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  2. Biological illustration - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Biological_illustration

    Many details must be discussed between the artist and scientist before a final drawing can be completed, and additional preliminary drawings must be prepared in order to work out aesthetic details. Pen and ink (often a flex nib fountain pen) line illustrations are clean, crisp, clear, and inexpensive to produce, making them ideal for biological ...

  3. List of academic databases and search engines - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_academic_databases...

    Provides an RDF data set about scientific publications and related entities, such as authors, institutions, journals, and fields of study. The data set is based on the Microsoft Academic Graph. [106] [107] Free University of Freiburg: MyScienceWork: Science Database includes more than 70 million scientific publications and 12 million patents. Free

  4. Illustration - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Illustration

    Illustration by Jessie Willcox Smith (1863–1935). An illustration is a decoration, interpretation, or visual explanation of a text, concept, or process, [1] designed for integration in print and digitally published media, such as posters, flyers, magazines, books, teaching materials, animations, video games and films.

  5. Scientific Study of Literature - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scientific_Study_of_Literature

    Scientific Study of Literature is a biannual peer-reviewed academic journal published by John Benjamins Publishing Company since 2011. It covers research in literary study.The editor-in-chief is David Ian Hanauer (Indiana University of Pennsylvania), founding editor and editor-in-chief from 2011 to 2013 was Willie van Peer (Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich).

  6. Scientific literature - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scientific_literature

    Scientific publications on the World Wide Web (although e.g. scientific journals are now commonly published on the web). Books, technical reports, pamphlets, and working papers issued by individual researchers or research organizations on their own initiative; these are sometimes organized into a series.

  7. Scientific writing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scientific_writing

    Style conventions for scientific writing vary, with different focuses by different style guides on the use of passive versus active voice, personal pronoun use, and article sectioning. Much scientific writing is focused on scientific reports, traditionally structured as an abstract, introduction, methods, results, conclusions, and acknowledgments.

  8. March of Progress - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/March_of_Progress

    Riley Black, writing for Scientific American, argues that the idea of a "march of progress", as depicted in the 1965 Time-Life illustration, dates back to the medieval great chain of being and the 19th century idea of the "missing link" in the fossil record. In her view, to understand life and evolution, "step one involves casting out types of ...

  9. Literature-based discovery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Literature-based_discovery

    An example diagram of Swanson linking, usinc the ABC paradigm. Literature-based discovery (LBD), also called literature-related discovery (LRD) is a form of knowledge extraction and automated hypothesis generation that uses papers and other academic publications (the "literature") to find new relationships between existing knowledge (the "discovery").