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News from JURN

Monthly Archives: March 2014

GoogleMonkeyR temporary fix

12 Wednesday Mar 2014

Posted by futurilla in JURN's Google watch

≈ 7 Comments

It seems that Google Search have committed to their new code for displaying Google Search results, after trialling the changes last week and then withdrawing them. The changes break the vital browser addon GoogleMonkeyR. A temporary fix is to edit the GoogleMonkeyR userscript thus…

Find…

var list = document.getElementsByXPath(".//div[@id='ires']/ol/li[starts-with(@class,'g')]/div/parent::li");

Replace with…

var list = document.getElementsByXPath(".//div[@id='ires']/ol/div[starts-with(@class,'srg')]/li");

Confirmed as working with Google.com search. Fails when you switch the keyword through to Google News.

UPDATE, NOV 2014.

Still working fine for me, with a few tweaks…

1. Updated Greasemonkey to 2.3 (29th Oct 2014) and GoogleMonkeyR to 1.7.2.

2. I access Google Search via this URL, which has a parameter that limits search results to 15 per page…

https://www.google.com/webhp?hl=en&complete=0&tbo=1&num=15&tbs=li:1

15 fits nicely in three columns, which I also have set up in GoogleMonkeyR Prefs — which is the cog-wheel that appears top-right once you make a Google search.

googlemonkeyr

3. Hide the “Searches related to test” element on the Google Search results page, by using the AdBlock Plus addon (right-click on “”Searches related to test””, ‘Inspect Element’, highlight whole ‘extrares’ element, click on red AdblockPlus icon, block). This bit gets hidden because otherwise it sits awkwardly between you and the numbered links that lead to the subsequent results pages.

‘A long time ago in a galaxy far, far away…’

10 Monday Mar 2014

Posted by futurilla in How to improve academic search

≈ Leave a comment

Ten years ago, today…

JISC ITT commission: A study to forecast a delivery, management & access model for eprints & open access journals within Further and Higher Education. … Access should be streamlined and free at the point of use, irrespective of the source of content.

Submission deadline:
   10th March 2004 12:00
Funding:
   £30,000

Dutch OA indexed at just 11% in Web of Science

05 Wednesday Mar 2014

Posted by futurilla in Economics of Open Access, Open Access publishing

≈ Leave a comment

Wouter has today posted a Powerpoint with a slide showing the number of Dutch open access articles and reviews indexed in Web of Science, 1995-2015…

open-access-in-wos

It’s good to see coverage is ‘on the up’, but it seems that open access journal content from the Netherlands is currently indexed in WoS at just 11%. This is another indication of the low level of OA journal article discoverability in big commercial databases, and a reminder that the coming Google Scholar / Web of Science combo interface won’t make Scholar a one-stop shop for finding open access articles.

Crazy English Teachers

04 Tuesday Mar 2014

Posted by futurilla in My general observations

≈ Leave a comment

Thanks to the (new?) English-translated version of the China National Knowledge Infrastructure (CNKI) journal search service, I’m fascinated to know there’s a journal in China called Crazy English Teachers 🙂

crazy

Indexing of OA Communication Studies journals

03 Monday Mar 2014

Posted by futurilla in Open Access publishing, Spotted in the news

≈ Leave a comment

More new research on Open Access ejournal penetration into commercial journal indexing databases: “Open Access Journals in Communication Studies: Indexing in Five Commercial Databases” (2014). Only…

32 percent of the 147 gold OA journals identified [in the field of Communication Studies] were indexed in five major commercial bibliographical databases commonly subscribed to by academic libraries [including Scopus, EBSCO Complete, Web of Science]

Global Social Science & Humanities Publishing 2013-2014

03 Monday Mar 2014

Posted by futurilla in How to improve academic search, Official and think-tank reports, Spotted in the news

≈ Leave a comment

Joseph Esposito has usefully had a peek inside a very expensive commercial market report titled Global Social Science & Humanities Publishing 2013-2014.

Social/Humanities publishing is found to be perhaps 25% of the size of Science/Technology/Medicine, at around $5bn. That actually strikes me as something of an achievement, when you consider that we have far smaller research funding inputs and a smaller technical/training infrastructure to call on. But perhaps the $5bn figure is given a strong boost by teacher training textbooks, social work manuals and the like?

Joseph highlights the report’s finding of a highly fragmented market. This market fragmentation is one of the reasons I’m skeptical about the success of a ‘one metadata to rule them all’ solution to OA indexing and discovery. It seems that DOAJ-listed OA journal titles can’t even find their way in full-text into the largest of commercial databases (such as EBSCO Complete) at higher levels than just over 20%. When last heard of the Web of Science / Scopus seemed to be barely scraping 1,000 OA titles indexed. One art history study found that Google Scholar could index only half the DOAJ’s OA art history titles. A dastardly conspiracy to keep OA titles out of these big indexes seems unlikely. So I suspect it’s largely due to many OA editors in the arts and humanities not giving a fig about providing the means to automatically index their content. Their widespread lack of something as basic as RSS feeds seems to confirm that. Add to that the fact that only 56% of DOAJ journals can supply the DOAJ with article metadata. Persuading non-librarian types to do something as simple tag all their back-issue content with some simple new machine-readable OA tag thus seems rather a long shot. Persuading mainstream publishers to do the same? Well… maybe, but what’s their incentive for that? Even if they do, will they allow mass harvesting of the OA articles? Nor are librarians likely to be of much use, after the fact of publication — since they seem to have mostly failed to apply even their own metadata standards to open content, and open repository metadata quality is reported to be dire.

Mind the Watford Gap

01 Saturday Mar 2014

Posted by futurilla in Academic search, Spotted in the news

≈ 1 Comment

Cameron Neylon has rustled up a useful map of the public libraries in the UK which are set to offer free access to 8,000 commercial paywalled academic ejournals…

journals_via_public_libraries_uk_2014

Very nice if you’re in the leafy Home Counties around London, not so useful for those in the industrial Midlands or the North. Although the use terms (“I can only use accessed information for non-commercial research and private study”) make such business access moot for people such as the cybersecurity boffins of Malvern or the ceramics R&D teams of Stoke-on-Trent.

Oh well, there’s always JURN, now with added business and science goodness.

New study on OA in full-text commercial databases

01 Saturday Mar 2014

Posted by futurilla in Spotted in the news

≈ 1 Comment

A 2013 study “Open access journal content found in commercial full-text aggregation databases and journal citation reports”…

“A study was conducted regarding the indexing of [DOAJ listed] open access journals in three large, commercially available full-text aggregation databases [EBSCOhost Academic Search Complete; Gale Onefile; and Proquest 5000 International]”

EBSCOhost Complete was the best of the three, claiming indexing of just over 20% of DOAJ-listed OA journals in full-text. As the author says, the marketing claims/lists on this were taken at face value, and were not verified. Nor was the indexing checked for being up-to-date.

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