23 results
Search Results
2. Science and policy in substance abuse.
- Author
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Arndt, Stephan
- Subjects
SUBSTANCE abuse ,OPEN access publishing ,PERIODICALS ,ELECTRONIC publishing ,DRUG addiction ,ALCOHOLISM - Abstract
Substance Abuse Treatment, Prevention, and Policy (SATPP) is an open access, peer-reviewed international journal of original research and scholarship that focuses on policy issues in the treatment and prevention of substance use disorders. Separate and often disparate public systems deal with substance use problems as well as provide treatment and prevention. This journal will provide an environment for the exchange of ideas, new research, consensus papers, and critical reviews that bridge fields that share a common goal of reducing the problems caused by drugs and alcohol. The agenda is simple; a new forum for integrating thoughts, issues, and developments. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. A new editorial board for a new editorial period.
- Author
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Villaverde, Antonio
- Subjects
GENETIC recombination research ,MOLECULAR cloning ,PROTEIN folding ,ELECTRONIC publishing - Abstract
The author reflects on the completion of the first period of the editorial life of Microbial Cell Factories as an Open Access journal by printing research papers and reviews. He stated that the scope of the journal includes genetic engineering, gene cloning and expression and protein folding and refolding. He also added that Open Access nature of Microbial Cell Factories permits the barrierless, widespread dissemination of the published papers among the scientific community.
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Open access and article processing charges.
- Author
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Arndt, Stephan
- Subjects
ELECTRONIC publishing ,PUBLISHED articles ,ELECTRONIC journals ,SUBSTANCE abuse ,PHARMACEUTICAL policy ,PERIODICAL publishing - Abstract
Substance Abuse, Treatment, Prevention, and Policy uses a medium that provides the broadest possible worldwide readership. Anyone in the world can read articles without charge. Since the articles published here will hopefully help inform policy this is exactly the right target - free and unlimited access. Beginning July 2006, article-processing charges will be applied to papers published in this journal. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Can we speed up the online publishing process? And who will pay for it, anyway?
- Author
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Wheatley, Denys and Grynszpan, Delphine
- Subjects
ELECTRONIC publishing ,PUBLISHING ,ELECTRONIC publications ,BOOK industry - Abstract
The article stresses the need to increase the speed of the process of online publishing. It cites factors that impede an improved turnaround time, including author resubmission. Also noted is the Varmus Principle, which states that important research papers should be published online so that they become immediately and freely available to readers. It adds that there are ways in which less privileged nations can gain subsidies to assist in publication costs, provided the principle is upheld.
- Published
- 2002
6. Five years of cooperation: EURAPA and Springer Publishers—state of the art, changes, and future development.
- Author
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Mechling, Heinz
- Subjects
PERIODICAL publishing ,AGING ,PHYSICAL activity ,IMPACT factor (Citation analysis) ,ELECTRONIC publishing ,OLDER people ,PERIODICALS - Abstract
The author reflects on the achievements and future developments of the journal European Review of Aging and Physical Activity (EURAPA), the official publication of European Group for Research into Elderly and Physical Activity (EGREPA). He states that EURAPA has acquired an impact factor (IF) of 0.550, making the journal's title, general policy and subject to be maintained as the official journal of EGREPA. He adds that the journal will be published only in an electronic version in 2011.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Retrovirology and young Turks….
- Author
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Kuan-Teh Jeang
- Subjects
ELECTRONIC journals ,ELECTRONIC publishing ,VIROLOGY ,EDITORS - Abstract
The article explains why "Retrovirology" will be different from other publications on virology. The journal will be exclusively online and will be Open Access. Open Access policy changes the way in which articles are published. All articles will become freely and universally accessible online. Articles will be edited by experienced editors.
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Lead editorial: Trials -- using the opportunities of electronic publishing to improve the reporting of randomised trials.
- Author
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Altman, Douglas G., Furberg, Curt D., Grimshaw, Jeremy M., and Rothwell, Peter M.
- Subjects
CLINICAL trials ,ELECTRONIC books ,DESKTOP publishing ,MEDICAL care ,ELECTRONIC publishing ,PUBLISHING - Abstract
This editorial introduces the new online, open access, peer-reviewed journal Trials. The journal considers manuscripts on any aspect of the design, performance, and findings of randomised controlled trials in any discipline related to health care, and also encourages the publication of protocols. Trialists will be able to provide the necessary detail for a true and complete scientific record. They will be able to communicate not only all outcome measures, as well as varying analyses and interpretations, but also in-depth descriptions of what they did and honest reflections about what they learnt. Trials also encourages articles covering generic issues related to trials, for example focussing on the design, conduct, analysis, interpretation, or reporting. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Which gene did you mean?
