Patrick Joyce (@joycesticks) 's Twitter Profile
Patrick Joyce

@joycesticks

A tube within a tube. Co-founder & COO @ResearchHub

ID: 856036949332819969

linkhttps://www.researchhub.com/ calendar_today23-04-2017 06:48:07

1,1K Tweet

1,1K Followers

656 Following

ResearchHub Foundation (@researchhubf) 's Twitter Profile Photo

1 hour to go Join our community call for the latest on the Coinbase listing, token burn 🔥, and what’s next. x.com/i/spaces/1OdKr…

Guy Fincham, PhD (@breath_guy) 's Twitter Profile Photo

I just peer reviewed: High on your own supply - Is endogenous DMT the key to altered states of consciousness during breathwork? on ResearchHub! researchhub.com/fund/4270/high…

Patrick Joyce (@joycesticks) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Great example of how ResearchHub is being used to accelerate science Props to Brandon Rasman, PhD for: ✅ Crowdfunding a preregistered study in <30 days ✅ Sharing real-time updates with open data ✅ Engaging their funders & audience in the comments

Scott Explores (@scottexplores29) 's Twitter Profile Photo

🧬 The Bio Agents are upon us… Just wrapped this video envisioned for the Bio Protocol × ResearchHub collaboration ⚗️🌍 Can’t wait to see what these two have in store for the DeSci community This is the stuff that gets me hyped 🚀 If you’re into this kind of content,

Mushtaq Bilal, PhD (@mushtaqbilalphd) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Getting funding is always a challenge for researchers. Research Hub helps you crowdfund your research — sort of like a GoFundMe for your research projects. Anyone can apply, and anyone can fund. Here's how to fund your project through Research Hub:

Sean Mccracken (@smccmuffin) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Open Access Reviewing is the future of science (ResearchHub). Here are a few recent reviews I've done (and got paid for) for research proposals looking into psychedelics. In short, these studies propose to look at the intersection of psychedelics and neuroscience.

ResearchHub (@researchhub) 's Twitter Profile Photo

A new fMRI study on Wim Hof breathing has reached its funding goal on ResearchHub. It’s the first human trial to test how this breathwork technique might boost brain waste clearance and mental health. 🧵 1/5

A new fMRI study on Wim Hof breathing has reached its funding goal on ResearchHub.

It’s the first human trial to test how this breathwork
technique might boost brain waste clearance and mental health. 🧵

1/5
Ruslan Rust 🧬🧠 (@rust_ruslan) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Join the discussion started by Brian Armstrong on ResearchHub What are the highest potential areas of research that are underfunded today? researchhub.com/post/4329/what…

Scott Explores (@scottexplores29) 's Twitter Profile Photo

🧬 Brian Armstrong just put up a 1,000 $RSC bounty for the best ideas on high-impact areas of science & tech I just shared my reply on ResearchHub — curious to see what others come up with 👀 If you’ve got a vision worth adding to the conversation, drop your answer here and

kenny (@kennyistyping) 's Twitter Profile Photo

so my gigabrain professor brother-in-law is intrigued by ResearchHub how does this work for a real scientist like him? he just signs up and starts uploading his work?

so my gigabrain professor brother-in-law is intrigued by <a href="/ResearchHub/">ResearchHub</a>

how does this work for a real scientist like him? he just signs up and starts uploading his work?
Guy Fincham, PhD (@breath_guy) 's Twitter Profile Photo

I just peer reviewed: Take A Breather –Physiological Correlates Of A Conscious Connected Breathing Session In A Trained Group Of Breast Cancer Patients on ResearchHub! S/O to ResearchHub Foundation. researchhub.com/paper/9475300/…

Ruslan Rust 🧬🧠 (@rust_ruslan) 's Twitter Profile Photo

A selection of preprints that I found interesting this week. They cover aging microglia, brain organoid models, computational pipelines, and proteome-scale AI. Contribute to open science & earn $150 for a high-quality review:

A selection of preprints that I found interesting this week. They cover aging microglia, brain organoid models, computational pipelines, and proteome-scale AI. 

Contribute to open science &amp; earn $150 for a high-quality review:
ResearchHub (@researchhub) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Chameleons communicate through colorful patterns on their skin that might make them a promising new animal model for preclinical psychopharmacology. Dr. Nicholas Denomme is exploring whether these patterns can serve as a biomarker for the animal’s internal states, offering a