报告摘要:
I will give an overview of editorial processes at Nature Research journals in general and give further insights in how we work at Nature Machine Intelligence. I will briefly discuss our focus for the journal regarding topics in artificial intelligence and our vision for the field. I will also touch on science publishing and the science writing process in general.One stream of work concerns a radically simplified scanning probe microscope, which obviates the need for nanofabricated tips and instead enables scanning probe imaging with planar extended samples like a bulk diamond.
Another stream of work concerns magnetic resonance tomography at the nanoscale, where we have recently demonstrated a three-dimensional imaging device with sub-10 nm spatial resolution.
Finally, I will present results on label-free imaging of action potentials in electrically active cells, where interferometric microscopy is employed to detect membrane motion events associated with action potentials without the use of voltage or calcium labeling.
报告人简介:
Dr. Liesbeth Venema joined Nature in 2000 as a manuscript editor, after obtaining a PhD in applied physics from Delft University of Technology. Having handled manuscripts across a range of topics in the physical sciences, she gained an interest in artificial intelligence research and its impact in science and society, and became Chief Editor of Nature Machine Intelligence in 2017.