| Literature DB >> 31644528 |
A Townsend Peterson1, Paul E Johnson2,3, Narayani Barve4, Ada Emmett5, Marc L Greenberg6,7, Josh Bolick5, Huijie Qiao8.
Abstract
The United States National Institutes of Health (NIH) imposed a public access policy on all publications for which the research was supported by their grants; the policy was drafted in 2004 and took effect in 2008. The policy is now 11 years old, yet no analysis has been presented to assess whether in fact this largest-scale US-based public access policy affected the vitality of the scholarly publishing enterprise, as manifested in changed mortality or natality rates of biomedical journals. We show here that implementation of the NIH policy was associated with slightly elevated mortality rates and mildly depressed natality rates of biomedical journals, but that birth rates so exceeded death rates that numbers of biomedical journals continued to rise, even in the face of the implementation of such a sweeping public access policy.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31644528 PMCID: PMC6808382 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pbio.3000352
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Biol ISSN: 1544-9173 Impact factor: 8.029
Fig 1Numbers of journals active in six broad fields over the period 1990–2015.
AGRICUL, Agriculture; BIOMED, Biomedical; ENGTECH, Engineering and Technology; NATSCI, Natural Sciences; PHYSCI, Physical Sciences; SOCSCI, Social Sciences.
Fig 2Relationship between birth and death rates in biomedical journals and in other fields.
On the left-hand side, observed birth and death rates per 1,000 journals between 1990 and 2015 are presented. In the right-hand column are thin plate splines (with 95% confidence intervals in gray) that smooth year-to-year birth and death rates for observed birth rates and for hazard rate estimates from a Cox proportional hazard model, using the journal age as the timescale. The vertical reference line marks the year 2008. BIOMED, Biomedical.