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The database contains the Abstract Journal which is distributed, subscribed to, and read by scientists in 60 countries, with more than 330 publications covering all fields of basic and applied sciences. In 2002, it was also noted for having more than 240 databases on science and technology, economics and medicine.
Russian sources make up 30% of the deposited scientific works. The database produces documents that have a bibliographal description, keywords, a heading and an abstract. Primary source abstracts are mostly in Russian. [1] Another organizational structure of the VINITI database is its divisions into 29 thematic fragments. Also, there are over ...
Many Russian scientists and university graduates left Russia for Europe or United States; this migration is known as a "brain drain". In the 2000s, on the wave of a new economic boom, the situation in the Russian science and technology has improved, and the government launched a campaign to encourage modernisation and innovation.
Mount Sinai Journal of Medicine: Medicine: John Wiley & Sons: English: 1934–2012 Movement Disorders: Neurology: Wiley-Liss: English: 1986–present Myanmar Medical Journal: Medicine: Myanmar Medical Association: English: 1953–present Nano Biomedicine and Engineering: Medicine: Open-Access House of Science and Technology: English: 2009–present
In Russia's far northeastern Yakutia region, local scientists are performing an autopsy on a wolf frozen in permafrost for around 44,000 years, a find they said was the first of its kind. Found by ...
The Russian Academy practically lost a generation of people born from the mid-1960s to mid-1970s; this age category is now underrepresented in all research institutes. In the 2000s, the situation in the Russian science and technology has improved, the government announced a modernization campaign.
In 1952 L. V. Radushkevich and V. M. Lukyanovich published clear images of 50 nanometer diameter tubes made of carbon in the Soviet Journal of Physical Chemistry. This discovery was largely unnoticed, as the article was published in the Russian language, and Western scientists' access to Soviet press was limited during the Cold War.
The purpose of the centre is to unite the efforts of scientists and practitioners in the fight against cancer, to create conditions for the introduction of the latest technologies in the field of cancer treatment, to ensure the breakthrough of Russian science and practice in the creation of nuclear medicine. [1]