Literature DB >> 31419421

Scientific Authors in a Changing World of Scholarly Communication: What Does the Future Hold?

Gyorgy Baffy1, Michele M Burns2, Beatrice Hoffmann3, Subha Ramani4, Sunil Sabharwal5, Jonathan F Borus6, Susan Pories7, Stuart F Quan4, Julie R Ingelfinger8.   

Abstract

Scholarly communication in science, technology, and medicine has been organized around journal-based scientific publishing for the past 350 years. Scientific publishing has unique business models and includes stakeholders with conflicting interests-publishers, funders, libraries, and scholars who create, curate, and consume the literature. Massive growth and change in scholarly communication, coinciding with digitalization, have amplified stresses inherent in traditional scientific publishing, as evidenced by overwhelmed editors and reviewers, increased retraction rates, emergence of pseudo-journals, strained library budgets, and debates about the metrics of academic recognition for scholarly achievements. Simultaneously, several open access models are gaining traction and online technologies offer opportunities to augment traditional tasks of scientific publishing, develop integrated discovery services, and establish global and equitable scholarly communication through crowdsourcing, software development, big data management, and machine learning. These rapidly evolving developments raise financial, legal, and ethical dilemmas that require solutions, while successful strategies are difficult to predict. Key challenges and trends are reviewed from the authors' perspective about how to engage the scholarly community in this multifaceted process. Published by Elsevier Inc.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Open access; Peer review; Predatory publishing; Preprint repository; Self-archiving

Mesh:

Year:  2019        PMID: 31419421     DOI: 10.1016/j.amjmed.2019.07.028

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am J Med        ISSN: 0002-9343            Impact factor:   4.965


  2 in total

1.  Publishing at any cost: a cross-sectional study of the amount that medical researchers spend on open access publishing each year.

Authors:  Mallory K Ellingson; Xiaoting Shi; Joshua J Skydel; Kate Nyhan; Richard Lehman; Joseph S Ross; Joshua D Wallach
Journal:  BMJ Open       Date:  2021-02-01       Impact factor: 2.692

2.  Tear down the walls: Disseminating open access research for a global impact.

Authors:  Mohammed Saqr; Abdulrahman Al-Mohaimeed; Zafar Rasheed
Journal:  Int J Health Sci (Qassim)       Date:  2020 Sep-Oct
  2 in total

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