In a response to Jason Priem’s post advocating the use of Twitter by academics, Don Taylor writes that while Twitter, blogs and other social media should be part of academic life, we must not lose the slow, deliberative process that emphasizes thoughtful scholarship behind traditional publication in journals
Peer review of research articles is a core part of our scholarly communication system. In spite of i...
Over the last several months, as I\u27ve met with the folks from if:book and with the quite impressi...
New models of scientific publishing and new ways of practicing peer review have injected a recent dy...
Academic research involving social media is still perceived as less rigourous than traditional journ...
Peer review is an essential part of academic publishing, yet many authors, reviewers, and editors ha...
The journal publishing model has long been criticised for being out of touch with modern, online com...
Peer review is the defining feature of scholarly communication. In a 2018 survey of more than 11,000...
lished results are invisible to the community at large and are, therefore, equivalent to work that h...
Publication of our scientific work is our currency – unpublished results are invisible to the commun...
With the ubiquitous connectivity offered by the Internet, social media sites (like Twitter and Faceb...
Continuing with our focus on the merits of social media for making academic impact, Alfred Hermida, ...
New models of scientific publishing and new ways of practicing peer review have injected a recent dy...
Academic blogs are transient, ephemeral and present a problem for citation, but their faults are not...
Peer review of research articles is a core part of our scholarly communication system. In spite of i...
How long has peer review been in crisis? At what point does crisis outlast emergency to become statu...
Peer review of research articles is a core part of our scholarly communication system. In spite of i...
Over the last several months, as I\u27ve met with the folks from if:book and with the quite impressi...
New models of scientific publishing and new ways of practicing peer review have injected a recent dy...
Academic research involving social media is still perceived as less rigourous than traditional journ...
Peer review is an essential part of academic publishing, yet many authors, reviewers, and editors ha...
The journal publishing model has long been criticised for being out of touch with modern, online com...
Peer review is the defining feature of scholarly communication. In a 2018 survey of more than 11,000...
lished results are invisible to the community at large and are, therefore, equivalent to work that h...
Publication of our scientific work is our currency – unpublished results are invisible to the commun...
With the ubiquitous connectivity offered by the Internet, social media sites (like Twitter and Faceb...
Continuing with our focus on the merits of social media for making academic impact, Alfred Hermida, ...
New models of scientific publishing and new ways of practicing peer review have injected a recent dy...
Academic blogs are transient, ephemeral and present a problem for citation, but their faults are not...
Peer review of research articles is a core part of our scholarly communication system. In spite of i...
How long has peer review been in crisis? At what point does crisis outlast emergency to become statu...
Peer review of research articles is a core part of our scholarly communication system. In spite of i...
Over the last several months, as I\u27ve met with the folks from if:book and with the quite impressi...
New models of scientific publishing and new ways of practicing peer review have injected a recent dy...