Now is the time of the month when I have to look at “the numbers” to see how things are going on Nature Protocols and Protocol Exchange. Since I was doing that anyway I thought I’d share some with you. The thing that most intrigues me is what brings people to the sites; what questions are they trying to answer? Well here are the top 20 search terms that resulted in people coming to Nature Protocols and Protocol Exchange in the last month (linked to the Protocols I imagine they found helpful).
- nature protocols
- nature protocol
- multiplex pcr
- “clonogenic assay “:http://www.nature.com/nprot/journal/v1/n5/abs/nprot.2006.339.html
- overlap extension pcr
- blue native page
- inverse pcr
- rolling circle amplification
- pyrosequencing
- pulsed field gel electrophoresis
- site directed mutagenesis
- scratch assay
- circular dichroism
- srb assay
- overlap pcr
- touchdown pcr
- trail making test
- cell culture
- chromatin immunoprecipitation
- qpcr
Not so informative really apart from showing that a lot of people need help with their PCR. I’m also surprised that there is so much interest in circular dichroism. But those looking for information are very persistent as the page I assume they are coming to (Using Circular Dichroism Spectra to Estimate Protein Secondary Structure) was on the third page of Google’s search results.
How about the Protocol Exchange:
- itraq
- transwell migration assay
- barnes maze
- kaiser test
- nature protocols
- neurosphere
- neurosphere assay
- slic cloning
- fluorescent in situ hybridization protocol
- dpph assay protocol
- immunofluorescence protocol
- chip assay
- nature protocol exchange
- transient transfection
- transwell assay
- in utero electroporation
- neurospheres
- protocol exchange
- purify protein complex
- fluorescence in situ hybridization protocol
That’s a much more diverse list of searches. But there certainly is a desire to know about iTRAQ (which stands for isobaric peptide Tags for Relative and Absolute Quantification if you were in any doubt), and the Protocol Quantitative analysis of protein expression using iTRAQ and mass spectrometry by Ry Y Tweedie-Cullen & Magdalena Livingstone-Zatchej will hopefully have satisfied them.
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