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Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press to Launch CSH Protocols
For Immediate Release
Contact:
Wayne Manos
manos@cshl.edu
516 422 4009
www.cshprotocols.org
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press to Launch CSH Protocols.
Community-Driven, Interactive Methods Database set for Release
June, 2006.
Cold Spring Harbor, New York (March 7, 2006) -- Cold Spring
Harbor Laboratory Press today announced the launch of Cold Spring
Harbor Protocols (CSH Protocols), a new, interactive online
methods database. Scheduled for release in June 2006, CSH
Protocols is being developed by the Press, publisher of the
world's best-selling laboratory manuals, in association with
HighWire Press of Stanford University.
"Researchers have traveled to Cold Spring Harbor for decades to
learn innovative laboratory techniques and share their own
discoveries," said Dr. James D. Watson, Chancellor of the
Laboratory. "Now they can do the same online and expect to
benefit from the same high level of technical expertise and
innovation."
Dr. John Inglis, Executive Director of the Press, described CSH
Protocols as "a unique site that combines the best methods from
our hands-on courses and manuals with instruction in newly
emerging techniques." Inglis added, "As a not-for-profit science
publisher committed to research and education, we can offer
scientists an authoritative site uniquely tailored to their needs
- a place where they can search for and store valuable
information, annotate it, share it with colleagues, and
contribute improvements and updates for the benefit of the entire
scientific community."
Dr. Michael Ronemus, previously a senior postdoctoral fellow at
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory and a former Associate Editor of
Nature Genetics, is the Executive Editor of CSH Protocols.
"Technology development is the lifeblood of experimental
science," said Ronemus, "and as a division of a very active
research center, Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press has the
inside knowledge, the resources, and the technological
sophistication to create a carefully edited and structured
database with state-of-the-art online features not found
elsewhere."
At launch, CSH Protocols will feature protocols in cell and molecular
biology, genetics, protein science, imaging, and bioinformatics. Its
coverage will continue to widen with the continuous addition of new
protocols from a variety of notable sources. Each protocol will be
presented step-by-step, with the clarity and attention to
troubleshooting and advice that have made Cold Spring Harbor's
laboratory manuals, such as Molecular Cloning, Antibodies, and Cells,
best-sellers worldwide. The protocols will be web-linked to online
resources that will help researchers strengthen their practical skills
and build new ones.
CSH Protocols will be fully searchable, with a unique taxonomy
for browsing and many features that can be customized by users.
The collection will have more than 900 protocols by year-end 2006
and will be continuously expanded, updated, and annotated by the
authors and users of the techniques. A moderated, interactive
function will enable users to ask questions, discuss their own
experiences, and contribute suggestions. New protocols will be
added monthly and many leading laboratories and researchers have
agreed to contribute their own methods. By signing up for the
site's alerting services, registered users will keep abreast of
the latest developments in their particular fields of interest.
CSH Protocols will be available via institutional site license. Prior
to official launch, librarians and scientists will have ample
opportunity to explore the database and experience its outstanding
utility and functions. Further details can be found at
www.cshprotocols.org
About Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Established more than a century ago, Cold Spring Harbor
Laboratory, headquartered in Cold Spring Harbor, New York, is a
private, non profit basic research and educational institution,
with some 330 scientists who conduct groundbreaking research in
cancer, neurobiology, plant genetics, and bioinformatics. The
Laboratory is one of eight National Cancer Institute designated
basic research centers in the United States. It is recognized
internationally for its educational activities, which include
scientific meetings and courses that attract more than 8,000
scientists to the campus each year. Its Watson School of
Biological Sciences offers an innovative Ph.D. program. In
addition, the Laboratory trains college undergraduates through
the Undergraduate Research Program, high school students through
the Partners for the Future Program, and grade-school children
through its Nature Study Program summer camp. The Laboratory
also operates the Dolan DNA Learning Center, which offers
laboratory workshops to science teachers and students. Other
components of the Laboratory include Cold Spring Harbor
Laboratory Press, the Banbury Conference Center, and the Cancer
Genome Research Center.
About Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press
Symposium in Quantitative Biology, Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Press is now the largest of the five educational divisions of the
Laboratory, with more than 200 books in print, 5 research
journals, and a variety of multimedia and online publications.
Its 55 staff members work within the Laboratory and in several
locations in the United States and abroad. Its publications
assist working scientists, graduate and undergraduate students,
and the general public through the mission of the Press to foster
and financially support the Laboratory's commitment to the
advance and spread of scientific knowledge.
CSH Protocols Subject Coverage
Antibodies
Bioinformatics / Genomics
Cell Biology
Chromatography
DNA Delivery / Gene Transfer
Electrophoresis
Genetics
High Throughput Analysis
Imaging / Microscopy
Immunology
Laboratory Organisms
Molecular Biology
Neuroscience
Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR)
Plant Biology
Proteins and Proteomics
RNA Interference (RNAi)
Small Interfering RNA (siRNA)
Stem Cells
Transgenic Technology
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