THE FUTURE OF ACADEMIC JOURNALS Amelia Acker | Information Ecology | 5.17.10.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Academic Search Engines
Advertisements

Partnering with Faculty / researchers to Enhance Scholarly Communication Caroline Mutwiri.
Scholarly publishing distribution models In traditional model, libraries/others serve as mediators between information and researchers by buying books.
What Do We Know about Scientists’ Use of Information? Carol Tenopir Donald W. King
The Importance of Journals to the Scientific Endeavor Carol Tenopir University of Tennessee Knoxville, Tennessee, USA.
E-prints: the Nottingham Experience Stephen Pinfield and Mike Gardner.
C. Tenopir 1 Scholarly Publishing at the Crossroads Carol Tenopir University of Tennessee
1 Electronic Journals What Are You Really Getting ? Carol Tenopir University of Tennessee
HOW ELECTRONIC JOURNALS ARE CHANGING ENGINEERS’ INFORMATION SEEKING & READING PATTERNS Donald W. King University of Pittsburgh School of Information Sciences.
Promoting Scholarly Communication in the 21 st Century The Role of Institutional Repositories in the Open Access Movement Paul Tam Pro-Vice-Chancellor,
Where should I submit my publication? Application Training Module Series III by Customer Education Team Stop Searching, Start.
Cornell Institute for Digital Collections DIGITIZATION AND THE DIGITAL: THE IMPACT ON ACADEMIC LIBRARIES Peter B. Hirtle Cornell Institute for Digital.
1 Connecting with Faculty Perceptions and Behaviors Dr. Karla Hahn Collection Management Team Leader University of Maryland Libraries.
Renaissance Computing Institute Scholarly Communication in a Digital World: Some Thoughts Dan Reed
T H O M S O N S C I E N T I F I C Editorial Development James Testa, Director.
Types of Sources Used in Research Nancy McEnery, MLIS.
Electronic or Print: Are Scholarly Journals Still Important? Carol Tenopir, University of Tennessee, USA.
Copyright Donald W. King and Carol H. Montgomery This work is the intellectual property of the authors. Permission is granted for this material to.
A Seminar report On Electronic Resources :An Overview
The Digital Journal Collection in Libraries -what Libraries Are doing -Impact on Scientists Carol Tenopir University of Tennessee
Comprehensive user education to successfully navigate the Internet Part 4- Scholarly communication Course developed by University Library of Debrecen.
Providing Access to Your Data: Tracking Data Usage Robert R. Downs, PhD NASA Socioeconomic Data and Applications Center (SEDAC) Center for International.
Rajesh Singh Deputy Librarian University of Delhi Research Metrics Impact Factor & h-Index.
Electronic Publishing and the Economics of Information Part II Implications for Libraries Carol Tenopir University of Tennessee, Knoxville
Fall 2003 Library Liaison Meeting. Agenda Introductions Role of Liaison Ordering schedule Library News –Valuable services to your department –Budget –Books.
Providing Access to Your Data: Tracking Data Usage Robert R. Downs, PhD NASA Socioeconomic Data and Applications Center (SEDAC) Center for International.
LIS654lecture 1 Introduction Thomas Krichel
Thomson Scientific October 2006 ISI Web of Knowledge Autumn updates.
DIGITAL ARCHIVING & OPEN ACCESS What is it? Why do it? How does it work? Getting started UNIVERSITY OF SYDNEY LIBRARY MICHELLE HARRISON | FACULTY LIAISON.
Does a green or golden route to OA make any difference to … Institutional evaluation and assessment of researchers … ? Gunnar Sivertsen Norwegian Institute.
THOMSON SCIENTIFIC Patricia Brennan Thomson Scientific January 10, 2008.
Measuring Value and Outcomes of Reading Dr. Carol Tenopir University of Tennessee
History and Hysteria Carol Tenopir University of Tennessee & Donald W. King Society of Scholarly Publishing Annual Meeting.
Presenter Name Presenter Institution ACRL Scholarly Communication 101: Starting with the Basics Introduction to the Scholarly Communications System.
Journal Reading Patterns of Medical Faculty in a Digital Age Carol Tenopir
Pricing and Paying for Scientific Information during a Period of Transition Madeleine McPherson
The ISI Web of Knowledge nce/training/wok/#tab3.
Maximizing Library Investments in Digital Collections Through Better Data Gathering and Analysis (MaxData) Carol Tenopir and Donald.
Definition and search of scientific articles Tord Heljeberg
LIS654 lecture 1 Introduction Thomas Krichel
CITATION ANALYSIS A Tool for Collection Development and Enhanced Liaison Services Christine Brown and Denis Lacroix.
How Scientists Use Journals: Electronic and Print Carol Tenopir Donald W. King
Are academic journals becoming obsolete? Ted Bergstrom University of California, Santa Barbara.
Open Access - an introduction, Aleppo, December Open Access – an introduction Ian Johnson.
ScholarSpace & Open UH Mānoa March 2013 Beth Tillinghast Web Support Librarian ScholarSpace & eVols Project Manager UHM Library.
Electronic Publishing and the Economics of Information SLA 2001 Carol Tenopir University of Tennessee, Knoxville
Communication Patterns of Engineers Carol Tenopir
JOURNAL CITATION REPORTS James Cook University Celebrating Research 9 OCTOBER 2009 Steven Werkheiser Manager, Customer Education & Training ANZ Thomson.
PUBLICATION Research Data Management. Research Data Management Publication Finishing Touches of Research Data Management Where should you publish: Academic.
The Transition from Traditional to Internet-Based Publishing Dr. ZHOU,Huaibei Scientific Research Publishing November 2015.
Towards Electronic Journals Carol Tenopir And Donald W. King
Institutional Repositories: the DSpace Experience Ann J. Wolpert Director of Libraries Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
Web of Science: The Use & Abuse of Citation Data Mark Robertson & Adam Taves Scott Library Reference Dept.
1 What It Really Costs Carol Tenopir University of Tennessee
C.Tenopir Using E-Journals To Promote Information Worldwide Carol Tenopir University of Tennessee
The Use and Value of Scientific Journals Carol Tenopir University of Tennessee.
+ Scholarly Communication: An Introduction November 7, 2015 Charlotte Roh Slides 3, 4, 9, and 11 of this work were originally created and revised by Stephanie.
Open Access (OA) : a summary for 2006 Joanne Yeomans CERN Scientific Information Group (Presentation for the CESSID students 12 th May 2006)
Measuring Research Impact Using Bibliometrics Constance Wiebrands Manager, Library Services.
Role of librarians in improving the research impact and academic profiling of Indian universities J. K. Vijayakumar Ph. D Manager, Collections & Information.
THE NCSU LIBRARIES the gateway to knowledge for the North Carolina State University community and partners.
Getting Academic Works Published in Peer-Reviewed Journals
Our Digital Showcase Scholars’ Mine Annual Report from July 2015 – June 2016 Providing global access to the digital, scholarly and cultural resources.
Are academic journals becoming obsolete?
How to Use Google Scholar An Educator’s Guide
How to Improve the Visibility and Impact of Your Research
A tale of three surveys: How librarians, faculty and students perceive and use electronic resources March 2009 © SkillSoft Corporation 2003.
Use Patterns of Print and Electronic Journals
Qualities of a Good Researcher
Isid.research.ac.ir
Presentation transcript:

