Preprints from 2025
Table of contents
Preprints -explanation-
What is a preprint?
A preprint is a full and complete draft of a research manuscript that authors upload and share on a public preprint platform before undergoing formal peer review.
What are the key points about preprints?
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Definition: A preprint represents the entire research paper, including methods, results, and conclusions. Authors share it publicly to disseminate their findings rapidly.
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Purpose:
- Rapid Dissemination: Unlike traditional journal publishing, which can take months or even years, preprints allow researchers to share their work immediately.
- Feedback and Validation: By posting preprints, authors receive critical feedback from the scientific community. This feedback helps validate, challenge, and improve their work.
- DOI: Most preprints receive a digital object identifier (DOI), making them citable in other research papers.
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Impact of Preprints:
- Changing Publishing Landscape: Preprints are transforming the publishing world, providing a more accessible and collaborative approach to scientific communication.
In summary, preprints empower researchers to share their work swiftly, receive feedback, and contribute to the scientific discourse even before formal peer review.
Our Preprints
- Structure-function relationship of alpha-synuclein fibrillar polymorphs derived from distinct synucleinopathies
- Genotype-Phenotype Correlation in RBM10-Associated Syndromes
- BBSome-Mediated Clearance of Ubiquitinated IMPG2
- CRISPR/Cas9-mediated generation of two isogenic CEP290-mutated iPSC lines
- De novo variants in KDM2A cause a syndromic neurodevelopmental disorder