Publisher distortion of citations

On publisher distortion of the citation rate…

“60 per cent [of research academics] admit that they would add citations from a journal to their reference list before submitting their article to [that journal]”

Once submitted…

“Over 20 per cent of researchers have been pressured by journal editors to modify their articles in ways that manipulate the reputation of the journal […] Editors can manipulate their journal’s ranking by asking authors to include more citations of other articles in that very journal”

Google Scholar: The Good, The Bad and The Ugly

Google Scholar: The Good, The Bad and The Ugly“, a short free Powerpoint from the University of Leeds in the UK. It’s a useful up-to-date summary, but I’d worry about the document’s opening claim that Google Scholar has… “Almost 100% coverage of journals from partner databases and publicly available TOCs”. A casual glance at this statement may mislead people into assuming that Google Scholar has complete coverage. It doesn’t. As I’ve said before, it is rather poor at including the contents of large numbers of open access arts and humanities ejournals.

Questia to revamp, relaunch

I hear that Questia is to… “relaunch this summer with an all-new updated look and feel”. Questia is a low-cost commercial buffet-style online research library, aimed at students. It claims to be… “the world’s largest online collection of books and journal articles in the humanities and social sciences”.

Incidentally, I also note that Open J-Gate hasn’t come back online after five months away — it went offline in February 2012 and is now just a holding page. Does anyone know if it’s likely to be coming back?

‘Nope, no content to see at JURN, move along now…’

An odd comment on JURN by Peter D. Verheyen (of The Book Arts Web), 19th May…

Jurn.org is good for finding articles, but does nothing to actually deliver and serve the actual content

It’s surely a simple matter of clicking on the links to get the full text. For instance, all the PDFs of Peter’s Bonefolder magazine are linked, in the first page of search results for “Bonefolder”.

A fluster of reports

A new report, from commercial academic publishers, asked UK libraries what the results might be of the government’s plan for universal open-access with an embargo period of six months…

“Nearly a quarter of [the 210 libraries that responded] would cancel their humanities and social science subscriptions entirely.”

A further report suggest another problem — that papers simply won’t be presented by academics to their repositories…

“The PEER findings […] indicated that the vast majority of academics did not self-archive their work even when asked to do so.”

Perhaps UK universities should declare that journal articles won’t count toward future career advancement, unless they are deposited in a timely manner?

Welsh Journals Online

An exemplary effort from the National Library of Wales, to get all their small and local journals freely available online at Welsh Journals Online. Added to the JURN Directory, and also to the JURN Search…

Flintshire Historical Society Journal (1977-2003)

Flintshire Historical Society Journal (1911-1976)

Gwent Local History (1976-2006)

Gower (1948-2005) (local history of this remote Welsh peninsula)

Journal of the Pembrokeshire Hist. Society (1985-2005)

Journal of the Welsh Bibliographical Society (1910-1984)

Journal of Welsh Ecclesiastical History (1984-1992)

Journal of Welsh Religious History (1993-2004)

Y Llyfr yng Nghymru / Welsh Book Studies (1998-2006)

Morgannwg (1957-2004) (Glamorgan local history and archaeology)

Montgomeryshire Collections (1944-2002)

National Library of Wales journal (1939-2006)

Nature in Wales (1955-1987) (included for its book reviews of literary nature writing)

Pembrokeshire Historian (1959-1981)

Radnorshire Society Transactions (1931-2004)

Reports … Cardiff Naturalists’ Society (1900-1981) (later issues also have regular articles on local history and archaeology)

Transactions … Cardiganshire Antiquarian Society (1911-1938)

Wales (1937-1959) (literary journal with reviews)

Welsh History Review (1960-2001)

Welsh Music History (1996-2004)

The future of ebooks

Publishers Weekly has a perceptive new article on the future of ebooks, A Soft Landing on Normandy

“Almost every single startup that is delivering authoring tools — either for designing and producing content, maintaining a full-bore content management system, or simply supporting an interim level of annotations or fragmentation — is building their own proprietary web-based layer that is largely HTML5-based yet also capable of linking to software development kits and libraries needed to support the export of rich app experiences. In other words, everything is baroque, and nothing in the standards space works well enough across the range of possible uses to be a default rendering environment. It is very much as if we are back in the Middle Ages scribbling on parchment, whittling our own quills from feathers we have on hand, drawing up whatever ink we have available. Our 21st Century parchment is a world-wide digital canvas, but our quills are hand-crafted.”

That can potentially make sense for presenting high quality specialist non-fiction/textbooks with complex layouts, which I’d suggest is where these startups may be going with these tools. If they can create a system easy enough for small and mid-sized publishers to use, but which can produce faithful / easy-to-update / app-friendly expensive non-fiction in iPad editions, then they stand a chance of a buyout by a major publisher — who might then polish and sell the system to smaller publishers, along with a rights lock-in.