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The phrase "scientific press" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to refer to publications, journals, or media outlets that focus on scientific topics and research. Example: "The findings were published in a reputable scientific press, ensuring that they reached a wide audience of researchers and academics." Alternatives: "academic publishing" or "scholarly press."
Exact(24)
These protests occurred under the radar of most of the medical and scientific press.
The design called for asbestos cement panels as duct covers; Hodson had read in the scientific press that asbestos was hazardous and fought against its use.
Before that, N.F.L. officials and the league's committee on brain injuries discredited any suggestion in the popular or scientific press that concussions were any more than the "dings" that players became accustomed to calling them.
Hulking studio cameras and banks of harsh spotlights were trained on the table, and it therefore seemed entirely normal when a real TV presenter strode on stage to take charge of what was, ostensibly, a scientific press conference.
"I was expecting the texture to be more soft," said Hanni Rützler of the Future Food Studio, who researches food trends and was the first to get a taste of the synthetic beef hamburger at a lavish event in London on Monday that bore more resemblance to a TV set than a scientific press conference.
Keep an eye on the opportunities advertised in the scientific press and contact agencies.
Similar(35)
Evelyn Fox Keller (2000) points out an irony which has ensued from the HGP's successes: even though gene-talk is more pervasive than ever in the popular and scientific presses, the concept of the gene, whether defined structurally or functionally, has been "radically undermined" (p. 5).
There are possibilities of linking AGRIS with science blogs and automatically updated feeds, and of further strengthening the relationship between AGRIS and AgriFeeds (http://www.agrifeeds.org/) (for example, http://esciencenews.com and other feeds from scientific presses and universities).
I've been catching up on my magazine reading and I came across a fascinating piece in a recent issue of New Scientist, which is usually a few steps ahead of the non-scientific press.
In contrast, studies with preliminary findings were defined as those quoted in newspapers that had not yet been published in a journal but had been presented in scientific or press meetings, such as conferences convened by professional or academic organizations, or those initiated by the general press, private institutions, commercial organizations and public relations companies.
The publications include a recent paper in The International Journal of General Medicine, published electronically by Dovepress, essentially a scientific vanity press.
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Write better and faster with AI suggestions while staying true to your unique style.
Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com