Abstract

BackgroundThe emergence of the Internet has triggered tremendous changes in the publication of scientific peer-reviewed journals. Today, journals are usually available in parallel electronic versions, but the way the peer-review process works, the look of articles and journals, and the rigid and slow publication schedules have remained largely unchanged, at least for the vast majority of subscription-based journals. Those publishing firms and scholarly publishers who have chosen the more radical option of open access (OA), in which the content of journals is freely accessible to anybody with Internet connectivity, have had a much bigger degree of freedom to experiment with innovations.ObjectiveThe objective was to study how open access journals have experimented with innovations concerning ways of organizing the peer review, the format of journals and articles, new interactive and media formats, and novel publishing revenue models.MethodsThe features of 24 open access journals were studied. The journals were chosen in a nonrandom manner from the approximately 7000 existing OA journals based on available information about interesting journals and include both representative cases and highly innovative outlier cases.ResultsMost early OA journals in the 1990s were founded by individual scholars and used a business model based on voluntary work close in spirit to open-source development of software. In the next wave, many long-established journals, in particular society journals and journals from regions such as Latin America, made their articles OA when they started publishing parallel electronic versions. From about 2002 on, newly founded professional OA publishing firms using article-processing charges to fund their operations have emerged. Over the years, there have been several experiments with new forms of peer review, media enhancements, and the inclusion of structured data sets with articles. In recent years, the growth of OA publishing has also been facilitated by the availability of open-source software for journal publishing.ConclusionsThe case studies illustrate how a new technology and a business model enabled by new technology can be harnessed to find new innovative ways for the organization and content of scholarly publishing. Several recent launches of OA journals by major subscription publishers demonstrate that OA is rapidly gaining acceptance as a sustainable alternative to subscription-based scholarly publishing.

Highlights

  • Citations are an important part of scientific articles, helping the author build their arguments by reference to earlier work without having to restate that work in detail

  • A robust copyright regime that is perceived to be equitable by the large majority of players in the system is a precondition for commercial content and media industries, and journal publishing is no exception

  • The Third World still lags the West in digital infrastructure but the success of the Research4Life programmes (HINARI, AGORA, OARE) means that researchers in the poorest countries are not restricted from accessing the scholarly literature by reason of unaffordable subscriptions

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Summary

Executive summary

Their desire to measure and to improve the returns on their investments emphasises accountability and dissemination These factors in turn first increase the importance of (and some say the abuse of) metrics such as Impact Factor and secondly lead to the growing number of mandates from funders requiring researchers to self-archive manuscripts in open repositories (page 49). Many publishers remain concerned that Green open access (self-archiving) is essentially parasitical on journal publishing, with no sustainable business model of its own should it (as they fear) undermine journal subscriptions

Scholarly communication
The research cycle
Types of scholarly communication
Changes in scholarly communication system
The RIN Principles for scholarly communication
What is a journal?
The journals publishing cycle
Sales channels
Journal economics and market size
Journal and articles numbers and trends
Global costs of the scholarly communication system
Global trends in scientific output
Authors and readers
Publishers
2.10 Peer review
2.11 Reading patterns
2.12 Disciplinary differences
2.13 Citations and the Impact Factor
2.14 Costs of journal publishing
2.15 Journal pricing
2.17 Publishing ethics
2.18 Copyright
2.19 Long term preservation
2.20 TRANSFER code
Researchers’ access to journals
Access gaps
Access in developing countries
Open access
Full open access
Full OA business models
Delayed open access
Other open access variants
Open access via self-archiving
Sustainability of open access
Effect of self-archiving on journals
System-wide perspective
4.10 Open access citation advantage
New developments in scholarly communication
Data-driven science
Semantic web
Open notebook science
Identity
Findings
Conclusions
Full Text
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