Index
A
author-pays approach,
31–4
challenges in evaluating, once designed,
43–65
framing the future,
65–73
popularity measures of,
59–62
sale by content purchase,
20–4
international perspectives on,
320–2
researcher behaviours and use of,
324–6
author-pays approach,
31–4
geographic inequities and,
18
interdisciplinarity,
18–19
knowledge politics,
16–17
participatory cultures,
19–20
publishing economics,
15–16
publishing technologies,
13–15
‘review lite’ approach,
33
technological shift in,
14
academic repositories,
116
advertising, journal publishing and,
149–50
initiatives supporting,
417–18
university presses,
406–7
academic publishing in,
18
application programming interfaces (APIs),
302
applications of content reuse,
128–30
Article of the Future project,
357–76
three-pane-based content exploration,
361–6
traditional publications vs.,
367–75
B
bibliographic indexes and catalogues,
384–7
Bioline International,
344,
417
Budapest Open Access Initiative (BOAI),
97,
214,
394
business models in publishing,
139–50
C
Campbell, Philip,
51,
276
Canadian Medical Association Journal (CMAJ),
332–6,
344–5
geographical spread,
430–2
internationalization,
433–4
influence on future of copyright,
255–6
scientific, technical and medical journals,
426–30,
432–3
Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS),
432–3
Chinese Social Sciences Citation Index,
262
network biases and positional power,
62–5
in open access journals,
60–1
CLACSO (Consejo Latinoamericano de Ciencias Sociales),
381,
387–8
Coalition of Open Access Policy Institutions (COAPI),
26
conventional repositories,
301
Copyright Directive, 2001,
252–3
COUNTER (Counting Online Usage of Networked Electronic Resources),
286–8,
319
Creative Commons licence (CC-BY), ,
115,
236
D
Digital Millennium Copyright Act,
250,
252
digital technology,
14,
123
disciplinary repositories,
302
download statistics,
285–8
E
East African Agricultural and Forestry Journal,
418–19
East African Medical Journal (EAMJ),
408–9
electronic journals, ,
100
access to external users,
325–6
European Reference Index for the Humanities (ERIH),
288–90
European Union, government intervention in,
236–7
evolution before the Internet,
88–93
Excellence in Research for Australia (ERA),
291–2
F
Fair Access to Science and Technology Research Act (FASTR),
17,
306–8
Federal Research Public Access Act (FRPAA),
234–5
Finch Report, ,
17,
114–15,
151,
224,
235–6,
241,
243,
256,
299–300,
308
Forum for African Medical Editors,
412,
418
Fulltext Sources Online,
173,
175
G
Garfield’s Law of Concentration,
89–90,
92
GNU General Public Licence,
129–30
recent growth in number,
163–8
H
humanities and social sciences (HSS)
I
higher-impact journals on,
276–7
journal citation reports and,
267–8
network biases and positional power influencing,
63–5
popularity influencing,
60
reducing denominator for improving,
277
review articles and,
273–6
strategies for improving,
273–9
INASP (International Network for the Availability of Scientific Publications),
208,
418
independent journals,
199
Indian Citation Index,
262
Ingelfinger, Franz J.,
132
innovation in assembly,
126–32
Institute of Scientific Information (ISI)
institutional repositories (IR), ,
116,
118
intellectual property (IP) rights,
66–7,
252–5
International Association of STM Publishing,
200,
212
International Network for the Availability of Scientific Publications (INASP),
208,
408,
418
J
Journal Citation Reports (JCR),
48,
92,
197
subject aggregated data,
270–1
using metrics in promoting journals,
271
journal indicators,
281–2
K
key benefits of journals,
available designs of,
11–12
network biases and positional power,
62–5
‘one citation does not equal one unit of’,
53–8
popularity metrics and,
59–62
pre-publication accountability,
37–40
digital technology in,
14
evaluation of, once designed,
43–65
framing the future,
65–73
geographic inequities and,
18
Popperian model of,
124–6
popularity measures of,
59–62
L
Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC)
bibliographic indexes and catalogues,
