Complaints about spiralling serials costs, lack of service from large commercial publishers, and the inability to meet the information needs of researchers are not new. Over the past few years, however, we have begun to see new models develop that better serve the information needs academics as both authors and readers. The internet is now being used in ways other than just to provide electronic facsimiles of print journals accessed using the traditional subscription models. Authors can now ‘self-archive’ their own work making it available to millions and new open access journals extend this by providing a peer-review service to ensure quality control. SPARC and SPARC Europe play a prominent role in the new scholarly communication lands...
This presentation describes current developments within the scholarly communications landscape and p...
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 ...
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...
Complaints about spiralling serials costs, lack of service from large commercial publishers, and the...
Advances in scholarship rely on the effective communication of research results. Discoveries need to...
Diaporama d\u27une intervention au 32e congrès LIBER qui s\u27est tenu à Rome du 17 au 20 juin 2003....
The current model of scholarly communications fails to meet the information needs of researchers wor...
In the late 1990s the need for an overhaul in the approach to scholarly publishing was recognized. ...
The basic model for scholarly communication in science and technology has remained unchanged for ove...
New information and communications technologies are changing the way publishers and librarians view ...
The convergence of dissatisfaction with traditional, subscription-based business model for scholarly...
The steep rise in subscriptions costs to scientific publications and the potential of the internet h...
Paul Ayris explains to Elspeth Hyams why scholarly communication has moved beyond the debate on e-jo...
This presentation describes current developments within the scholarly communications landscape and p...
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 ...
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...
Complaints about spiralling serials costs, lack of service from large commercial publishers, and the...
Advances in scholarship rely on the effective communication of research results. Discoveries need to...
Diaporama d\u27une intervention au 32e congrès LIBER qui s\u27est tenu à Rome du 17 au 20 juin 2003....
The current model of scholarly communications fails to meet the information needs of researchers wor...
In the late 1990s the need for an overhaul in the approach to scholarly publishing was recognized. ...
The basic model for scholarly communication in science and technology has remained unchanged for ove...
New information and communications technologies are changing the way publishers and librarians view ...
The convergence of dissatisfaction with traditional, subscription-based business model for scholarly...
The steep rise in subscriptions costs to scientific publications and the potential of the internet h...
Paul Ayris explains to Elspeth Hyams why scholarly communication has moved beyond the debate on e-jo...
This presentation describes current developments within the scholarly communications landscape and p...
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 ...