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47Loose ends 1: Limiting manuscript revision by optimal presentation of the core storyBioessays 39 (3): 1700017. 2017.
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65Developing a Journal's Influence Without Impact Factor Madness: Quality in ShapeBioessays 40 (2): 1800002. 2018.
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54Your Numbers Might Be Strong, but You Still Need Strength in NumbersBioessays 41 (8): 1900109. 2019.
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69We Must Use Less: A Year of Climate Crisis, a Glimpse of Hope, but not in Mere TechnologyBioessays 41 (12): 1900214. 2019.
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67
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36The social contract of peer review revisited and reinforced: An idea to reduce the strain for reviewersBioessays 37 (5): 465-467. 2015.
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37Trading off accountability against professional survival? Or the consequences of Pareto's principle…Bioessays 38 (7): 587-587. 2016.
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46The evolution of photoreception and vision: Or the blind watchmaker gone mad?Bioessays 39 (7): 1700094. 2017.
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49Should We Rule Out Technologies Because They Are “Bad,” or Is That Just Politics?Bioessays 42 (5): 2000064. 2020.
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59Save Our Science? You could learn something from E. coli's SOS response!Bioessays 33 (10): 721-721. 2011.
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53Science is not just for research: More questions must be posed to the public …Bioessays 39 (10): 1700160. 2017.
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70Return to Freud! Research on memes is needed to counter global crisesBioessays 42 (12): 2000283. 2020.
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57Predatory Preprint Servers Join Predatory Journals in the Paper Mill Industry…Bioessays 42 (11): 2000259. 2020.
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82Peroxisomes: A small step from mitochondria but a giant leap for eukaryotesBioessays 37 (2): 113-113. 2015.
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78On the state of scientific English and how to improve it – Part 9Bioessays 37 (8): 831-831. 2015.
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57On the State of Scientific English and How to Improve it − Part 12: Keeping it Simple When Under Time Pressure…Bioessays 40 (12): 1800218. 2018.
Areas of Interest
| 17th/18th Century Philosophy |