384–7
financial sustainability,
391–3
higher education expansion and,
381–3
language of publication,
389–90
national agencies and experiences,
388–9
science, technology and innovation,
380–1
life cycle of journals,
141–3
M
Canadian Medical Association Journal,
332–6
East African Medical Journal,
408–9
Pan African Medical Journal,
409–10
MESUR (MEtrics from Scholarly Usage of Resources) project,
71,
293
N
National Library of Medicine,
26,
347,
417
National Sciences Foundation (NSF) project,
169,
403
Nature Communications,
239
New England Journal of Medicine (
NEJM),
57,
132,
197,
338
non-commercial electronic journals,
96–100
O
academic freedom and,
341–4
academic journal content,
15
academic library and,
323–4
article processing fee model,
210–12
author discretionary model,
32
as a business model in publishing,
150–5
commercial publishers and,
210
and government intervention,
234–7
higher education expansion and,
381–3
independent origins,
201–3
number of articles published,
152
present state of development,
100–2
publishing costs of,
31–2
Springer Open Choice,
32,
210
subject-based repositories,
116–18
use of computational dimension,
106–7
Open Archives Initiative Protocol for Metadata Harvesting (OAI-PMH),
107,
302
Open Choice, Springer,
32,
210
P
Pan African Medical Journal (
PAMJ),
409–10
panel judgements in journal rankings,
288–90
pay-to-publish vs.,
187–8
post-publication, commentary,
189
quantitative evaluation with,
290–3
Popperian model (of knowledge),
124–6
popularity measure of journals,
59–61
Price, Derek de Solla,
161–3
Public Library of Science (PLOS)
Public Sector Information (PSI),
130–1
Springer,
21–2,
31,
101,
210,
216,
229,
239,
305,
332,
432
biomedical, editorial interference in,
337–9
editorial independence violation in,
334–7
editorial interference in,
337–9
Morgan Stanley research report,
140
pay-to-publish vs. standards,
187–8
research impact and,
182–3
research information network report,
147
Submitted Manuscript under Review,
303–4
Publishing and the Ecology of European Research (PEER),
236–7,
323
R
alternative sources for,
279
citation distributions,
266
combination peer review and quantitative evaluation,
290–3
combining usage and citation statistics,
292–3
conventional measurement types,
260–6
comparing different ranking systems,
282–5
peer-review panel judgements,
288–90
subject-specific citation differences,
263–6
usage statistics in,
286–8
relative database citation potential (RDCP),
282
current landscape of,
301–3
systematic development,
5–6
reprint requests and author give-aways,
183
Research Councils UK (RCUK),
236,
308
Research Data Alliance (RDA),
105
research data, repositories and,
310–12
Research Excellence Framework (REF),
91,
290–1
Research Information Network (2008),
143,
147
Reviews of Modern Physics,
49
S
geographic inequities and,
18
interdisciplinarity,
18–19
participatory cultures,
19–20
politics of knowledge,
16–17
publishing economics,
15–16
publishing technologies,
13–15
scientific, technical and medical (STM) journals
commercial publishers of,
200,
210
SJR (SCImago Journal Rank) indicator,
281–5
SNIP (Source Normalized Impact Paper),
283–5
South African Family Practice,
420
Sponsoring Consortium for Open Access Publishing in Particle Physics (SCOAP
³),
211,
242–3
Springer,
21–2,
31,
101,
210,
216,
229,
239,
305,
332,
432
subject-based repositories (SR),
116–18
T
The San Francisco Declaration on Research Assessment (DORA),
52–3,
64
The Structure of Scientific Revolutions,
86,
161
essential science indicators,
279
Web of Knowledge,
70,
390
Todkill, Anne Marie,
334–6
two-tier system of science,
95–6
U
UK Research Assessment Exercise (RAE),
290–1
government intervention,
235–6
Research Excellence Framework,
91,
290–1
government intervention,
234–5
growth of journals in,
164
National Library of Medicine,
26,
347,
417
National Science Foundation (NSF),
169,
310,
403
open access policy, ,
115
White House Office of Science and Technology Policy,
16
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