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HOW TO WRITE AND NOT TO WRITE A SCIENTIFIC PAPER (With a guide to Ethics)

发布时间:2014/09/25     浏览次数:
时间:2014-9-28 (星期日) 3:30pm-4:30pm
地点:周隆泉楼 A3-206
主讲人:Purnendu K. Dasgupta
来访单位:University of Texas at Arlington,美国 USA
邀请人:马剑
联系人:马剑 2186916

HOW TO WRITE AND NOT TO WRITE A SCIENTIFIC PAPER

(With a guide to Ethics)

Purnendu Dasgupta, University of Texas at Arlington, USA

As an editor ofAnalytica Chimica Actafor many years and also having served on the editorial advisory boards ofTalanta, Atmospheric Environment, Environmental Science and Technology, Analytical Chemistry, etc. and having authored over 400 papers himself, Professor Dasgupta is familiar with scientific writing; indeed, writing itself, as he really wanted to be a poet rather than a scientist. He has also the dubious distinction of uncovering the most extensive case of scientific fraud ever reported – the saga of Pattium Chiranjeevi that was covered inScience, Chemical Engineering & Newsand many other venues.

This talk, a result of collaboration between he and Gary Christian, longtime EditorofTalantaand his virtual mentor, talks about Do’s and Don’ts and various case studies…

Professor Dasgupta was at Texas Tech University for 25 years and held the Paul Whitfield Horn Distinguished Professorship for more than a decade. In 2007 he joined the University of Texas at Arlington as the Jenkins Garrett Chair and Department Chairman. As of 2011, he thankfully no longer has the responsibility of a Department head. He is the recipient of the American Chemical Society award in Chromatography, the Dal Nogare Award in Chromatography (see www.youtube.com/watch?v=UGE3KgiIcyQ ), Traylor creativity award from Dow Chemical, the Benedetti-Pichler award from the American Microhemical Society, the Scientist of the Year award of the ARCS Foundation and a two-time recipient of the international outstanding achievement award in ion chromatography. His research interests are in Measurement of Trace Atmospheric Species and Atmospheric Chemistry, Air Pollution Toxicology, Automated Intelligent Analyzers, Microfabricated Sensors and Instrumentation, Thin Film Flow Devices and Sensors, Automated Process Analyzers for the Chemical Industry, Novel Approaches to Ionic Analysis and most recently, Breath Analysis for Clinical Diagnostics and Perchlorate in the Environment.