Journal of Visualized Experiments

Welcome

JoVE in the news

123456789

CTV National News

Scientists Upload Research to YouTube-inspired Journal

Published: 01/15/2012
Type: Press
Language:

"A science journal that broke the mold of academic publishing with a YouTube-inspired approach to sharing new studies is celebrating its fifth year with a growing Web audience. The Journal of Visualized Experiments, or JoVE, is an online, peer-reviewed and indexed scientific journal that highlights the latest research on everything from plankton cells to human diseases."

Cornell Chronicle

Study: Tomato, wine byproducts in filters could make cigarettes less toxic

Published: 01/09/2012
Type: Press
Language:

"Researchers from the lab of Jack H. Freed, the Frank and Robert Laughlin Professor of Physical Chemistry, have demonstrated that lycopene and grape seed extract literally stuffed into a conventional cigarette filter drastically lowers the amount of cancer-causing agents passing through. Their research is published in the Jan. 2 issue of the Journal of Visualized Experiments (JoVE)."

MacLeans: On Campus

Scientific journal is a lot like YouTube

Published: 12/07/2011
Type: Press
Language: English

"Are you tired of reading textbooks and journal articles? Imagine if you could research your lab report or learn an experimental technique by watching a YouTube video. I just learned that you basically can, thanks to the Journal of Visualized Experiments."

University of Saskatchewan On Campus News

Peer-Reviewed Publishing Goes Online

Published: 11/18/2011
Type: Press
Language:

"What JoVE does is publish research online accompanied by video. For Dumonceaux, a research scientist with Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada and adjunct professor in the Department of Veterinary Microbiology, explaining his work in front of a camera “was a different way to spend a day but there’s nothing like it for people trying to reconstruct a lab protocol. It’s a thousand times better than reading the materials and methods section of a journal article.”

New Scientist TV

Jellyfish strokes come to life with laser vision

Published: 11/10/2011
Type: Press
Language:

"A night dive isn't usually ideal for spotting marine life, unless you're using a new underwater laser imaging device. The SCUVA system shown in this video, developed by bioengineers Kakani Katija of the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution in Falmouth, Massachusetts and John Dabiri from the California Institute of Technology, works best in darkness. In this clip, it's being used to visualise the wake produced by jellyfish."

Scientific American Blogs: Symbiartic

I Heart Copepods. You should, too.

Published: 11/04/2011
Type: Press
Language:

"Dr. Kakani Katija and her colleagues published a paper this week in JOVE that shows off a cool new device they’ve developed to record fluid motion caused by the movements of animals in their native habitats using a laser and a hand held video recording device they’ve dubbed SCUVA (self-contained underwater velocimetry apparatus)."

The New York Times: Dot Earth Blog

Fostering Insights by Engaging the Whole Brain

Published: 10/19/2011
Type: Press
Language:

"I put out the challenge there (and now repeat it here) to young data-visualization wizards to find ways to envision, literally, that vague but vital concept called public health. There are signs of progress in this area. When the New England Journal of Medicine uses an animated data set to convey shifting patterns of obesity in a community, you know something’s afoot. Now there’s a peer-reviewed publication, the Journal of Visualized Experiments, devoted to conveying findings and methods using video."

The Tree of Life

Open Access from the Perspective of an Academic Journal

Published: 10/03/2011
Type: Press
Language:

"I really like the concept behind JOVE - high quality videos of experimental protocols. Publications in JOVE were initially freely available to all (see my 2008 post about JOVE here). Alas, a few years ago, things changed with the introduction of a subscription model. This saddened many out there, myself included, since JOVE was a wonderful addition to the collection of freely available scientific resources. I wish they had been able to avoid this, but it seems that they could not. Katherine Scott from JOVE explains their side of the story below:"

Drosophila neurogenetics course. Uganda 2011

Good news for scientist in developing countries!

Published: 09/29/2011
Type: Press
Language:

"Visualizing the experiments rather than trying to reproduce them from the often brief materials & methods section of papers is the best way to be able to reproduce previous experiments and set-up new techniques in a lab. This becomes particularly important in developing countries, where learning cutting-edge experimental techniques, whether via courses or by visiting laboratories with the desired expertise, is often very difficult."

Science in Action

Show and Tell— Sharing Science by Video

Published: 09/29/2011
Type: Press
Language:

"The Journal of Visualized Experiments (JoVE) makes hands-on science available by video. Real scientists demonstrate their experiments on line to accompany their publications. A picture being worth a thousand words, and a video being worth at least a thousand pictures, this novel channel gives fellow researchers (and budding scientists!) around the world clearer access to experimental procedures. Now JoVE is offering free access to developing-country researchers."

sciencebase

JoVE Around the World

Published: 09/29/2011
Type: Press
Language:

"JoVE is hoping to address scientific information inequality across the globe and has now made free subscriptions to Journal of Visualized Experiments through the HINARI initiative to developing nations in South America, Asia and Africa."

Nature

Learning Tools: Visual Aids

Published: 09/28/2011
Type: Press
Language:

"Video tutorials save not only time and effort from mentors, but also money and even travel, as Moshe Pritsker realized. As a PhD student working on stem cells at Princeton University in New Jersey, Pritsker was asked to recreate a method of culturing embryonic stem cells that had been reported by researchers in Edinburgh, UK. “I tried to follow the steps in an article,” he says. But try as he might, the experiment wouldn't work."

123456789