This blog post features an opinion piece from PLOS ONE Section Editor in Urban Studies Dr. Diego Rybski about the interplay between…
-
Guest Post Opinion: The ‘death of the distance’ revisited
-
Guest Post International Day of Women and Girls in STEM from a Latin American perspective
February 11 marks the International Day of Women and Girls in Science. PLOS ONE is marking this day by handing over our…
-
Guest Post It takes two, or more, to tango. Why a focus on fair and equitable research collaborations is essential for global health – and how to achieve it.
Guest bloggers: Carel IJsselmuiden (COHRED, University of KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa); Bipasha Bhattacharya (COHRED, Corresponding Author, rfi@cohred.org), Julia Vallauri and Eric Martin…
-
Guest Post Collaboration on the road to better preclinical research
In this blog post Adrian Smith from Norecopa discusses the role that the PREPARE Guidelines and Website play in improving the robustness…
-
Guest Post Disciplinary Identities and other barriers to advancing interdisciplinary working
In this Guest Blog, Dr Linda Waldman, Professor Jo Sharp and Professor James Wood discuss the challenges surrounding authorship attribution in interdisciplinary…
-
Guest Post How to publish reusable enzymology data?
In this blog post Carsten Kettner, from the Beilstein-Institut discusses the role STRENDA Guidelines and Database play in helping publish reusable enzymology…
-
Guest Post ‘Wicked problems’ and how to solve them
In this Guest Blog, PLOS ONE Academic Editor, Sieglinde Snapp, discusses the challenges faced in sustainability research to solve complex, so-called “Wicked…
-
Awards The Unitary Fund: a no-strings attached grant program for Open Source quantum computing
This is a Guest Post written by Will Zeng. Editorial Note: As part of our ongoing efforts to support Open Source projects…
-
Collections Urban Ecology: where the wild meets the city
This is a Guest Post written by PLOS ONE Academic Editor Christopher Lepczyk Urban ecosystems are expanding around the world as people…