Publishing with Nature Human Behaviour

  • Date:
    Wed, Aug 21, 2024
  • Time:
    11:00-12:00 (JST)
  • Location:
    【Online】Zoom
    【In person】3F Seminar Room, Ito International Research Center, the University of Tokyo
    https://www.u-tokyo.ac.jp/adm/iirc/en/access.html
  • Organizers:

    Institute for Future Initiatives (IFI), the University of Tokyo
    Springer Nature

  • Registration:

    Registration is now closed for this event.

    Space for in person attendance is limited. Allocated on a first come basis.

    *The Institute for Future Initiatives and Springer Nature collect personal information in order to provide you with the event information about our current and future activities. Your personal information will not be disclosed to any third party.

Overview

Nature Human Behaviour publishes primary research of outstanding significance into any aspect of individual or collective human behaviour. The journal covers a broad range of social, biological, health and physical science disciplines. It also publishes opinion pieces in the magazine section, where it aims to platform a diverse range of voices and make a positive impact in their community of readers. This talk will introduce the aims and scope of the journal, and will explain the process of submission and peer review with them, for both primary research articles and opinion pieces.

Bio of speaker

Charlotte Payne is Senior Editor and Team Leader (Magazine) for Nature Human Behaviour. She has a background is in Anthropology, Public Health, Primatology and Zoology. Before joining Nature Human Behaviour in 2019 she conducted research on the implications of using insects as food for our health, food security, and environmental footprint. This was the focus of her PhD thesis in Zoology at the University of Cambridge, and she has conducted field-based research on this topic in the Democratic Republic of Congo, Japan, Zimbabwe, Mexico and Burkina Faso. Prior to this she assisted with health related research projects at the University of Oxford, where she worked with large scale epidemiological data and high-throughput genomic data. She spent time in Japan as a Daiwa scholar in 2009-2011 and as a MEXT research student in 2013-2015, and speaks Japanese. She did her undergraduate degree in Archaeology and Anthropology at Cambridge in 2006-2009, where she conducted field- and zoo-based research on great ape behaviour, ecology and genetics. She has a broad range of interests and is passionate about the importance of meaningful, interdisciplinary and equitable research.

Program
  • 11:00-12:00
    Seminar
Contact

gasparatos[at]ifi.u-tokyo.ac.jp
*Please replace [at] with an @ mark.