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News from JURN

Category Archives: Open Access publishing

The Five Stars of Online Journal Articles

19 Thursday Jan 2012

Posted by futurilla in How to improve academic search, Open Access publishing

≈ 1 Comment

David Shotton proposes The Five Stars of Online Journal Articles…

“I propose five factors — peer review, open access, enriched content, available datasets and machine-readable metadata — as the Five Stars of Online Journal Articles.”

From a search perspective, I might suggest we need to add another star for “Googlyness”, when all the following factors are present…

* search-engine friendliness (i.e.: make sure the article title shows up as the clickable link in search results, not something like “43w94.taryyt.indd”)

* RSS feeds for linked tables-of-contents

* embedding of the journal title and home URL in each individual PDF or HTML article page (so they can be easily tracked back, after they get casually downloaded to a hard-drive)

Open access journal publishing guide in Spanish

16 Monday Jan 2012

Posted by futurilla in Open Access publishing

≈ Leave a comment

A large well-designed website in Spanish, offering advice and tools for publishing open access ejournals.

  [ Hat-tip: Technolama ]

Open access in Chinese ejournals

12 Thursday Jan 2012

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

≈ Leave a comment

Just published, details of the number of open access ejournals in the state-controlled Chinese National Knowledge Information (CNKI) database…

“We identified and analysed the 147 journals offering open access (OA) among the 2960 scholarly journals indexed by the Chinese National Knowledge Information (CNKI) database in the humanities and social sciences”

Dehau Hu. “The availability of open access journals in the humanities and social sciences in China“. Online at the Journal of Information Science, 4th January 2012.

In 2009 it was reported there were “1,856 print journals in the humanities” in the CNKI. It indexes journals from 1915 onwards. The pages were apparently until recently ‘hard’ scanned images of pages, in order to prevent keyword searches of full-text. No journal publication outside of the CNKI is permitted. PDFs are now available via this service.

Previously on JURN blog…

Chinese set out measures to control academic corruption

Problems with Chinese journals

Fake China

Society Publishers With Open Access Journals, second edition

07 Saturday Jan 2012

Posted by futurilla in Open Access publishing

≈ Leave a comment

List of Society Publishers With Open Access Journals, second edition (Dec 2011). There are about 50 listed in the arts and humanities.

A Comparative Study of the Indexing of Open Access Art Journals

07 Saturday Jan 2012

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

≈ 2 Comments

An interesting new Nov 2011 journal article…

Sian Evans, Hilary Thompson, and Alex Watkins. “Discovering Open Access Art History: A Comparative Study of the Indexing of Open Access Art Journals” (PDF full-text link).

The researchers found 30 art history titles listed in the DOAJ directory. They then looked for the presence of these in Art Full Text, ARTbibliographies Modern, Art & Architecture Complete, and Bibliography of the History of Art / International Bibliography of Art. They found that only 6 of the 30 DOAJ titles were being indexed by these commercial databases. But half the time the actual full-text article was still inaccessible…

“50% of the time [in the commercial databases] there was no indication that the article could be read for free, nor was the full text provided”

By contrast, Google Scholar indexed 15 of the 30 DOAJ art history titles, and provided handy click-through links to full-text articles, albeit at the price of jumbling them in among results from a host of paywalled results drawn from commercial databases, Google Books, and the like.

Of course, JURN indexes all 30 — and the JURN Directory currently links to more than 60 titles in the art history category. Plus journals in museology and heritage conservation, and also the wider collection of history journals.

It was also interesting to read in the article that…

“No study regarding the indexing of open access journals has yet been conducted in the arts”.

Is there really not a single librarian, or even an OA advocate, in the entire world who is or has been interested in such matters?

Sadly, the authors find that…

“the vast majority of open access art scholarship remains undiscoverable for specialists in the field.”

Annotum

05 Thursday Jan 2012

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

≈ 2 Comments

Annotum is now available. First mooted in March 2011, it’s now a new WordPress theme that aims to deliver a….

* simple, robust, easy-to-use authoring system to create and edit scholarly articles

* an editorial review and publishing system that can be used to submit, review, and publish scholarly articles

An open-source, open-process, open-access scholarly authoring and publishing platform based on WordPress, built on the Carringon Theme framework. Annotum provides a complete, open-access scholarly journal production system including peer-review, workflow, and advanced editing and formatting features such as structured figures, equations, PubMed and CrossRef reference import, and structured XML input and output compatible with the National Library of Medicine’s Journal Article DTD.

Could be especially useful for university librarians who have journal management foisted on them?

Open Access Journal Publishing in the Arts and Humanities workshop – report

14 Wednesday Dec 2011

Posted by futurilla in Open Access publishing

≈ Leave a comment

A summary of the Open Access Journal Publishing in the Arts and Humanities workshop, held at the SaS in London on 20th October 2011.

Open Spires

19 Saturday Nov 2011

Posted by futurilla in Open Access publishing

≈ Leave a comment

Open Spires, open podcasts from the University of Oxford. Started in 2009, and now seemingly getting up more of a head of steam. Such a pity that there’s no unified RSS feed, though. The feeds are all for the individual departments and schools. Oxford, please remember that there’s an “In Our Time” audience out there that doesn’t much care about disciplinary boundaries. On the credit side, MP3 downloads are allowed.

UK will ignore journal title in determining research quality

22 Saturday Oct 2011

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

≈ 1 Comment

In the UK, the Universities and Science Minister is reported as saying that the research excellence framework (the national assessment exercise coming in from 2014) will seemingly take no notice of which journal an academic publishes in..

“Individual universities may have a different perspective on the journals you should have published in when it comes to promotion and recruitment, but the REF process makes no such judgements,” he said.

It will apparently also…

“encourage departments to “look beyond publication in a peer-reviewed journal as the be all and end all of academic life”.

Open Access Week

14 Friday Oct 2011

Posted by futurilla in Open Access publishing

≈ Leave a comment

Open Access Week starts in just 10 days, and the events list seems to be filling out nicely.

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