Sentence examples for unrestricted publishing from inspiring English sources

Exact(1)

One thing we are sure of there is no such thing as unrestricted publishing.

Similar(58)

As in many other applications, the rapid proliferation and unrestricted Web-based publishing of health-related content have made finding pertinent and useful healthcare information increasingly difficult.

The time period for the search in which the papers were published was unrestricted, therefore the period is for papers published up to and including 2016.

No writer who gets published is unrestricted; each is restricted by his character, the dreams, the schemes, and the oddities of his publishers & editors.

The channel claims a "royalty-free, non-exclusive, perpetual, unrestricted, worldwide license" to publish your material, plus the right to reproduce and use your content, at no cost, across all future technologies.

Another example of this trend is that charitable organizations such as Wellcome Trust included in its funding policy the support to unrestricted access to the published researches in order to reach the widest possible audience.

Authors have no objection in granting and assigning the Annals of Intensive Care Journal unrestricted right to reproduce, publish, and distribute this manuscript in all forms including electronic form either offline or online media.

Last year 11,000 scientists signed a pledge stating that they would publish only in journals that "grant unrestricted free distribution rights" to original research they have published.

Although initially looked upon with skepticism, the open access publishing model, which provides an unrestricted and free access to scientific and scholarly work, has become increasingly accepted as a viable model, with more than 7, 000 open access journals now operating worldwide [ 2].

Both readers semi-quantitatively assessed the image quality of each coronary segment on a four-point ranking scale as previously published [ 1]: 1, excellent (no artifacts, unrestricted evaluation); 2, good (minor artifacts, good diagnostic quality); 3, adequate (moderate artifacts, still acceptable and diagnostic), and 4, not assessable (severe artifacts impairing accurate evaluation).

In a study published in 1991, evaluating saline or glucose as vehicle for oxytocin, one study group received a mean of 710 ± 640 ml of intravenous glucose. 2 A more recent work, published in 2005, studied the effect of unrestricted oral carbohydrate intake.

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