American Chemical Society: Difference between revisions

From Citizendium
Jump to navigation Jump to search
imported>William Weaver
No edit summary
 
imported>William Weaver
No edit summary
Line 24: Line 24:
[[Category:Chemistry societies]]
[[Category:Chemistry societies]]
[[Category:1876 establishments]]
[[Category:1876 establishments]]
[[Category:CZ Live]]
[[Category:Chemistry Workgroup]]
[[Category:Chemistry Workgroup]]



Revision as of 22:27, 22 November 2006

The American Chemical Society (ACS) is a learned society (professional association) based in the United States that supports scientific inquiry in the field of chemistry. Founded in 1876 at New York University, the ACS currently has over 158,000 members at all degree-levels and in all fields of chemistry, chemical engineering and related fields. The ACS holds national meetings twice a year covering the complete field of chemistry, plus dozens of smaller conferences in specific fields. Its publications division produces some two dozen first-rate scholarly journals (the oldest of them, Journal of the American Chemical Society, has appeared since 1879) and several book series. The newest journal, ACS Chemical Biology, has unique web-only features such as "Ask the Expert" and a WIKI and ChemBioGlossary open to all scientists. The primary source of income of the ACS is the Chemical Abstracts Service and its publications. Chemical & Engineering News is the weekly news magazine published by the American Chemical Society and sent to all members.

The American Chemical Society also sponsors the United States National Chemistry Olympiad (USNCO), a contest used to select the four-member team that represents the United States at the International Chemistry Olympiad (IChO).

The ACS Division of Chemical Education provides standardized tests for various subfields of chemistry. The two most commonly-used tests are the undergraduate-level tests for general and organic chemistry. Each of these tests consists of 75 multiple-choice questions, and gives students 110 minutes to complete the exam.

The ACS Fall National Meeting for 2006 will take place in San Francisco, September 10th through the 14th.

PubChem controversy

Since the inception of National Center for Biotechnology Information's open access PubChem chemical compound database initiative, ACS has actively lobbied NCBI and its supervising agencies to stop the database development effort. ACS markets its own subscription- and pay-based Chemical Abstracts Service. In a May 23, 2005, press-release, the ACS stated:

The ACS believes strongly that the Federal Government should not seek to become a taxpayer supported publisher. By collecting, organizing, and disseminating small molecule information whose creation it has not funded and which duplicates CAS services, NIH has started ominously, down the path to unfettered scientific publishing...

See also

External links

de:American Chemical Society fr:American Chemical Society ja:アメリカ化学会 no:American Chemical Society pt:American Chemical Society sv:American Chemical Society ta:அமெரிக்க வேதியியல் குமுகம் zh:美国化学会