THE FUTURE OF ACADEMIC JOURNALS Amelia Acker | Information Ecology |

What makes an Academic Journal?  Peer review  Discipline specificity  Specialized vs. Broad  Research reviews, book reviews  New research  Critiques of existing research  Indexed rankings

PEER REVIEW

Indexed Rankings  Science Citation Index  Social Science Citation Index  Not a long indexing tradition in the humanities & arts, but there are 1,100 journals indexed in the Arts and Humanities Citation Index  Indexing is done by Thomson’s Scientific’s Institute for Scientific Information

Journal Impact Factor  A journal’s impact factor (IF) is calculated in Journal Citation Reports (also published by ISI)  IF is the average number of citations of articles that were published in the past 2 years: X = number of times articles published in ‘08-09 were cited by indexed journals in ’10 Y = total number of citations published in ‘ Impact factor = X/Y

Publishing

Print vs. Electronic Formats Hard copies on the shelf Electronic Copies online Remote storage like SRLF

Open Access Journals  Factors pushing scholarly communications online: low costs of reproduction and distribution, increasing networked connectivity, current publishing price structures are crippling libraries  Factors keeping journals off-line: licensing and copyright, current academic reward structure… [read = print or perish]  Q: Which type of publication are you likely to submit to in LIS?

Costs of Hard Copies  First copy costs of an academic article on paper is $2K-$4K (Tenopir and King 1996)  Fixed cost of a journal, with 4 issues per year at $12, with 600 subscribers is $120,000  Archiving a journal for a SINGLE issue is estimated $25-$45 for a library (Cooper 1989)  Cost-per-article-read: estimated between $50- $200 (Consider cost per cited, which is quite low)

Benefits of Electronic Copies  Saving shelf space creates possibilities for increasing real estate for cultural heritage materials, other formats, and improved environments like study spaces  Monitoring metrics: easier to measure use, distribution, users (faculty, grad students, public use)  Supporting materials: data sets, images, modules  Search: improves findability but decreases traditional avenues of serendipity  Q: Let’s speculate the costs of electronic formats

Shifting Conventions Publishing conventions are shifting in our current budget climate. Factors such as the academic reward system, library resources, open access, and networked communication are changing we see the once ‘stable’ format of the scholarly journal article. As information scholars, professionals and scientists, what roles should we take on as we begin to publish, promote, write and research? What traditions should we begin to slough off?

References Cooper, Michael. (1989.) A cost comparison of alternative book storage strategies. Library Quarterly 59(3): xx—xx. Marcum, J. W. (2003). Visions. D-Lib Magazine, 9(5). doi: /may2003-marcum Mullins, J. L., Allen, F. R., & Hufford, J. R. (n.d.). ACRL | Top ten assumptions for the future of academic libraries and librarians. Retrieved May 18, 2010, from ions.cfm ions.cfm Tenopir, Carol, and King, Donald W. (1996.) Trends in scientific scholarly journal publishing. Technical report, School of Information Sciences, University of Tennesee, Knoxville. Varian, H. R. (1997). Reprint: The Future of Electronic Journals. Retrieved May 11, 2010, from idx?c=jep;view=text;rgn=main;idno=