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Learned Publishing, Volume 23
Volume 23, Number 1, January 2010
- Alan Singleton:
'Peaks and troughs' or 'pigs in troughs'? 3 - Kirsty Meddings:
Credit where credit's due: plagiarism screening in scholarly publishing. 5-8 - Helen (Yuehong) Zhang:
CrossCheck: an effective tool for detecting plagiarism. 9-14 - Clifford B. Saper, John H. R. Maunsell:
The Neuroscience Peer Review Consortium. 15-16 - Malhar N. Kumar:
The 'peer reviewer as collaborator' model for publishing. 17-22 - Mark Bide, Alicia Wise:
21st-century rights management: why does it matter and what is being done? 23-31 - Chris Armbruster:
Whose metrics? Citation, usage and access metrics as scholarly information service. 33-38 - Stephen Pinfield:
Paying for open access? Institutional funding streams and OA publication charges. 39-52 - Henning P. Nielsen, Sven-Olaf Vogt:
What pharmaceutical libraries really want. 53-58 - Frank-Thorsten Krell:
Should editors influence journal impact factors? 59-62 - James Hartley:
Never mind the impact factor: colleagues know better! 63-65 - Peggy Glahn:
Why outsourcing cannot help profitability in today's challenging times. 67-68 - Fred Friend:
A journal business model to replace the big deal? 69-70 - Priscilla S. Markwood:
Managing Global Business Strategies: A Twenty-first-century Perspective. 72-73 - John Cox:
Current Models of Digital Scholarly Communication: Results of an Investigation Conducted by Ithaka for the Association of Research Libraries. 73-75 - Fytton Rowland:
Information Science in Transition. 76 - Richard Balkwill:
International Copyright Law and Policy. 76-78 - Sarah Day:
Digital Consumers: Reshaping the Information Profession. 78
Volume 23, Number 2, April 2010
- Janet Fisher:
Whither e-books? 83-84 - James Culling:
All together now: integrating customer data with MasterVision. 85-92 - Xue-Li Liu, Mei-Ying Wang:
Self-citation in Chinese biomedical journals. 93-100 - Sarah Cooney-McQuat, Stefan Busch, Deborah Kahn:
Open access publishing: a viable solution for society publishers. 101-105 - Claire Bird:
Continued adventures in open access: 2009 perspective. 107-116 - Shaul Shalvi, Matthijs Baas, Michel J. J. Handgraaf, Carsten K. W. De Dreu:
Write when hot - submit when not: seasonal bias in peer review or acceptance? 117-123 - Lutz Bornmann, Hans-Dieter Daniel:
Reliability of reviewers' ratings when using public peer review: a case study. 124-131 - Cathy Griffin:
The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery's CrossCheck experience. 132-135 - Mary Waltham:
Humanities and social science journals: a pilot study of eight US associations. 136-143 - Ian Rowlands, David Nicholas:
The economic downturn and libraries: an international survey. 144-156 - Charlie Rapple:
Online. Indexed. Catalogued. Free. But will users find it? 157-161 - Ted Freeman:
The Web@20: thoughts about utopias, technology, and collaborative science. 163-165 - Peter Kilborn:
Identification of e-books. 166-168 - Michael Jubb:
Open Access - What Are the Economic Benefits? A Comparison of the United Kingdom, Netherlands and Denmark. 169-170 - Ann Okerson:
Licensing Digital Content: A Practical Guide for Librarians, 2nd edn. 170-171 - Anna Marie Roos:
Getting Published: A Companion for the Humanities and Social Sciences. 171-172 - Thad McIlroy:
The Brave New World of Publishing: The Symbiotic Relationship Between Printing and Book Publishing. 172-173 - Thad McIlroy:
Digitize This Book: The Politics of New Media or Why We Need Open Access Now. 172 - William Bowes:
Digital Copyright: Law & Practice (3rd edn). 173-174 - Michael Jubb:
The Future of the Academic Journal. 174-175
Volume 23, Number 3, July 2010
- Alan Singleton:
Why usage is useless. 179-184 - Maxine Smith:
Gaining ISO 9001: the experience of Oxford Journals. 185-192 - Nerea Rodríguez-Armentia, Carlos B. Amat:
Is it worth establishing institutional repositories? The strategies for open access to Spanish peer-reviewed articles. 193-203 - Kitty McClanahan, Lei Wu, Carol Tenopir, Donald W. King:
Embracing change: perceptions of e-journals by faculty members. 209-223 - Gang (Gary) Wan, Zao Liu:
Knowing your users: the value of article database usage analysis. 225-236 - Catalina Estrada-Mejía, Clemente Forero-Pineda:
The quest for visibility of scientific journals in Latin America. 237-252 - Mark Anderson-Wilk:
In defense of the reference: more than linking in evolving Web environments. 253-257 - Arif E. Jinha:
Article 50 million: an estimate of the number of scholarly articles in existence. 258-263 - Bob Campbell, John Willinsky, Rick Anderson:
Report and Recommendations from the Scholarly Publishing Roundtable. 264-266 - Buhle Mlambo-Thata:
Evaluating Electronic Resource Programmes and Provision: Case Studies from Africa and Asia. 266-267 - Alan Singleton:
Bibliometrics and Citation Analysis; from the Science Citation Index to Cybermetrics. 267-268 - Priscilla S. Markwood:
The Long Tail: Why the Future of Business is Selling Less of More. 268-269 - Becky Albitz:
Content Licensing: Buying and Selling Digital Resources. 269-270 - Iain D. Craig:
Measuring Academic Research: How to Undertake a Bibliometric Study. 270-271
Volume 23, Number 4, October 2010
- Janet Fisher:
Do you know what your users are doing? 277-278 - Joss Saunders:
Plagiarism and the law. 279-292 - Ronald Snijder:
The profits of free books: an experiment to measure the impact of open access publishing. 293-301 - Min Shen, Wan-jie Jiang, Shu-sen Zheng:
China's medical periodicals: from localization to internationalization. 303-311 - Zhigang Wang:
Digital publishing in China: is there a copyright crisis? 313-318 - Hasan Shareef Ahmed, Abdullahel Hadi, Nuzhat Choudhury:
Authorship conflict in Bangladesh: an exploratory study. 319-325 - William Park:
The publishing world is open, not flat. 326-328 - Tracey Armstrong:
Context-based licensing: technology and content working together. 329-330 - Sylwia B. Ufnalska:
Multilingual EASE guidelines for authors and translators. 331-332 - John Wilbanks:
We need a Web for data. 333-335 - Ove Kähler:
Combining peer review and metrics to assess journals for inclusion in Scopus. 336-346 - Laura Cox:
Scholarly book publishing practice: the ALPSP survey findings. 347-356 - Martin Marlow:
The role of the aggregator: using third-party suppliers to reach the market. 357-361 - Richard Balkwill:
COPYRIGHT - interpreting the law for libraries, archives and information services. 363-364 - Richard Balkwill:
Moral Panics and the Copyright Wars. 364-365 - David Payne:
Editor's Handbook: An Online Resource and CE Course. 365-366 - Huw Alexander:
Selling Rights. 366-367
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