Openaccessforauthors

27
Open Access Publishing: An Author’s Perspective Laura Gogia, MD Center for Teaching Excellence Virginia Commonwealth University

description

Open Access Publishing for the author, from a practitioner's viewpoint

Transcript of Openaccessforauthors

Page 1: Openaccessforauthors

Open Access Publishing: An Author’s Perspective

Laura Gogia, MDCenter for Teaching Excellence Virginia Commonwealth University

Page 2: Openaccessforauthors

What is open access?

▪ http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L5rVH1KGBCY&feature=youtu.be

Page 3: Openaccessforauthors

Open Access Publishing: The Budapest Initiative

Permitting any users to read, download, copy, distribute, print, search, or link to the full texts of these articles, crawl them for indexing, pass them as data to software, or use them for any other lawful purpose, without financial, legal, or technical barriers other than those inseparable from gaining access to the internet itself. http://www.budapestopenaccessinitiative.org

Page 4: Openaccessforauthors

Publisher Open Access Models

Delayed Open Access

Short-term Open Access

Selected Open Access

Hybrid Open Access

Partial Open Access

Total Open Access

Photo: Nick Brandies - Flickr

Page 5: Openaccessforauthors

Two Approaches to OA (for Authors)

Publishing in OA Journals “Gold”

Self-Archiving Your Work“Green”

Pictures: http://www.library.ucsf.edu/content/library-launches-pilot-open-access-fund

Page 6: Openaccessforauthors

Open Access is a Spectrum

“HowOpenIsIt?” Open Access Spectrum. (2013). Retrieved from PLOS: http://www.plos.org/wpcontent/uploads/2012/10/OAS_English_web.pdf

Page 7: Openaccessforauthors

What do the numbers look like?

2011 – 340,000 articles published by 6,713 open access journals

17% of the total papers published

Laakso and Björk BMC Medicine 2012 10:124 doi:10.1186/1741-7015-10-124

Page 8: Openaccessforauthors

Where in the world?

Laakso and Björk BMC Medicine 2012 10:124 doi:10.1186/1741-7015-10-124

Page 9: Openaccessforauthors

Which disciplines?

Laakso and Björk BMC Medicine 2012 10:124 doi:10.1186/1741-7015-10-124

Page 10: Openaccessforauthors

Open Access Titles You May Know…

Page 11: Openaccessforauthors

OA Titles with local connections…

Page 12: Openaccessforauthors

Who are OA Publishers?

Laakso and Björk BMC Medicine 2012 10:124 doi:10.1186/1741-7015-10-124

Page 13: Openaccessforauthors

Article Processing Charges (APCs)

▪ Fees paid by authors, institutions, or funders as the main means of financing journal operations.

▪ Public Library of Science (PLoS) and BioMed Central (BMC) were the first (2000)

▪ As of 2011, 1,825 (or 26%) OA journals charged APCs

▪ Typically, fees are waived for special circumstances.

Page 14: Openaccessforauthors

You Want Me to Pay WHAT?

Solomon, D., & Bjork, B. (2012). A study of open access journals using article processing charges. Journal of the American Society for Information Science & Technology. 63, 8: 1485-1495.

Page 15: Openaccessforauthors

You Want Me to Pay WHAT?

Solomon, D., & Bjork, B. (2012). A study of open access journals using article processing charges. Journal of the American Society for Information Science & Technology. 63, 8: 1485-1495.

Page 16: Openaccessforauthors

You Want Me To Pay WHAT?

Solomon, D., & Bjork, B. (2012). A study of open access journals using article processing charges. Journal of the American Society for Information Science & Technology. 63, 8: 1485-1495.

Page 17: Openaccessforauthors

APCs: An Interesting Phenomenon

▪ APCs add a new dimension to decisions on where to attempt to publish

▪ Changes focus of publishers’ marketing efforts

▪ Changes relationship between readers, authors, publishers, and the libraries

Photo: Doug Wheller - Flickr

Page 18: Openaccessforauthors

How does a researcher benefit from OA?

▪ Increases ability to find and use relevant literature

▪ Increases visibility, readership, and impact of your work

▪ Creates new avenues for discovery in a digital environment

▪ Enhances interdisciplinary research

▪ Accelerates pace of research, discovery and innovation

Page 19: Openaccessforauthors

Barriers to publishing in OA journals

▪ Lack of high-profile titles

▪ Lack of funding

▪ Quality

▪ No OA journals in my field

Page 20: Openaccessforauthors

So What About “High-Profile”?

▪ Bjork and Solomon (2012) compared citation rates for subscription-based and OA journals

▪ Average citation rates were about 30% higher for subscription-based journals BUT this difference disappeared when controlling for

▪ Discipline (medicine/health versus other)

▪ Age of journal

▪ Location of publisher

Page 21: Openaccessforauthors

So What About Quality?

Research your journal!

Page 22: Openaccessforauthors

Researching Your Journal

▪ Can you find their website?

▪Are the editors and board members recognizable?

Photo: Ciccio Pizzettaro - Flickr

Page 23: Openaccessforauthors

Researching Your Journal

▪ Article quality?

▪ Journal impact factor?– http://thomsonreuters.com/journal-citation-reports/

Page 24: Openaccessforauthors

Researching Your Journal

▪ Listed in the Directory of Open Access Journals?

▪ Member of the Open Access Publishers Association?

▪ ISSN?

Page 25: Openaccessforauthors

Researching Your Journal

Is it too good to be true?▪ Are they promising one week peer reviews?

▪ Are they hopelessly broad and interdisciplinary?

▪ Are they transparent about peer review and fees?

Page 26: Openaccessforauthors

Good resources for further information

▪ SPARC - http://sparc.arl.org/issues/open-access– General resource, including Author’s Rights Page

▪ Public Knowledge Project (PKP) - http://pkp.sfu.ca/– General resource, especially useful for starting a journal

▪ Open Society Foundations -http://www.opensocietyfoundations.org/voices/opening-access-research– History and overview of the movement

Page 27: Openaccessforauthors

More Good Resources

▪ Directory of Open Access Journals (DOAJ) – http://www.doaj.org/– Official “go-to” for identifying open access journals

▪ SHERPA - http://www.sherpa.ac.uk/– RoMEO - Publisher's copyright & archiving policies

– JULIET - Research funders archiving mandates and guidelines

– OpenDOAR worldwide Directory of Open Access Repositories

▪ PLOS - http://www.plos.org/– a publisher and advocacy organization