CURRENT CONTENTS/General Science
Celebrating 25 Years of The Scientist
seoulfric
2011. 11. 18. 14:41
October 2011
Table of Contents
Cover Story
Our silver anniversary issue celebrates a quarter century of covering major advances in the life sciences—some in fields that didn’t even exist when we first went to press—and looks ahead to future research milestones.
Features
By Walter F. Bodmer
In celebration of major conceptual advances in biology and the revolutions just over the horizon
Comment
Read about beginnings of neuroscience through the eyes of Nobel Prize winner Eric Kandel, and how researchers today envision the future of the field.
Comment
Early sequencing evolved into the publication of genomes for myriad species, including our own, within the span of two and a half decades. Bioinformatician Stephen Friend opines on what’s in store as the next quarter century of omics takes shape.
Comment
Explore the past and present of US research funding, compare the investment priorities of the United States and Europe, and read an opinion from Research!America president Mary Woolley on what scientists need to do to secure the financial future of the US research enterprise.
Comment
At the nanoscale old materials acquire new properties that International Institute for Nanotechnology Director Chad Mirkin thinks will change the way medicine is practiced.
Comment
Learn about the field’s first genetic circuits and read forecasts by George M. Church and J. Craig Venter of a future where man-made organisms pump out novel fuels, drugs, and therapies.
Comment
Ecosystems are failing and extinction rates are soaring. Thomas E. Lovejoy and Edward O. Wilson weigh in on why cataloging existing species, discovering new ones, and maintaining a balanced and diverse global ecosystem are critical for ensuring a habitable environment for all.
Comment
Departments
Editorial
By Mary Beth Aberlin
To the great scientific leaps witnessed during our first 25 years, and the game changers yet to come.
By Eugene Garfield
The publication I launched a quarter century ago has come further than anyone ever expected.
Notebook
By Cristina Luiggi
The mother of disabled twins doggedly pursued the root of her children’s illness and found it in their genome profiles.
By Richard P. Grant
Epigenetic perturbations could jump-start heritable variation.
By Jessica P. Johnson
Dried plant specimens reveal the origin of an insect pest that has spread throughout Europe.
By Jef Akst
As ecotourism becomes more popular, wild apes are succumbing to human diseases.
Speaking of Science
A selection of quotes from past issues of The Scientist
The Literature
By Richard P. Grant
Editor’s choice in Ecology
By Jessica P. Johnson
Editor’s Choice in Cell Biology
By Jessica P. Johnson
Editor’s choice in Plant Biology
Reading Frames
By William McEwan
The promise of viruses as biotech tools will help molecular biology fulfill its true potential.
By Darlene Francis and Daniela Kaufer
Researchers studying differences in how individuals respond to stress are finding that genes are malleable and environments can be deterministic.
Lab Tools
By Jeffrey M. Perkel
Three gene jockeys share their thoughts on past and future tools of the trade.
Bio Business
By Tia Ghose
From iPhone apps to cloud computing, everyday digital technologies are helping advance drug discovery, conduct clinical trials, and improve medical care.
Foundations
By Walter F. Bodmer
An early advocate of the sequencing of the human genome reflects on his own predictions from 1986.
By Jef Akst
Twenty-five years later, the magazine is still hitting many of the same key discussion points of science.
Contributors
Meet some of the people featured in the October 2011 issue of The Scientist.
F1000 Reports
Biology Reports
By Bruce N. Cronstein
By Carol A. Barnes
Medical Reports
By Claudia Sommer & Frank Birklein
By Xiaoyun Shen, Frank M. Orson & Thomas R. Kosten