Article Sharing Framework: Facilitating Scholarly Sharing Through Metadata CopyrightDiscoveryInfrastructurePolicyTechnologyTools The ability of sites to capture, index and republish digital content has created a plethora of useful tools and services on the internet. Who hasn’t found it useful to perform a search on Google or another search platform and to be returned not simply the web page, but t
For years now, preprint communities have provided a glimmer of an alternative to the journal publishing system, that speed and efficiency might replace what has seemed to many like a cumbersome editorial and peer review process. What started in a small set of originating fields such as high energy physics in 1991 has, in recent years, begun to take hold elsewhere, including the biomedical sciences
They Know We Know They Know: Does Sci-Hub Affect Library Subscriptions? AuthorsControversial TopicsCopyrightEthicsLibrariesOpen AccessSocial RoleTechnology The question of whether — and, if so, to what degree — Sci-Hub and similar pirate portals will lead (or are already leading) libraries to cancel journal subscriptions has been a fraught one for some time, and the debate doesn’t seem likely to s
Better Metadata Could Help Save The World! Data PublishingMetrics and AnalyticsResearchTechnologyTools The title of this post may seem like a farfetched claim, however, no one can deny that we are currently faced with increasingly critical challenges — climate crisis, shrinking biodiversity, hunger, poverty, disease, and more. I think most of us would agree this means it’s essential for the resear
Guest Post — Emerging Trends in the Academic Publishing Lifecycle AuthorsLibrariesTools Editor’s Note: the following is a guest post by Christine Tulley, based on a presentation at the 2019 Researcher to Reader Conference in London. Christine is Professor of English, Director of the Masters in Rhetoric and Writing Program, and Academic Development Coordinator at The University of Findlay, Ohio. Th
Guest Post — Pictures Worth a Thousand Words? On Visualizations of Scholarly Workflow DesignResearchTechnologyTools Note from Scholarly Kitchen Chef Lisa Janicke Hinchliffe: I’m pleased to introduce today’s post from Rebecca Springer and Danielle Cooper of Ithaka S+R. I happened upon a Twitter conversation where they were sharing some of the workflow diagrams they have collected and asked if they
MLIS: Metadata Librarians In Scholarly publishing CareersDiscoveryLibrariesTechnologyTools Editor’s Note: Today’s post is by Abigail Wickes and Erica Leeman. Abigail is the Discoverability Associate at Oxford University Press (OUP), managing relationships with discovery partners and working to ensure OUP metadata meets industry standards. Erica is the Metadata Associate at the MIT Press (MITP), wh
In order to contribute analytical food for thought at this week’s Joint Roadmap for Open Science workshop, I was invited to facilitate discussion on the current landscape of open science tools and the opportunities for new or improved digital products in service of the research workflow. Among many things, Joint Roadmap for Open Science Tools (JROST) members came together to consider where they mi
Recurring Dream — Organizations with Subscriptions Are More Valuable AdvertisingBusiness ModelsCommerceControversial TopicsEconomicsExperimentationInnovationMarketingNewspapersSocial RoleTechnologyToolsUser Experience The subscription model has a number of virtues, including spreading costs across more entities in the market, thereby lowering the cost for each in relative terms, while creating a r
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