- Author
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Mons, Barend
- Subjects
COMPUTATIONAL biology ,BIOINFORMATICS ,GENES ,DATA mining ,ELECTRONIC publishing - Abstract
Computational Biology needs computer-readable information records. Increasingly, meta-analysed and pre-digested information is being used in the follow up of high throughput experiments and other investigations that yield massive data sets. Semantic enrichment of plain text is crucial for computer aided analysis. In general people will think about semantic tagging as just another form of text mining, and that term has quite a negative connotation in the minds of some biologists who have been disappointed by classical approaches of text mining. Efforts so far have tried to develop tools and technologies that retrospectively extract the correct information from text, which is usually full of ambiguities. Although remarkable results have been obtained in experimental circumstances, the wide spread use of information mining tools is lagging behind earlier expectations. This commentary proposes to make semantic tagging an integral process to electronic publishing. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Open Access gains attention in scholar communication.
- Author
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Chiao, Paul J. and Schmidt, Christian
- Subjects
OPEN access publishing ,SCHOLARLY publishing ,SCHOLARLY periodicals ,ELECTRONIC publishing - Abstract
The article discusses the use of open access in scholar communication. It enumerates the benefits of open access for science and the general public including the universal accessibility of all articles online. It cites the advantages of the on-line publication of the periodical "Molecular Cancer" such as the presentation of coloured pictures and large sets of supporting data without additional charges. The authors cite that the acceptance rate of the publication did not change significantly.
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Open access to the scientific journal literature.
- Subjects
OPEN access publishing ,ELECTRONIC publishing ,SCIENTIFIC literature ,SCHOLARLY peer review ,COPYRIGHT - Abstract
None of the advantages of traditional scientific journals need be sacrificed in order to provide free online access to scientific journal articles. Objections that open access to scientific journal literature requires the sacrifice of peer-review, revenue, copyright protection, or other strengths of traditional journals, are based on misunderstandings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2002
12. What feedback do reviewers give when reviewing qualitative manuscripts? A focused mapping review and synthesis.
- Author
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HERBER, Oliver Rudolf, BRADBURY-JONES, Caroline, BÖLING, Susanna, COMBES, Sarah, HIRT, Julian, KOOP, Yvonne, NYHAGEN, Ragnhild, VELDHUIZEN, Jessica D., TAYLOR, Julie, and Böling, Susanna
- Subjects
ACQUISITION of manuscripts ,ELECTRONIC publishing ,THEMATIC analysis ,OPEN access publishing ,INTERNET publishing - Abstract
Background: Peer review is at the heart of the scientific process. With the advent of digitisation, journals started to offer electronic articles or publishing online only. A new philosophy regarding the peer review process found its way into academia: the open peer review. Open peer review as practiced by BioMed Central (BMC) is a type of peer review where the names of authors and reviewers are disclosed and reviewer comments are published alongside the article. A number of articles have been published to assess peer reviews using quantitative research. However, no studies exist that used qualitative methods to analyse the content of reviewers' comments.Methods: A focused mapping review and synthesis (FMRS) was undertaken of manuscripts reporting qualitative research submitted to BMC open access journals from 1 January - 31 March 2018. Free-text reviewer comments were extracted from peer review reports using a 77-item classification system organised according to three key dimensions that represented common themes and sub-themes. A two stage analysis process was employed. First, frequency counts were undertaken that allowed revealing patterns across themes/sub-themes. Second, thematic analysis was conducted on selected themes of the narrative portion of reviewer reports.Results: A total of 107 manuscripts submitted to nine open-access journals were included in the FMRS. The frequency analysis revealed that among the 30 most frequently employed themes "writing criteria" (dimension II) is the top ranking theme, followed by comments in relation to the "methods" (dimension I). Besides that, some results suggest an underlying quantitative mindset of reviewers. Results are compared and contrasted in relation to established reporting guidelines for qualitative research to inform reviewers and authors of frequent feedback offered to enhance the quality of manuscripts.Conclusions: This FMRS has highlighted some important issues that hold lessons for authors, reviewers and editors. We suggest modifying the current reporting guidelines by including a further item called "Degree of data transformation" to prompt authors and reviewers to make a judgment about the appropriateness of the degree of data transformation in relation to the chosen analysis method. Besides, we suggest that completion of a reporting checklist on submission becomes a requirement. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. How to choose the best journal for your case report.
- Author
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Rison, Richard A., Shepphird, Jennifer Kelly, and Kidd, Michael R.
