to you a manuscript that has not been correctly prepared in this manner. |
|
One of these is the Wesley Historical Society whose branches hold regular meetings and publish journals recording the history of Methodism. |
|
Professional journals published by academic departments at Columbia University include Current Musicology and The Journal of Philosophy. |
|
Even Judge Bradley's callused sentiments were thorned by the narration of Jaclyn's journals. |
|
The other articles in such hybrid journals are either made available after a delay or remain available only by subscription. |
|
Today, publishing academic journals and textbooks is a large part of an international industry. |
|
There is a chapter devoted to each shipwreckee, including their own photographs, drawings, cartoons, extracts from journals and other writings. |
|
Most open access journals remove all the financial, technical, and legal barriers that limit access to academic materials to paying customers. |
|
The online distribution of individual articles and academic journals then takes place without charge to readers and libraries. |
|
The prospectus was reviewed quite positively and cited at some length in several journals. |
|
Most scientific research is initially published in scientific journals and considered to be a primary source. |
|
I also subscribed to journals such as Logophile, Verbatim, Maledicta, Cryptologia, Semagames, Wordsworth, and The Palindromist. |
|
Journals having this delayed availability are sometimes called delayed open access journals. |
|
Paper journals are now generally made available in electronic form as well, both to individual subscribers, and to libraries. |
|
Some journals, particularly newer ones, are now published in electronic form only. |
|
This is particularly true for the most popular journals where the number of accepted articles often outnumbers the space for printing. |
|
Due to the inelastic demand for these journals, the commercial publishers lost little of the market when they raised the prices significantly. |
|
He has also edited several journals, and has acted as editorial advisor to the Encarta Encyclopedia and the Encyclopedia of Evolution. |
|