Browsing by Subject "open access"
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Item Data Underlying "Is the open access citation advantage real? A systematic review of the citation of open access and subscription-based articles"(2021-06-03) Langham-Putrow, Allison; Bakker, Caitlin; Riegelman, Amy; cjbakker@umn.edu; Bakker, CaitlinThis data underlies a systematic review project: "Is the Open Access Citation Advantage Real?" This project considers whether materials that are published open access receive a greater number of citations than materials published in subscription-based resources. The data here are extracted from 134 relevant studies. The data also include a risk of bias assessment that considers the methodological quality and flaws of the included studies.Item Enhanced Public Access to NIH Research Information: Implications for Open Access(The Charleston Advisor, 2005-01) Watson, LindaThe genesis, the implications of and the reactions to NIH's pioneering plan for enhanced access to NIH research information are described.Item Exploring new ways of publishing: a library-faculty partnership(Medical Library Association, 2003-04) Watson, Linda; Login, Ivan S; Burns, Jeffrey MThe University of Virginia began a campaign in 1998 to educate faculty about issues of scholarly communication. In 2002, the Health Sciences Library worked with a faculty member and a resident in the Department of Neurology to submit an article to the open access venue, BMC Neurology. The experience is described.Item Increasing the influence of your digital identity and scholarly contributions [Video, 19:51](2020-03) Arendale, DavidMoving beyond the traditional publish and present model of sharing scholarship, I have expanded into sharing through online information depositories, websites, email listservs, and social media (podcasting, YouTube, Twitter, LinkedIn, Facebook, and others). The new model is open source which is easily accessible to anyone, anywhere without requiring payment of article purchases, journal subscriptions, and professional organization paid memberships.Item It’s all the same to me!: Copyright, contracts, and publisher self-archiving policies(College & Research Libraries News, 2015-12) Sims, Nancy A.This article explores how publisher polices that distinguish between differently-formatted versions of an article do not correlate with what copyright law considers to be separate "works". Under copyright law, only substantial differences in -creative expression- will create a separate work; a manuscript has the same copyright as the identical text formatted for printing. Regardless of publisher policies, If authors retain copyright ownership, they can archive any version of an article that they wish.Item Minutes: Faculty Consultative Committee: April 1, 2010(University of Minnesota, 2010-04-01) University of Minnesota: Faculty Consultative CommitteeItem Subscribe to Open: Modelling an open access transformation, Table 1(College & Research Libraries News, 2020) Langham-Putrow, Allison; Carter, Sunshine JTable 1. Publisher four-year financial outlook for a phased subscribe-to-open model. Published in Allison Langham-Putrow and Sunshine Carter, "Subscribe to Open: Modelling an open access transformation," College & Research Libraries News 81, no. 1 (2020).Item Subscribe to Open: Modelling an open access transformation, Table 2(College & Research Libraries News, 2020) Langham-Putrow, Allison; Carter, Sunshine JTable 2. Impact of a 10% loss of subscribers in a subscribe-to-open model, considering original pricing practices and revenue. Published in Allison Langham-Putrow and Sunshine Carter, "Subscribe to Open: Modelling an open access transformation," College & Research Libraries News 81, no. 1 (2020).Item Understanding the new wave of the open access movement(2019-10-04) Carter, Sunshine J; Carlson Grebinoski, Jodi; Langham-Putrow, AllisonMomentum for the open access movement has increased over the past few years. The presenters review the basic tenets of open access, discuss characteristics of transformative open access agreements, and highlight a few global and national attempts to move towards a fully open access world.