Recent research on search costs in electronic markets documents that the wide use of Internet has reduced consumer search costs and has increased market efficiency. This study, considering scholarly publications as a special type of product, investigates the Internet’s impact on knowledge usage and transfer in academic communities. Based on the work on search theory and knowledge transfer, this paper proposes that lower search costs of scientific publications can increase scholars’ knowledge usage and change their capability or means to compete in the scientific marketplace for audiences. Scholarly articles not freely available online may be quoted less because of the easy and free access to a growing number of substitutable publications. A...
This study explores how ICTs and the Internet are influencing, and being influenced by, the evolutio...
Discovering the existence of scholarly papers in an online environment has been possible since the m...
This article gives an overview of how popularity of World Wide Web and open access concepts challeng...
This essay examines how researchers gain access to knowledge at a time when scholarly communication ...
The coming of the Internet has transformed the way scientific communication among the scientists and...
The basic model for scholarly communication in science and technology has remained unchanged for ove...
This paper considers how and why scholarly publishing has changed over the last two decades. It disc...
This paper examines the shift to online knowledge in research. In recent years there has been a majo...
A recent article by James Evans in Science (Evans 2008) is being widely discussed in the science and...
Purpose: The paper aims to explore the way in which the internet and e-research are changing the nat...
A recent article by James Evans in Science (Evans 2008) is being widely discussed in the science and...
The scholarly communication and research evaluation landscape is locked into historical paradigms wh...
With 94% of US graduate students reportedly using search engines such as Google to perform research ...
Abstract: The mean price of scholarly journals is now three times higher than it was in the mid-1980...
Online journals promise to serve more information to more dispersed audiences and are more efficien...
This study explores how ICTs and the Internet are influencing, and being influenced by, the evolutio...
Discovering the existence of scholarly papers in an online environment has been possible since the m...
This article gives an overview of how popularity of World Wide Web and open access concepts challeng...
This essay examines how researchers gain access to knowledge at a time when scholarly communication ...
The coming of the Internet has transformed the way scientific communication among the scientists and...
The basic model for scholarly communication in science and technology has remained unchanged for ove...
This paper considers how and why scholarly publishing has changed over the last two decades. It disc...
This paper examines the shift to online knowledge in research. In recent years there has been a majo...
A recent article by James Evans in Science (Evans 2008) is being widely discussed in the science and...
Purpose: The paper aims to explore the way in which the internet and e-research are changing the nat...
A recent article by James Evans in Science (Evans 2008) is being widely discussed in the science and...
The scholarly communication and research evaluation landscape is locked into historical paradigms wh...
With 94% of US graduate students reportedly using search engines such as Google to perform research ...
Abstract: The mean price of scholarly journals is now three times higher than it was in the mid-1980...
Online journals promise to serve more information to more dispersed audiences and are more efficien...
This study explores how ICTs and the Internet are influencing, and being influenced by, the evolutio...
Discovering the existence of scholarly papers in an online environment has been possible since the m...
This article gives an overview of how popularity of World Wide Web and open access concepts challeng...