Ten Simple Rules for Selecting a Postdoctoral Position
Philip E. Bourne,Iddo Friedberg +1 more
TL;DR: Here are ten simple rules to help you make the best decisions on a research project and the laboratory in which to carry it out.
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Abstract: You are a PhD candidate and your thesis defense is already in sight. You have decided you would like to continue with a postdoctoral position rather than moving into industry as the next step in your career (that decision should be the subject of another “Ten Simple Rules”). Further, you already have ideas for the type of research you wish to pursue and perhaps some ideas for specific projects. Here are ten simple rules to help you make the best decisions on a research project and the laboratory in which to carry it out.
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Ten simple rules for getting published.
TL;DR: The student council of the International Society for Computational Biology asked me to present my thoughts on getting published in the field of computational biology at the Intelligent Systems in Molecular Biology conference held in Detroit in late June of 2005, and the advice I gave that day is modified and present as ten rules for getting published.
Ten simple rules for making good oral presentations.
TL;DR: What it takes to make a good oral presentation is considered; the rules apply broadly across disciplines and are certainly important from the perspective of this readership.
A hybrid anomaly-based intrusion detection system to improve time complexity in the Internet of Energy environment
TL;DR: A hybrid anomaly-based IDS that can be installed at any networked site of the IoE architecture, such as Advanced Metering Infrastructure (AMI), to counteract security attacks and achieves the highest accuracy in comparison with the existing approaches.
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Ten Simple Rules for Doing Your Best Research, According to Hamming
TL;DR: The thoughts presented are not the authors' own; rather, they condense and annotate some excellent and timeless suggestions made by the mathematician Richard Hamming two decades ago on how to do “first-class research”.
Considerations for higher efficiency and productivity in research activities
Diego A. Forero,Jason H. Moore +1 more
TL;DR: Several key considerations are suggested for higher efficiency and productivity in academic and research activities and some of them could be innate and others could be transferable.