Researcher app is an all-in-one tool that would assist you to stay on top of your field. Here are 5 main reasons why this free app could help you succeed in your academic journey.
5 reasons why you should use Researcher
Aug 9, 2022 4:41:00 PM / posted in academic publishing, marketing, authors, industry research, wechat, Researcher Live, early career researcher
NEVER MISS A MSRH PAPER WITH RESEARCHER: LEARN HOW
Jul 7, 2022 12:28:36 PM / posted in academic publishing, event, imperial
How to Get Published in Academia - Introducing our Early Career Researcher Live series with Edanz
Dec 2, 2021 10:49:58 AM / posted in news, academic publishing, Researcher Live, Edanz
Early Career Researchers vs The Paper
I vividly remember setting off to write my first research paper. If you haven’t written a paper yet, here’s what it resembles: it’s a little bit like being handed a scroll in the lost language of Atlantis and asked to do the Queen’s taxes. There is a general sense that you should ‘just know’ what you’re doing, even though no two research papers are really the same, and so the criteria for evaluating one might not apply to another.
Researcher and Edanz join forces to help early career researchers enhance their skills
Dec 1, 2021 6:21:58 PM / posted in academic publishing, Researcher Live, Edanz, series, early career researcher
“News & Blogs”: everything you need to know about Researcher’s new feature
Jul 22, 2021 4:20:53 PM / posted in news, academic publishing, authors
Global Research on Researcher: Gaurav Singh, India
Mar 27, 2020 12:46:24 PM / posted in academic publishing, authors
As part of our Global Researchers series we’ve been in contact with Researcher users to learn more about their research, the challenges they face, and what benefits they’ve derived from Researcher.
Speaking with researchers to understand the reasoning behind their research is instrumental for publishers. These small insights aid the publishers of the paper in understanding how they affect the day to day lives of researchers, their colleagues and their research.
Researcher’s Featured Authors: Academic Conferences with Rik Tykwinski
Mar 23, 2020 4:33:33 PM / posted in academic publishing, authors
Why do researchers do their research and how did they arrive at their academic niche? As part of our ‘Featured Authors’ series, we previously spoke with Alison Heard from the University of Calgary who discussed her paper as well as the challenges faced throughout the entire research, writing and publishing process.
As a speaker at the University of Oxford’s Curo-Pi3 conference in 2018, we interviewed Professor Rik Tykwinski. He shared his insights into what young academics and PhDs should do when attending academic conferences, what academics get up to when they attend international conferences, and how simple curiosity can be the driving force behind academic research.
Global Research on Researcher: Jefferson Bitencourt, Brazil
Mar 19, 2020 4:45:35 PM / posted in academic publishing, authors
As part of our Global Researchers series, we’ve been in contact with Researcher users to learn more about their research, the challenges they face, and what benefits they’ve derived from Researcher.
Global Research on Researcher: Hashim Muhammad Suleiman, Nigeria
Mar 16, 2020 9:17:51 AM / posted in academic publishing, authors
Why do researchers undertake research and how does Researcher impact this process? With the sheer volume of papers being published across a whole spectrum of subjects, it can be difficult to understand the motivations and behaviours of individual researchers. Yet learning how academics and researchers ‘do what they do’ and understanding how the embracing of new technologies is driving scientific innovation is important for the entire scientific publishing community.
Researcher’s Featured Authors: A Discussion On Sensorimotor Effects with Alison Heard
Mar 11, 2020 3:23:01 PM / posted in academic publishing, authors
Since Researcher launched in 2017, we have displayed millions of paper abstracts across multiple subjects and disciplines to over one million researchers and academics globally. We could analyse streams of data that pinpoint trends in academia and scientific publishing, but this fails, from an individualistic perspective, to uncover one of academia’s most important questions - ‘why?’. Why do researchers do their research and how did they arrive at their academic niche?