21 lines
1.6 KiB
Markdown
21 lines
1.6 KiB
Markdown
---
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title: 'Open Access'
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date: '2008-01-12T11:14:27-05:00'
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permalink: /open-access/
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tags:
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- conferences
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---
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One presentation in this session on open access; notes below the fold.
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Cy Dillon, “Open Access: Potential and Challenges”
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— challenges to college libraries: periodical budgets stagnant; users prefer electronic access
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— aggregated databases seemed to solve the problem, but some high profile journals (Science) are moving to control their electronic version and archive, pulling out of database deals (like JSTOR)
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— challenges to faculty: quantity of new research coming out, soaring textbook costs, aggressive copyright enforcement, lack of understanding of fair use
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— different OA models: free access to articles of a certain type, or to all articles after a certain period of time, in journals that are usually subscription based; pay-to-publish/author-pays models; self-archiving in institutional, disciplinary society, or personal repositories (use the Science Commons/SPARC Addendum for authors)
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— arguments in favor of publishing via OA journals
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— the peer review “problem”: peer review existed long before printing (circulation of scientific ideas via letters); commercially published journals don’t use all of proceeds for review!; peer review works just fine in OA journals
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— conclusions: don’t fall for the argument that OA corrupts peer review; think about using OA articles in courses; consider submitting to OA journals, esp. the ones that don’t charge authors; learn how to use the Science Commons/SPARC Addendum for authors; see that library links to DOAJ, PLoS, and other OA collections
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