Publishing your research? How to avoid predatory journals
Predatory Journals prioritise self-interest at the expense of research integrity and often use aggressive solicitation practices. How do you spot one?
Take a look at our new video: https://youtu.be/sIbpmkh5ORs
Bumblebees tunnel run experiment
Evidence for socially influenced and potentially actively coordinated cooperation by bumblebees—new in Proceedings B this week: https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/10.1098/rspb.2024.0055
New research led by Dr. Olli Loukola at the University of Oulu reveals the intricate nature of bumblebees' cooperative behaviour. The study challenges traditional views, suggesting that bumblebees' cooperation is socially influenced rather than solely individual effort. When faced with delays, bees exhibited slower task initiation, indicating social factors at play. Observations also hint at a basic understanding of partner roles in cooperative tasks. These findings shed light on animal social behaviour and open avenues for further exploration into the complexities of cooperation among bumblebees and other invertebrates.
Chicks can solve Molyneux's problem
Since 1688, philosophers and scientists have wondered about Molyneux’s question: if a person born blind learns by touch to distinguish between a cube and a sphere, would they immediately recognise these objects by sight once their vision is restored? These Biology Letters authors tested baby chicks. After hatching in darkness, chicks experienced either tactile smooth or tactile bumpy stimuli. Then, they were tested in a visual recognition task. At their very first visual experience, chicks exposed to tactile smooth stimuli approached the visual smooth stimulus significantly more than chicks previously exposed to tactile bumpy stimuli. Chicks show that cross-modal recognition doesn’t require multisensory experience. https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/10.1098/rsbl.2024.0025
Announcing the winning entries of the Royal Society Publishing Photography competition 2023
After a 4-year absence due to the global pandemic, the Royal Society Publishing Photography competition returned in 2023 to showcase the amazing images our scientists captured in the areas of Astronomy, Behaviour, Earth Science and Climatology, Ecology and Environmental Science, and Microimaging. We're excited to announce our winning entries, showcased in the video below, including Microimaging and overall winner, Martian landscape by Irina Petrova Adamatzky.
We are grateful to our judges Professor Jon Blundy FRS, Professor Duncan Mackay and Professor Ulrike Muller for whittling several hundred entries down to our 10 finalists, and hope you enjoy seeing the nebulas, fault lines and ocean creatures they found along the way.
For more information, please visit: https://royalsociety.org/journals/publishing-activities/photo-competition/ #RSPphotocomp
What is open science?
Increasing the use of open science practices can only make scientific practice better and accelerate the rate of knowledge discovery. Our new video explains what open science is and why it's so important: https://youtu.be/8fGRN5fa-Ks
Welcome to Science in the making
We're excited to launch Science in the making, our permanent digital archive portal containing 30,000 items of archival material and 250,000 individual images related to the publication of the Society’s scientific journals.
The website presents the complex material that lies behind published articles including reviews by Darwin, correspondence by Newton, astronomical observations, electrical experiments, anatomical illustrations and more, drawing from every branch of science.
Explore: https://makingscience.royalsociety.org/
Could you be a Guest Editor of Philosophical Transactions?
We are always open to receiving new theme issue proposals for #PhilTransA and #PhilTransB. Learn about the benefits of guest editing for the longest-running science journal in the world: http://bit.ly/GE-benefits
Investigating the muscle power behind seahorse feeding
Investigating the muscle power behind seahorse feeding—new in Proceedings B this week: https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/full/10.1098/rspb.2023.0520
Fast animal movements are limited by available muscle power. To overcome these limitations, seahorses evolved a unique mechanism of dual elastic energy storage, allowing them to execute extremely fast head motions accompanied by the generation of fast water flows into their mouth. The joint actuation and coordination of these movements result from the design of their skull bones, tendons, and muscles. This mechanism allow these otherwise slow fishes to specialize on capturing highly-evasive prey, which they suck it into their mouth before it can escape.
Celebrating women in science
To celebrate International Women's Day, we're highlighting the lives and scientific achievements of women associated with the Royal Society. Including crystallographer Dame Kathleen Lonsdale, who proved the structure of benzene, and Dr. Elsie Widdowson, who played an integral role in making vitamin supplements a standard part of World War II food rations.
By a whisker: the sensory role of vibrissae in hovering-flight in nectarivorous bats
New research published in Proceedings of the Royal Society B suggests that some bats use their whiskers to guide their approach to nectar-bearing flowers.
Wild-caught nectivorous bats were trained to feed from a glass flower and their approach recorded. After trimming their vibrissae (long, stiff whiskers) bats approached the flower differently. Analysis of museum specimens found nectivorous bats possess longer whiskers than non-nectivorous species, suggesting vibrissae length and sensory adaptation as another co-evolution of plant and pollinator.
Read the article here: https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/10.1098/rspb.2022.2085
Could ants help support early detection of cancer?
In a new study published on Proceedings B, silky ants were trained to associate the odour of urine from mice grafted with human breast cancer, derived from a consenting patient, with a sugar reward. Ants spent 20% more time in the vicinity of the learned odour than with urine from control mice. The study demonstrates that ants reliably detect tumour cues in mice urine and have the potential to act as efficient and inexpensive cancer bio-detectors.
Read the article:
https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/10.1098/rspb.2022.1962
We're excited to announce the launch of the Notes and Records Essay Award prize competition for early career researchers.
Notes and Records reports on current research and archival activities throughout the field of history of science, technology and medicine. The Essay Award is open to researchers in the history of science who have completed a postgraduate degree within the last five years. The previously unpublished essay of up to 12,000 words should be based on original research and it may relate to any aspect of the history of science, technology and medicine in any period. First prize wins £500, second prize £250, runners up £100 and the winner is published in the journal.
Find out more:
https://royalsocietypublishing.org/rsnr/essay-award
This video outlines 7 Royal Society peer review processes that support research integrity.
By reviewing for the Royal Society journals you are supporting a society publisher and you have various options to gain recognition:
• Opting for publication in an annual citable article listing reviewers
• Choosing to record your review in the Web of Science Reviewer Recognition Service e.g. stating that you have reviewed for ‘Proceedings B’ in 2022
• Deciding to include this in your ORCID record too
• Signing your review if published alongside an article (some journals)
• Our best reviewers are often given the opportunity join our prestigious editorial boards
Find out more about reviewing for us:
https://royalsociety.org/journals/reviewers/