Elsevier Publishing Boycott by Academics

Posted by Celia Walter | 1 Feb, 2012

From The Chronicle of Higher Education:

Timothy Gowers of the University of Cambridge, who won the Fields Medal for his research, has organized a boycott of Elsevier because, he says, its pricing and policies restrict access to work that should be much more easily available. He asked for a boycott in a blog post on January 21, and as of Monday evening, on the boycott’s Web site The Cost of Knowledge, nearly 1,900  scientists have signed up, pledging not to publish, referee, or do editorial work for any Elsevier journal.

The company has sinned in three areas, according to the boycotters: It charges too much for its journals; it bundles subscriptions to lesser journals together with valuable ones, forcing libraries to spend money to buy things they don’t want in order to get a few things they do want; and, most recently, it has supported a proposed federal law (called the Research Works Act) that would prevent agencies like the National Institutes of Health from making all articles written by its grant recipients freely available.

Read the Complete COHE Article by Josh Fischman

 

From INFOdocket

Scholarly communication: "journal articles ...a 17th-century solution"

Posted by Celia Walter | 23 Dec, 2010
Research intelligence - Rip it up and start again

Journal articles are an outdated way of sharing scientific research, says open-access advocate. Paul Jump reports

"Once you start looking at how the scholarly communication system works with any degree of outside perspective, it looks utterly insane."

This is the view of biophysicist Cameron Neylon, a senior scientist at the Science and Technology Facilities Council's Rutherford Appleton Laboratory at Harwell, Oxfordshire, and author of the blog Science in the Open.

He said the current system of communicating the results of scientific research via journal articles is a 17th-century solution to a 17th-century problem. "Printing was adopted because researchers got tired of sending letters to each other," he told Times Higher Education.

"Publishing was essentially letter aggregation. When there became too many letters, peer review was introduced. You can argue that the biggest innovation since then has been the removal of 'Dear Sir' from the beginning of articles."... [More]

 

From Celia: Read the comments and look at the web site of a journal designed for digital distribution:

http://www.opticsinfobase.org/oe/issue.cfm

" 'Liquid Journals' Use the Web to Upend Peer Review" & Additional Materials. Resourceshelf

Posted by Celia Walter | 2 Sep, 2010

Can community-minded Web developers fix scientific publishing? 

From Technology Review:
...

Liquid Journals follow the disintermediated tendencies of the web to their logical conclusion: Liquid Journals do not rely on peer review. Instead, they are assembled by individuals or groups of scientists and experts using the Liquid Journals platform.

The Liquid Journals platform does not discriminate between peer reviewed and non peer reviewed papers, raw data sets and blog posts. The idea is that smart scientists can decide for themselves what belongs in their own liquid journal, and influential leaders and groups in the movement will organically accrue a readership to their journal according to the quality of the work they select.

See Also: Access Liquid Journals Web Site (Free to Use, Login With a Facebook ID)

See Also: Lean More About Liquid Journals (via it's EU Page)
Worth a Mention: Springer is listed as a partner in the project.

See Also: Technical Report/Research Paper: Liquid Journals: Knowledge Dissemination In The Web Era (12 pages; PDF; February, 2010)
by Marcos Baez, Fabio Casati, Aliaksandr Birukou And Maurizio Marchese

From the Abstract:

In this paper we rede fine the notion of "scientific journal" to update it to the age of the Web. We explore the historical reasons behind the current journal model, and we show that this model is essentially the same today, even if the Web has made dissemination essentially free. We propose a notion of liquid and personal journals that evolve continuously in time and that are targeted to serve individuals or communities of arbitrarily small or large scales. The liquid journals provide "interesting" content, in the form of "scientific contributions." that are "related" to a certain paper, topic, or area, and that are posted (on their web site, repositories, traditional journals) by "inspiring" researchers. As such, the liquid journal separates the notion of "publishing" (which can be achieved by submitting to traditional peer review journals or just by posting content on the Web) from the appearance of contributions into the journals, which are essentially collections of content. In this paper we introduce the liquid journal model, and demonstrate through some examples its value to individuals and communities. Finally, we describe an architecture and a working prototype that implements the proposed model.

 via Resourceshelf

International Journal of Transdisciplinary Research

Posted by Celia Walter | 29 Jun, 2009
International journal of transdisciplinary research
The International Journal of Transdisciplinary Research is a peer reviewed academic journal that is concerned with extending and integrating the study of economics with disciplines within the natural and social sciences, as well as the humanities. As economics is intertwined in almost every field of research, it takes a transdisciplinary approach. It covers issues such as: sustainability, social multicriteria evaluations, ecological economics and the biophysical foundations of economics, systems research, and complexity and post normal science. It also includes articles from fields other than economics on how economic systems really work. Articles are freely available as PDF downloads with an archive of past issues.From Intute.ac.uk
http://www.ijtr.org/

