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24 January 2024
ACCORD: new guideline to support consistent and complete reporting of consensus methods in biomedical research
Oxford PharmaGenesis has contributed to the development of the new ACCORD reporting guideline to help the medical and scientific communities to improve the reporting of research involving consensus methodologies. The guideline was published in the non-profit open access journal PLOS Medicine.
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Synergizing scientific transparency: a crash course from National Academy of Sciences discussions
Scientific transparency Champion sponsor of the Annual Meeting Reported by Sarah Sabir Speakers Richard W Davis IV, Associate Editor, Molecular Cancer Therapeutics David Mellor, Director of Policy Initiatives, Center for Open Science Leslie McIntosh Leslie McIntosh, CEO, Ripeta; Executive Director at the Research Data Alliance Transparency, through the complete reporting of data, code, and software,…
Keynote: How to write a scientific masterpiece in 2020
Scientific masterpiece Champion sponsor of the Annual Meeting Reported by Olivia McKenna Speaker Corinne Williams, Senior Science Editor, Journal of Clinical Investigation (JCI) and JCI Insight Corinne Williams provided her editorial insights into the medical publishing world and advice on how to maximize the output of publications. Medical publishing will face a huge change in…
Don't be such a scientist: talking substance in an age of style
An age of style Champion sponsor of the Annual Meeting Reported by Olivia McKenna Speaker Randy Olson, author and scientist-turned filmmaker Randy Olson delivered an enthusiastic and interactive session on how storytelling can be used as a powerful tool for delivering effective scientific communication. Intrigued by the ability of the original Jurassic Park movie to…
Poster 2.0: Creating better research posters
Research posters Champion sponsor of the Annual Meeting Reported by Sarah Sabir Speaker Mike Morrison, Science Communication Designer, University of Michigan If you’ve ever presented a poster at a scientific congress, chances are that you’ve experienced meeting attendees walking straight past your poster with a plate of food in hand. Can we really blame them?…