- Subjects
OPEN access publishing ,ELECTRONIC publishing ,COPYRIGHT ,SCIENCE publishing ,NEWSLETTERS ,DECISION making ,MEDICAL records ,PROFESSIONAL peer review ,STANDARDS - Abstract
Since the establishment of the Journal of Medical Case Reports in 2006, the number of journals that publish case reports has increased rapidly, and most of these journals are open access. Open access publishing usually requires authors to pay publication fees while offering the articles online, free of charge, and free of most copyright and licensing restrictions. The movement for open access has gained support in the research community, with the publishers BioMed Central and PLOS ONE becoming leaders in scientific publishing in their number of articles and citations. As the number of open access publishers has exploded, so too has the number of publishers that act in bad faith to profit from the open access model. Simple guidelines have been developed and resources are available to help authors choose a suitable journal for publication of their case reports. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Corrections in an electronic environment.
- Author
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Norton, Melissa L. and Saltman, Deborah C.
- Subjects
ELECTRONIC publications ,ELECTRONIC records ,ELECTRONIC publishing ,SCHOLARLY publishing - Abstract
The need to publish corrections to scientific articles, and occasionally to retract them, has been recognized for decades. However very little emphasis has been attached to how this is done, provided that the retraction or correction is accessible. We are considering a policy to directly correct our online publications. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Open access versus subscription journals: a comparison of scientific impact.
- Subjects
IMPACT factor (Citation analysis) ,OPEN access publishing ,PERIODICALS ,ELECTRONIC publishing ,PUBLISHING - Abstract
The article presents a study that compares the scientific impact of open access (OP) journals with subscription journals, controlling for journal age, the country of the publisher, discipline and their business model. The study uses the two-year impact factors as a proxy for scientific impact, and Directory of Open Access Journals (DOAJ) to identify OA journals. It reveals that OA journals indexed in Web of Science and/or Scopus have the same impact and quality as subscription journals.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Society News.
- Subjects
OLDER people ,PHYSICAL activity ,HEALTH behavior ,PERIODICAL publishing ,ELECTRONIC publishing ,SERVICES for membership in associations, institutions, etc. ,SOCIETIES - Abstract
The article offers information related to the European Group for Research into Elderly and Physical Activity (EGREPA). It states that EGREPA leads in the creation of expert opinions concerning physical activity. It also mentions that the journal of EGREPA, "The European Review of Aging and Physical Activity (EURAPA)," entitles its members with online issues with no charge. Meanwhile, the EGREPA Membership Application form is presented,.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Are pediatric Open Access journals promoting good publication practice? An analysis of author instructions.
- Author
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Meerpohl, Joerg J., Wolff, Robert F., Antes, Gerd, and von Elm, Erik
- Subjects
MEDICAL specialties & specialists ,PEDIATRICS ,ELECTRONIC publishing ,GUIDELINES ,MEDICAL care - Abstract
Background: Several studies analyzed whether conventional journals in general medicine or specialties such as pediatrics endorse recommendations aiming to improve publication practice. Despite evidence showing benefits of these recommendations, the proportion of endorsing journals has been moderate to low and varied considerably for different recommendations. About half of pediatric journals indexed in the Journal Citation Report referred to the Uniform Requirements for Manuscripts of the International Committee of Medical Journal Editors (ICMJE) but only about a quarter recommended registration of trials. We aimed to investigate to what extent pediatric openaccess (OA) journals endorse these recommendations. We hypothesized that a high proportion of these journals have adopted recommendations on good publication practice since OA electronic publishing has been associated with a number of editorial innovations aiming at improved access and transparency. Methods: We identified 41 journals publishing original research in the subject category "Health Sciences, Medicine (General), Pediatrics" of the Directory of Open Access Journals http://www.doaj.org. From the journals' online author instructions we extracted information regarding endorsement of four domains of editorial policy: the Uniform Requirements for Manuscripts, trial registration, disclosure of conflicts of interest and five major reporting guidelines such as the CONSORT (Consolidated Standards of Reporting Trials) statement. Two investigators collected data independently. Results: The Uniform Requirements were mentioned by 27 (66%) pediatric OA journals. Thirteen (32%) required or recommended trial registration prior to publication of a trial report. Conflict of interest policies were stated by 25 journals (61%). Advice about reporting guidelines was less frequent: CONSORT was referred to by 12 journals (29%) followed by other reporting guidelines (MOOSE, PRISMA or STARD) (8 journals, 20%) and STROBE (3 journals, 7%). The EQUATOR network, a platform of several guideline initiatives, was acknowledged by 4 journals (10%). Journals published by OA publishing houses gave more guidance than journals published by professional societies or other publishers. Conclusions: Pediatric OA journals mentioned certain recommendations such as the Uniform Requirements or trial registration more frequently than conventional journals; however, endorsement is still only moderate. Further research should confirm these exploratory findings in other medical fields and should clarify what the motivations and barriers are in implementing such policies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Internationalisation of information services for publishers' open access policies: the DINI multilingual integration layer.