Scholarly journals - new free service makes keeping up-to-date easy

Posted by Celia Walter | 17 Dec, 2008

Keeping up-to-date with the scholarly literature just became much easier, thanks to a new service called ticTOCs  - Journal Tables of Contents Service.

http://www.tictocs.ac.uk

ticTOCs is a new scholarly journal tables of contents (TOCs) service.  It’s free, its easy to use, and it provides access to the most recent tables of contents of over 11,000 scholarly journals from more than 400 publishers.  It helps scholars, researchers, academics and anyone else keep up-to-date with what’s being published in the most recent issues of journals on almost any subject...

 

 

International Journal of Cuban Studies

Posted by Celia Walter | 23 Jul, 2008

International Journal of Cuban Studies
International Journal of Cuban Studies is a new peer-reviewed OA journal published by the International Institute for the Study of Cuba at London Metropolitan University.

 From the homepage:

A forum for objective investigation and informed debate

about the Cuban experience.

 

From Peter Scott's Library blog 

 

Highwire Press: free online journal collection

Posted by Celia Walter | 24 Jun, 2008
Highwire Press: free online journal collection
HighWire Press is a division of the Stanford University Libraries. It has a well established repuation for publishing high quality academic journal titles. While these mainly focus on medical and scientific subject areas, there is also strong coverage of some social science subjects such as social psychology, psychiatry, sociology and health policy. This section of the website provides free access to over 100 of the ejournal titles(many including archive backfiles). It is possible to search or browse. Users may also sign up to receive alerts of new content. Intute.ac.uk
http://highwire.stanford.edu/lists/freeart.dtl

Peer Review in Scholarly Journals

Posted by Celia Walter | 18 Mar, 2008

Peer Review in Scholarly Journals - perspective of the scholarly community: an international study

http://www.publishingresearch.net/PeerReview.htm

The main objective of this research is to measure the attitudes and behaviour of the academic community with regard to peer review.

From: Internet Resources Newsletter, 160 

National FORUM Journals

Posted by Celia Walter | 28 Jan, 2008

National FORUM journals

National FORUM Journals was founded in 1983. Since then, over 4,000 professors have published in these national and international refereed journals. Their titled include: FOCUS on Colleges, University, and Schools; International Journal of Scholarly Academic Intellectual Diversity IJ SAID; Journal National FORUM of Educational Administration and Supervision Journal; National FORUM of Applied Educational Research Journal; National FORUM of Teacher Education Journal; National FORUM of Special Education Journal; National FORUM of Multicultural Issues Journal. Users can sign up for email updates from the site and explore the archive of previous articles. From Intute.ac.uk
http://www.nationalforum.com/

Progress of open access journal publishing from SPAC and ACRL

Posted by Celia Walter | 6 Nov, 2007

SPARC and ACRL release materials on the progress of open access journal publishing
From the announcement:
SPARC (The Scholarly Publishing and Academic Resources Coalition) and the Association of College and Research Libraries (ACRL), have released interviews and analysis exploring in depth the views of three major open access publishers on the challenges of sustainability. The materials were produced in conjunction with the 15th SPARC-ACRL Forum on Emerging Issues in Scholarly Communication, which took place on June 23, 2007.
Read the rest of this entry »

Resourceshelf

How big can a research paper get?

Posted by Celia Walter | 31 Oct, 2007

In the era of globalization, science is leading the curve. A microcosm of this trend can be seen in the massive research article entitled ‘Precision electroweak measurements on the Z resonance’ published in Physics Reports in 2006 (1). Spanning 198 pages (in a dedicated double issue of the journal) and listing 405 references, this singular work of scholarship is attributed to 2,535 authors affiliated with 225 institutes in 33 countries, working within 7 collaborative research groups.From Research Trends

(1) Grünewald et al (2006) “Precision electroweak measurements on the Z resonance”, Physics Reports, Vol. 427, No. 5-6, pp. 257-454.

Measuring the value and prestige of scholarly journals

Posted by Celia Walter | 25 May, 2007
Article: Eigenfactor: Measuring the value and prestige of scholarly journals
by Carl Bergstrom, associate professor in the Department of Biology at the University of Washington (More)