I am writing to tell you about the first member of a new generation of online scientific publications, brought to you by the editors of Science and the technical staff of Stanford University's HighWire Press-Science's Signal Transduction Knowledge Environment (STKE). I would also like to inform you how you can register to become part of a select group of scientists that are always kept up to date on this new product as it continues to develop and improve.
Science's STKE is a knowledge management tool that will help you keep up with, sort out, and piece together insights from the complex and vital discipline of biological signal transduction research. Published weekly and available only in electronic format, the STKE provides you with the following benefits: **Access to "hot off the presses" information on signal transduction in one location through full text research papers from cooperating journals like Science, The Journal of Biological Chemistry, Proceedings of the National Academy of Science, Annual Reviews, and more. **Opportunity to read original content that is available nowhere else but on Science's STKE including exclusively electronic, frequently updated reviews of important topics in signal transduction, and shorter commentaries on hot topics and controversial issues written by leaders in the field. **Time and energy saving features available only in Science's STKE that will allow you to say goodbye to the chore of scanning dozens of tables of contents and searching Medline every week to keep current. These new technologies will also allow you to track a thousand and one protein kinases (not to mention phosphatases, G proteins, second messengers, receptors, transcription factors, and all the rest) quickly and easily. We have developed Science's STKE for scientists like you who need access to Signal Transduction information on a daily basis. If you are interested please go to http://stke.highwire.org and register to be among the first to have access to this powerful information management tool. Sincerely, Floyd Bloom Editor, Science
Message posted by: Frank S. Zollmann
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