Lucía Sapiña

Two Cultures Observatory, Mètode.

Journalism graduate by the Autonomous University of Barcelona and Masters Degree in History of Science and Science Communication by the University of Valencia. She is a member of the Two Cultures Observatory, a multidisciplinary research group of the University of Valencia that focuses on the links between journalism and science. Now her research is focused on the communication of cancer, both in press and social networks.

Maurizio Gotti. Photo: Martí Domínguez

Interview with Maurizio Gotti, linguist at the University of Bergamo, researcher on specialised discours
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Reporting biomedical research is not easy. On the one hand, research teams should be able to share their results in a coherent and comprehensible manner. In

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Francisca abad

After graduating in Medicine and finishing her PhD thesis, her lines of research focused on scientific information systems. We interview Francisca Abas for Mètode.
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Irene Yuste  In 2013 actor Michael Douglas said in an  interview that the tongue cancer he had suffered three years

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sao-portada

Lucía Sapiña Science in Valencia gathers great professionals and vast knowledge, but lacks better funding and a more

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Miguel Lorenzo Recently, Mètode published an article where we presented a list of the most followed scientists on Twitter, a text written by the staff

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TWITTER

Mètode Communicate science in 140 characters or less. Barely a headline or a catchy sentence to hook the

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Randy Schekman

Interview with Randy Schekman, cell biologist and Nobel Prize for Medicine 2013.
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Riken In early January, Nature published two papers (I and II) on mature cells that could acquire embryonic properties

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CERN One of the highest-profile scientists last year was, without a doubt, Peter Higgs. He won the Nobel

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