| Literature DB >> 17349038 |
Stefanie E Warlick1, Ktl Vaughan2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In an attempt to identify motivating factors involved in decisions to publish in open access and open archives (OA) journals, individual interviews with biomedical faculty members at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill (UNC-Chapel Hill) and Duke University, two major research universities, were conducted. The interviews focused on faculty identified as early adopters of OA/free full-text publishing.Entities:
Year: 2007 PMID: 17349038 PMCID: PMC1832213 DOI: 10.1186/1742-5581-4-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomed Digit Libr ISSN: 1742-5581
Deciding factors in order of frequency
| Impact Factor | 7 |
| Target audience | 6 |
| Prestige | 4 |
| Topic | 3 |
| Cost | 2 |
| Speed of publication | 2 |
| Quality | 2 |
| Visibility | 2 |
| Open Access status | 2 |
Additional participant comments regarding publishing decisions:
"Audience I want to meet, first by a wide margin."
Speed important?
| Yes | 13 |
| No | 1 |
| n = 14 |
Additional participant comments regarding speed:
"Now it doesn't feel like there is a huge difference in speed because most have gone to electronic review and submission."
"Speed used to be more of a factor during my post-doc."
"Everyone tries to avoid the journals known to be slow or disorganized."
"It is more the speed of review and notification that is important to me."
"The advent of electronic reviewing has sped up and homogenized the process in my field."
Impact factor
| Quite important | 8 |
| Moderately important | 3 |
| Not a factor | 3 |
| n = 14 |
Influenced by reported subscribers?
| Yes | 3 |
| No | 11 |
| n = 14 |
OA part of publishing decision?
| Yes | 9 |
| Increasingly | 2 |
| No | 3 |
| n = 14 |
Additional participant comments regarding open access as a part of publishing decisions:
"Increasingly important because things are moving more quickly now that they are online."
"I see it being more of an issue in the future."
Motivating factors of OA in order of frequency
| Free Access | 9 |
| Visibility | 3 |
| Speed | 2 |
| Antipathy towards traditional publishers | 2 |
| When targeting a general (non-professional) audience | 1 |
Additional participant comments regarding personal motivation for open access publishing:
"Ensure wider access of results that are worth publishing and to modernize the way information is shared on a global scale."
"In theory, data is disseminated more easily because anyone can get it."
"Once you get past the most elite journals in the field, there is almost no reason not to publish in open access."
Open access incentives in order of frequency
| Audience accessibility | 7 |
| Broad exposure | 5 |
| Not that I know of | 4 |
| Retain copyright | 3 |
| Rapid dissemination | 2 |
| UNC covers author fees | 1 |
| Reviewer comments posted | 1 |
| High quality publications | 1 |
Additional participant comments regarding open access incentives:
"Open access is practical in terms of audience and accessibility and philosophical in terms of ownership."
"Retaining copyright makes life easier."
"Anyone can read it from anywhere, including me!"
Open access disincentives in order of frequency
| Cost | 5 |
| Publications not highly respected | 4 |
| Few venues | 3 |
| Not that I know of | 3 |
| Lower impact factor | 1 |
| Concerns for own career | 1 |
| Concerns for career of their students | 1 |
| Lack of OA support from institution | 1 |
Additional participant comments regarding disincentives for open access publishing:
"Page costs may be a factor, but UNC is a member [of the open access publisher] so it doesn't matter. I have to deal with high page costs anyway because I have to pay for color images."
"In some cases, journals increased page charges to offset the costs of open access. This can be a factor as the amount of money we have for page charges is small and comes from grants, not our department or UNC funds."
"Cost. For example PLoS is very expensive, but the University has an agreement so I pay less."
"None, except some open access venues are not highly respected."
Departmental Statement
| Yes | 1 |
| Not that I know of | 5 |
| No | 8 |
| n = 14 |
Aware of the UNC-Chapel Hill Convocation?
| Yes | 1 |
| No | 13 |
| n = 14 |
Published in an open access journal?
| Yes | 11 |
| Not that I know of | 3 |
| n = 14 |
Selected OA publication?
| Yes | 13 |
| No response | 1 |
| n = 14 |
Paid author fees?
| Yes | 11 |
| No | 2 |
| Can't recall | 1 |
| n = 14 |
Additional participant comments regarding author fees:
"Yes initially, until UNC assumed that role."
"We have to pay for page charges in most journals anyway...NIH and most other grant sources just get a bulk budget. It is assumed that you will be paying those charges."
Funding Source
| Grants | 11 |
| N/A | 3 |
| n = 14 |