Description
A preprint is {Quote} a way in which a manuscript containing scientific results can be rapidly communicated from one scientist, or a group of scientists, to the entire scientific community {end of Quote}.
Reference: What are preprints? (2016)
FAQ
The big benefits of a preprint are that you obtain a quick credit about the work done and also a citable source for your research. Nowadays even the NIH accept to cite preprints on their grant applications (see: http://www.sciencemag.org/news/2017/03/nih-enables-investigators-include-draft-preprints-grant-proposals). The second advantage is the immediate feedback that you can receive from the scientific community. A submitted article will be review by two or three experts in the field but a preprint can be read and discuss by anyone in the world with access to a computer. This feedback is usually public and promote the debate about the data and the ideas published in the preprint. Finally, it gains a lot of visibility without waiting for the usually long time that takes to publish in an indexed journal. This allow you to promote your research easily and also obtain some citations since the first moment that the preprint is out in the web.
Question
Answer
Question?
Q
MitoPedia topics: "MitoFit Preprint Arch" is not in the list (Enzyme, Medium, Inhibitor, Substrate and metabolite, Uncoupler, Sample preparation, Permeabilization agent, EAGLE, MitoGlobal Organizations, MitoGlobal Centres, ...) of allowed values for the "MitoPedia topic" property. MitoFit Preprint Arch"MitoFit Preprint Arch" is not in the list (Enzyme, Medium, Inhibitor, Substrate and metabolite, Uncoupler, Sample preparation, Permeabilization agent, EAGLE, MitoGlobal Organizations, MitoGlobal Centres, ...) of allowed values for the "MitoPedia topic" property.