
Robert Frederick
Science Journalist and Producer at Freelance
Editor-in-Chief and Chief Content Officer at Global Virus Network
lackin compl. info. @niemanfdn (‘21) Former @AmSciMag @ScienceMagazine @STLpublicRadio. More focused at @R_E_Frederick, but not on Twitter much.
Articles
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Dec 19, 2024 |
science.org | Al Ozonoff |Annie Elong Ngono |Robert Frederick
Information & AuthorsPublished In ScienceVolume 386 | Issue 672820 December 2024Article versionsSubmission historyPublished in print: 20 December 2024PermissionsRequest permissions for this article. Metrics & Citations Article Usage Altmetrics Cite as Red tape strangles viral surveillance programs.Science386,1357-1357(2024).DOI:10.1126/science.ads3461 Export citation Select the format you want to export the citation of this publication.
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Dec 19, 2024 |
science.org | Al Ozonoff |Annie Elong Ngono |Robert Frederick
Information & AuthorsPublished In ScienceVolume 386 | Issue 672820 December 2024Article versionsSubmission historyPublished in print: 20 December 2024PermissionsRequest permissions for this article. Metrics & Citations Article Usage Altmetrics Cite as Red tape strangles viral surveillance programs.Science386,1357-1357(2024).DOI:10.1126/science.ads3461 Export citation Select the format you want to export the citation of this publication.
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Oct 31, 2024 |
jamanetwork.com | Robert Frederick |Cristina M Baldassari
Titration Protocol for Upper Airway Stimulation in Pediatric Patients With Down Syndrome Key PointsQuestion How should clinicians titrate upper airway stimulation (UAS) devices in young patients with Down syndrome?
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Jul 4, 2024 |
science.org | Kevin McLean |Andrew Zaleski |Zakiya Whatley |Robert Frederick
First up this week, guest host Kevin McLean talks to freelance writer Andrew Zaleski about recent advancements in the world of synthetic blood. They discuss some of the failed attempts over the past century that led many to abandon the cause altogether, and a promising new option in the works called ErythroMer that is both shelf stable and can work on any blood type.
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May 23, 2024 |
science.org | Sarah Crespi |Kevin McLean |David Grimm |Robert Frederick
Abi Warner Photography/Alamy Stock Photo This week’s show is all animals all the time. First, Online News Editor Dave Grimm joins host Sarah Crespi to discuss stepping on venomous snakes for science, hunting ice age cave bears, and demolishing lizardlike buildings. Next, producer Kevin McLean talks with Diana Liao, a postdoctoral researcher at the University of Tübingen, about teaching crows to count out loud. They discuss the complexity of this behavior and how, like the famous band, these...
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After teaching Harvard's first course on #ClimateChange #journalism, I have some thoughts. Many thanks to my students for their many questions, which helped me formulate and focus those thoughts. I put them in my latest for @NiemanReports: https://t.co/29jmaHsT4Q https://t.co/ElbDiMBdU7

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