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2007-01-19 04:32:40 · 4 answers · asked by Sophie T 1 in Science & Mathematics Medicine

4 answers

Generally going to or reading the abstract book of conferences related to the subject you are interested in.
However, as the risk of being "scooped" is quite high, scientists normally only present work that is on the way to be published, or, anyway, well advanced in terms of results (almost a complete story!).
If you want really novel studies in Biology, there are the so-called "Gordon conferences" held in USA every few months, where poeple only present very new results and all the partecipants are bound to confidentiality agreement. Which means that you can´t divulgate what you heard.
Another source of unpublished studies are the specilized journals: normally they have a section of papers "in press" or coming soon...

Scientifically speaking, though, a published work has a much bigger impact than an unpublished work, for the aim of citation. So I would stick to what you can find of published work!
Try this site for all the papers you might need:

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?DB=pubmed

or Google scholar http://scholar.google.com/

2007-01-19 05:24:10 · answer #1 · answered by Jesus is my Savior 7 · 0 0

Perhaps in an unlibrary?

Get real. If they're unpublished, how do you even find out about them in the first place? Your only recourse is to go the people who would have been the authors.

2007-01-19 12:37:49 · answer #2 · answered by arbiter007 6 · 0 0

at some conferences, but to lessen the risk of being scooped unpublished studies are well protected

2007-01-19 15:07:35 · answer #3 · answered by shiara_blade 6 · 0 0

unpublished studies???????????? hmmmmmmmmmmm after reading the question i seriously doubt your ability to even read published studies.

2007-01-19 12:39:36 · answer #4 · answered by hogwhisperer 2 · 0 0

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