JoVE trial extended: What do you think?

The University of Cambridge trial of JoVE Journal of Visualized Experiments has been extended to 14 May 2018.

Please tell us what you think about the JoVE collections by writing to library@ch.cam.ac.uk.

Thank you

Access the trial on campus via https://www.jove.com/

You can also create an account if you use an email address in the Cambridge domain – cam.ac.uk – which will provide access for the trial (“Create an account” on the green LOG IN tab top right on https://www.jove.com).

Off campus options for access:

http://ezproxy.lib.cam.ac.uk:2048/login?url=https://www.jove.com/

or via Shibboleth (Insitutional) login on the JoVE site (green LOG IN tab top right on https://www.jove.com and then “Sign in with Shibboleth” option).

RSS feeds now available from Cambridge Core

RSS feeds are now available on Cambridge Core, to alert you to the latest publishing in journals and subjects of your choice.

You can activate the journals feeds from the journals listing page, or from your chosen journal homepage, issue page or article page.  In each case look for the RSS icon, which appears as in the image below. Simply click the icon to sign up to the feed. On the journals listing page the icons are over on the right hand side, corresponding to each journal in the A-Z list. On journals homepages themselves, the icons appear in the image at the top right of the page, next to the existing email alerts icon.

For RSS alerts by subject, choose your subject on the ‘Browse Subjects‘ page, open the subject page and click the same icon at the top right of the page. The subject RSS feeds will alert you when new content is published in both books and journals in your chosen subject.

In all cases, clicking on the icon will open a new tab from where you can sign up for RSS feeds.

If you have any feedback or questions for us about these new feeds, please email us at: corefeedback@cambridge.org

If you’re not familiar with RSS feeds, there is a recently updated explanation here.

Please note that the RSS icon will not appear on journals which are no longer published, even if they have content hosted on Cambrdge Core, as these titles will no longer be providing any new content.

Re-posted from the Cambridge Core blog.

Nature Human Behaviour

New on ejournals@cambridge A-Z : Nature Human Behaviour.

From the Nature website for the journal:

“Launched in January 2017, Nature Human Behaviour is an online-only monthly journal dedicated to the best research into human behaviour from across the social and natural sciences. All editorial decisions are made by a team of full-time professional editors.”

Now available to the University of Cambridge electronically from volume 2 (2018) to present.

Access Nature Human Behaviour via the Journal Search or from this iDiscover record.

Image credit: “help” by rachel on Flickr – https://flic.kr/p/CNW8m

Nature Reviews Chemistry

New on ejournals@cambridge A-Z : Nature Reviews Chemistry.

From the Nature website for the journal:

Nature Reviews Chemistry is an online-only journal for the weekly publication of Reviews, Perspectives and Comments in all disciplines within chemistry…

“Our Reviews aim to be balanced and objective analyses of the selected topic – with descriptions of relevant scientific literature and discussions that are easy to grasp for recent graduates in any chemistry-related discipline, as well as informing principal investigators and industry-based research scientists of the latest advances. Reviews should provide the authors’ insight into future directions and their opinion of the major challenges faced by researchers in the field.

“Perspectives – as the name suggests – take a look at a topic from a slightly different angle. They may offer more personal viewpoints, explain the historical background to a topic, or discuss some of the social, ethical or environmental factors related to chemistry research in academia and industry.

“Our Comments address topical issues in chemistry — the aim is to cover subjects that are of interest to chemists generally that are not necessarily focussed on the results or practice of chemistry research. This may include, but is not limited to, discussions of education in chemistry and the practicalities of research outside the academic environment.”

Now available to the University of Cambridge electronically from volume 1 (2017) to present.

Access Nature Reviews Chemistry via the Journal Search or from the iDiscover record.

Image credit: “Chemistry” by Becky Johns on Flickr – https://flic.kr/p/7P2u91