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Product Spotlight


15 minutes to develop your research career: new podcast series from Taylor & Francis and Vitae


From driving public engagement in research to making the most of academic mentoring, there’s something for everyone in our 15-minute podcast series. Created with Vitae, the international program which champions professional development for researchers, we offer practical tips and insights for researchers looking to develop their career.


Listen to the series at: http://bit.ly/15minpodcast


Episode 1: Public engagement in research What does ‘public engagement’ mean? What can researchers gain from encouraging people outside of academia to read their work? And where to start? We hear from Lucy Robinson, Citizen Science Manager at The Natural History Museum, as well as PhD students explaining their thesis in three minutes as part of the 3MT competition.


Episode 2: Stepping up, moving on and alternative career paths for researchers What transferable skills do you develop as a researcher? What are the different career paths researchers take? We spoke to Kate Murray, Careers Consultant at Kings College London and more.


Episode 3: Academic mentoring What can researchers gain from being mentored? What are the different mentoring opportunities out there? Dr. Uzma Asghar from the Institute of Cancer Research and Andy Nobes from AuthorAid share their insights.


Episode 4: Overcoming impostor syndrome What is impostor syndrome? Why is it a hotly discussed topic in academia? What steps can you take to overcome it? Featuring interviews with David Uribe from the European University Association and PhD researcher, Lilia Mantai.


For more information Please contact Claire Doffegnies, Communications Executive, Taylor & Francis. Email: Claire.Doffegnies@tandf.co.uk Telephone: +44 (20) 701 75034


eBook Archives Inspire Research of Today


With the rapid growth of research worldwide, there is ever-increasing recourse to past published literature for the foundations and verifications of new research. Data shows that researchers are searching, utilizing and extracting value from research in many of the archive (pre-2005) titles found in the Springer Book Archives portfolio on SpringerLink. The overall usage of archive ebooks is significant as older books continue to receive numerous citations in modern works, demonstrating that historical precedents support and inspire today’s research. Bookmetrix data confirms the number of citations long-tails over 30 years after publication. Researchers access historical


precedents to support current theories, to deepen understanding and foundational knowledge, to trace the genesis of significant research and protocols for links to new discoveries, to find and verify prior research to avoid mistakes, to accelerate current research, and to meet the demands of a truly comprehensive research process. The Springer Book Archives portfolio includes titles which were previously hard to find or unavailable in print. The Springer Book Archives portfolio includes over 120,000 titles in science, technology, and medicine and now offers the Palgrave Macmillan backlist titles in humanities and social sciences as eight new archive subject collections on SpringerLink. Springer Nature now offers smaller Springer Book Archives year-set licensing options on the 11 SBA English-language and the 5 SBA German-language subject collections, making the Springer Book Archives a more accessible e-resource for libraries and organizations worldwide.


For more information Contact Springer Nature to request a usage and denials report for your institution or for more information about our licensing options. www.springer.com/contact or email libraryrelations@springer.com


Introducing Remarq, from RedLink, a tool to engage editors, authors, and readers on publisher sites


RedLink Remarq™ brings the community, profile, and sharing capabilities currently found in separate sites like ResearchGate, Academia.edu, and Trellis, and allows publishers to enable these across their actual sites, without diverting traffic. The service allows editorial updates, author updates, post-publication review, and more, and users can make private notes and public comments. Remarq™ works across platforms and publishers in a user-centric manner:


l Enables article-sharing that counts – article-sharing counts as usage


l Provides editors with the ability to implement polls, send editorial updates, start discussions, and enable post- publication review


l Provides authors with the ability to update people interested in their articles or areas of expertise, to answer questions or make minor corrections, all while maintaining the Version of Record


l Ensures that comments come from qualified experts


l Allows moderation of comments, as well as the usual mechanisms for reputation management


l Easily integrates with sites; easy to manage, with “super-user” roles for administrators


l Allows end-users to make citable comments, private notes and annotations, and rich personal profiles


l Allows annotation and commenting across HTML and PDF versions of articles, so that notes and comments made in either the HTML or PDF are visible in the other format


l Tracks social media uptake, citations, usage, and other data for authors and their articles via their personal profiles


l Allows users, authors, and editors to follow articles of interest, connect with colleagues, and work in virtual groups.


For more information Related link: remarqable.com Phone: +1 508 366 5653 Email: hello@redlink.com


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