- Author
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Scholze, Frank
- Subjects
OPEN access publishing ,ELECTRONIC publishing ,COPYRIGHT of electronic information resources ,PUBLISHING ,SCIENTIFIC literature - Abstract
It is essential for the strategy of open access self-archiving that scientific authors are given comprehensive information on publisher copyright policies. DINI, the German Initiative for Networked Information, has developed a German (and potentially multilingual) interface to the English SHERPA/RoMEO service to provide additional information on German publishers' open access policies. As a next step, this interface was enhanced to an integration layer combining different sources on publisher copyright policies. This integration layer can be used in many different contexts. Together with the SHERPA/RoMEO team, DINI aims to build an international support structure for open access information. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Funding free and universal access to Journal of Neuroinflammation.
- Author
-
Mrak, Robert E. and Griffin, W. Sue T.
- Subjects
ELECTRONIC journals ,ELECTRONIC publications ,ELECTRONIC publishing ,PUBLISHING ,ACCESS to information ,INFORMATION retrieval - Abstract
Journal of Neuroinflammation is an Open Access, online journal published by BioMed Central. Open Access publishing provides instant and universal availability of published work to any potential reader, worldwide, completely free of subscriptions, passwords, and charges. Further, authors retain copyright for their work, facilitating its dissemination. Open Access publishing is made possible by article-processing charges assessed "on the front end" to authors, their institutions, or their funding agencies. Beginning November 1, 2004, the Journal of Neuroinflammation will introduce article-processing charges of around US$525 for accepted articles. This charge will be waived for authors from institutions that are BioMed Central members, and in additional cases for reasons of genuine financial hardship. These article-processing charges pay for an electronic submission process that facilitates efficient and thorough peer review, for publication costs involved in providing the article freely and universally accessible in various formats online, and for the processes required for the article's inclusion in PubMed and its archiving in PubMed Central, e- Depot, Potsdam and INIST. There is no remuneration of any kind provided to the Editors-in-Chief, to any members of the Editorial Board, or to peer reviewers; all of whose work is entirely voluntary. Our article-processing charge is less than charges frequently levied by traditional journals: the Journal of Neuroinflammation does not levy any additional page or color charges on top of this fee, and there are no reprint costs as publication-quality pdf files are provided, free, for distribution in lieu of reprints. Our article-processing charge will enable full, immediate, and continued Open Access for all work published in Journal of Neuroinflammation. The benefits from such Open Access will accrue to readers, through unrestricted access; to authors, through the widest possible dissemination of their work; and to science and society in general, through facilitation of information availability and scientific advancement. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Introduction of article-processing charges for Population Health Metrics.
- Author
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Mathers, Colin D. and Murray, Christopher J. L.
- Subjects
ELECTRONIC journals ,ELECTRONIC publishing ,INFORMATION services ,MEDICINE - Abstract
Population Health Metrics is an open-access online electronic journal published by BioMed Central - it is universally and freely available online to everyone, its authors retain copyright, and it is archived in at least one internationally recognised free repository. To fund this, from November 1 2003, authors of articles accepted for publication will be asked to pay an article-processing charge of US$500. This editorial outlines the reasons for the introduction of article-processing charges and the way in which this policy will work. Waiver requests will be considered on a case-by-case basis, by the Editor-in-Chief. Article-processing charges will not apply to authors whose institutions are 'members' of BioMed Central. Current members include NHS England, the World Health Organization, the US National Institutes of Health, Harvard, Princeton and Yale universities, and all UK universities. No charge is made for articles that are rejected after peer review. Many funding agencies have also realized the importance of open access publishing and have specified that their grants may be used directly to pay APCs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2003
21. What does the marriage of Open Access with online publication bring?
- Author
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Gupta, Kailash C.
- Subjects
OPEN access publishing ,ELECTRONIC publishing ,INFORMATION dissemination ,AIDS research ,SCHOLARLY periodicals - Abstract
Open Access online publishing is the trend of the future for unrestricted rapid and international dissemination of knowledge. Several journals are published on acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS) research, but none of them appear to be Open Access. To eliminate or to abate the scourge of AIDS, it is important that the knowledge acquired through research be disseminated as soon as possible. The Open Access journal, AIDS Research and Therapy, is intended to fill this knowledge gap by online publication of basic, preclinical, and clinical research articles. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Asia Pacific Family Medicine: The rebirth of a not-so-young child.
- Author
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Clearihan, Lyn, Lam, T. P., and Leopando, Zorayda
- Subjects
OPEN access publishing ,MEDICAL literature ,PERIODICALS ,ELECTRONIC publishing - Abstract
The authors discuss the open access web-based BioMed Central platform of the journal "Asia Pacific Family Medicine." For the authors, this move is like a rebirth of the journal. They anticipate that this move will help increase the journal's exposure to a much wider audience. But despite this move, the journal's objectives have remained unchanged, according to the authors.
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Current Controlled Trials: an opportunity to help improve the quality of clinical research
- Author
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Chalmers, Iain
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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