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JoVE, the Journal of Visualized Experiments, is the world's first peer reviewed scientific video journal. Established in 2006, JoVE is devoted to publishing scientific research in a visual format to help researchers overcome two of the biggest challenges facing the scientific research community today; poor reproducibility and the time and labor intensive nature of learning new experimental techniques. JoVE has published thousands of video articles from top research institutions around the world. The members of JoVE's Editorial Board are drawn from the ranks of world renowned professors, scientists, physicians and key opinion leaders. Board members are selected for their proven experience and knowledge of the latest in either experimental scientific or cutting-edge medical practice.
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Biological Abstracts Archive 1926-1968 delivers the complete bibliographic records from 49 Biological Abstracts print volumes dating from 1926 to 1968. The original scientist abstractors and editors focused on selecting the most relevant international items in life sciences, and often wrote extensive abstracts and enhanced titles with added indexing terms as search aids. These volumes, including material from journals, patents, conference reports and books, are now available as 1.8 million fully indexed and searchable electronic records. In addition to bibliographic details Biological Abstracts includes: Disease Data, Gene Name Data, Geologic Time Data
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A Resource for Studying Biological Macromolecules. The PDB archive contains information about experimentally-determined structures of proteins, nucleic acids, and complex assemblies. As a member of the wwPDB, the RCSB PDB curates and annotates PDB data according to agreed upon standards. The RCSB PDB also provides a variety of tools and resources. Users can perform simple and advanced searches based on annotations relating to sequence, structure and function. These molecules are visualized, downloaded, and analyzed by users who range from students to specialized scientists.
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Full text access to conference proceedings and standards of the IEEE (Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers). The following subject areas are covered: computer science, electrical engineering, measurement technology, control technology, energy technology, biology, biotechnology, medicine, neuropsychology, physics. VDE VERLAG Conference Proceedings: IEEE and VDE VERLAG - a renowned publishing house for electrical engineering and information technology - have partnered to offer subscribers of the IEEE Xplore digital library access to all English language papers from VDE VERLAG conferences. Bell Labs Technical Journal: IEEE has partnered with Alcatel-Lucent to bring the Bell Labs Technical Journal (BLTJ) to the IEEE Xplore digital library. This peer-reviewed journal highlights key research and development activities across Alcatel-Lucent. With a goal to identify the current challenges in information and communications technology (ICT), and to find solutions for those challen...
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The NATO Research and Technology Organisation (RTO) promotes and conducts co-operative scientific research and exchange of technical information amongst 26 NATO nations and 38 NATO partners. The largest such collaborative body in the world, the RTO encompasses over 3000 scientists and engineers addressing the complete scope of defence technologies and operational domains.
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PubChem is an open chemistry database at the National Institutes of Health (NIH). “Open” means that you can put your scientific data in PubChem and that others may use it. Since the launch in 2004, PubChem has become a key chemical information resource for scientists, students, and the general public. Each month our website and programmatic services provide data to several million users worldwide. PubChem mostly contains small molecules, but also larger molecules such as nucleotides, carbohydrates, lipids, peptides, and chemically-modified macromolecules. We collect information on chemical structures, identifiers, chemical and physical properties, biological activities, patents, health, safety, toxicity data, and many others. Where does the data in PubChem come from? PubChem records are contributed by hundreds of data sources. Examples include: government agencies, chemical vendors, journal publishers, and more. The amount of data in PubChem is ever-growing, please visit the PubChem St...
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PSD archives a wide range of data ranging from gridded climate datasets extending hundreds of years to real-time wind profiler data at a single location. The data or products derived from this data, organized by type, are available to scientists and the general public. The third party data appearing on this web site may be reformatted from their original form, but not altered as to the informational content contained therein. It is provided as a public service.
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