Correia, A. M. R., & Teixeira, J. C. (2005). Reforming scholarly publishing and knowledge communication: From the advent of the scholarly journal to the challenges of open access. Online Information Review, 29(4), 349-364. https://doi.org/10.1108/14684520510617802Purpose - The purpose of this paper is to provide an overview of the continuous evolution of scholarly publishing and knowledge communication as a result of the internet revolution. Design/methodology/approach - Information was obtained from a literature review of the main contributions on "self-archiving" - the broad term often applied to electronic publishing of author-supplied documents on the web without commercial publisher mediation. The paper analyses the impact of the open ...
Complaints about spiralling serials costs, lack of service from large commercial publishers, and the...
With this paper, we hope to foster debate about the place of open access (OA) in scholarly publishin...
The open access (OA) model for journals is compared to the open source principle for computer softwa...
Correia, A. M. R., & Teixeira, J. C. (2005). Reforming scholarly publishing and knowledge communicat...
Advances in scholarship rely on the effective communication of research results. Discoveries need to...
This paper gives an account of the origin and development of the Open Access Initiative (OAI) and th...
This paper will trace the evolution of scholarly communication from the 17th century up to electroni...
Emerging developments in Internet in the 1990s led to global sharing of knowledge and universal acce...
The article describes the evolution of scholarly communication through scholarly journals. It gives ...
With 94% of US graduate students reportedly using search engines such as Google to perform research ...
The current model of scholarly communications fails to meet the information needs of researchers wor...
This paper presents the rationale, common practices, challenges, and some personal anecdotes from a ...
Open access (OA) to scholarly publishing is encouraged and enabled by new technologies such as the I...
This paper will trace the evolution of scholarly communication from the 17th century up to electroni...
Complaints about spiralling serials costs, lack of service from large commercial publishers, and the...
Complaints about spiralling serials costs, lack of service from large commercial publishers, and the...
With this paper, we hope to foster debate about the place of open access (OA) in scholarly publishin...
The open access (OA) model for journals is compared to the open source principle for computer softwa...
Correia, A. M. R., & Teixeira, J. C. (2005). Reforming scholarly publishing and knowledge communicat...
Advances in scholarship rely on the effective communication of research results. Discoveries need to...
This paper gives an account of the origin and development of the Open Access Initiative (OAI) and th...
This paper will trace the evolution of scholarly communication from the 17th century up to electroni...
Emerging developments in Internet in the 1990s led to global sharing of knowledge and universal acce...
The article describes the evolution of scholarly communication through scholarly journals. It gives ...
With 94% of US graduate students reportedly using search engines such as Google to perform research ...
The current model of scholarly communications fails to meet the information needs of researchers wor...
This paper presents the rationale, common practices, challenges, and some personal anecdotes from a ...
Open access (OA) to scholarly publishing is encouraged and enabled by new technologies such as the I...
This paper will trace the evolution of scholarly communication from the 17th century up to electroni...
Complaints about spiralling serials costs, lack of service from large commercial publishers, and the...
Complaints about spiralling serials costs, lack of service from large commercial publishers, and the...
With this paper, we hope to foster debate about the place of open access (OA) in scholarly publishin...
The open access (OA) model for journals is compared to the open source principle for computer softwa...