Magazine
September-October 1998

September-October 1998
Volume: 86 Number: 5
Tens of thousands of journals now transmit new knowledge at steeply rising costs, belying predictions that the Internet would allow great economies in scientific publishing. In "Free Internet Access to Traditional Journals," Thomas J. Walker draws on the experience of a small disciplinary society in considering ways that the Internet might allow investigators to make the literature of science open and accessible—without reliance on "toll booths." On the cover, collage artist Tom Sullivan ponders alternative futures.
In This Issue
- Astronomy
- Biology
- Communications
- Computer
- Engineering
- Evolution
- Mathematics
- Physics
- Policy
- Psychology
- Sociology
- Technology
Free Internet Access to Traditional Journals
Thomas J. Walker
Communications
Can scientists find ways to share published research without high cost? The experiences of one society suggest it can be done cheaply, even profitably
From Society to Genes with the Honey Bee
Gene Robinson
Biology
A combination of environmental, genetic, hormonal and neurobiological factors determine a bee's progression through a series of life stages
How the Ribosome Works
Joachim Frank
Biology
For over 40 years, scientists have studied the machine that synthesizes proteins. Yet, until recently, no one had "seen" the ribosome with any great clarity
How to Boil a Nucleus
Vic Viola, Kris Kwiatkowski
Astronomy Physics
Striving to understand the nuclear "liquid" formed in the core of a neutron star, experimenters use "soft explosions" to induce phase transitions in atomic nuclei
Scientists' Nightstand
A Theory Enthroned
Barry Cipra
Mathematics Review Scientists Nightstand
A review of The Queen of Mathematics: A Historically Motivated Guide to Number Theory, by Jay R. Goldman.
Nanoviews: Impossibility, The User Illusion and more . . .
The Editors
Communications Review Scientists Nightstand
Short takes on eleven books
A Theory Enthroned
Barry Cipra
Mathematics
DO NOT PUBLISH THIS -- IT IS A DUPLICATE OF A PREVIOUSLY NON-WORKING NODE (1094) A review of The Queen of Mathematics: A Historically Motivated Guide to Number Theory, by Jay R. Goldman.