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The misconception that all frogs, or at least all those found in North America, make this sound comes from its extensive use in Hollywood films. [78] [79] There is no credible evidence that the candiru, a South American parasitic catfish, can swim up a human urethra if one urinates in the water in which it lives. The sole documented case of ...
Many mathematics journals ask authors of research papers and expository articles to list subject codes from the Mathematics Subject Classification in their papers. The subject codes so listed are used by the two major reviewing databases, Mathematical Reviews and Zentralblatt MATH .
Journal of Online Mathematics and its Applications; Journal of Physics A; Journal of Recreational Mathematics; Journal of Statistical Mechanics: Theory and Experiment; Journal of Symbolic Computation; Journal of Symbolic Logic; Journal of the American Mathematical Society; Journal of the American Statistical Association
Australasian Journal of Educational Technology; British Journal of Educational Technology; Bulletin of Science, Technology & Society; Computers in Education; Educational Technology & Society; IEEE Transactions on Learning Technologies; International Journal of Mobile and Blended Learning; Journal of Computer-Mediated Communication; Virtual ...
Notices of the American Mathematical Society is the membership journal of the American Mathematical Society (AMS), published monthly except for the combined June/July issue. The first volume appeared in 1953. Each issue of the magazine since January 1995 is available in its entirety on the journal web site.
Memoirs of the American Mathematical Society is a mathematical journal published in six volumes per year, totalling approximately 33 individually bound numbers, by the American Mathematical Society. It is intended to carry papers on new mathematical research between 80 and 200 pages in length.
In this the American Mathematical Monthly fulfills a different role from that of typical mathematical research journals. The American Mathematical Monthly is the most widely read mathematics journal in the world, according to records on JSTOR. [2] [3] Tables of contents with article abstracts from 1997–2010 are available online.
The Mathematical Intelligencer publishes a variety of contributions on and about mathematics. [9] In addition to articles of a strictly mathematical nature, shorter “notes,” poetry, short fiction, and the occasional interview, the journal currently features regular columns on the history of mathematics (“Years Ago” overseen by Jemma Lorenat), humor (“Mathematically Bent” written by ...