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Learned Publishing, Volume 18
Volume 18, Number 1, January 2005
- Maurice Long:
Guest Editorial. 3 - Jill Cousins, Eamonn Neylon:
Information objects are hot, documents are not: the use of identifiers in online publishing. 5-12 - David Goodman:
Open access: what comes next? 13-23 - Alma Swan, Paul Needham, Steve G. Probets, Adrienne Muir, Charles Oppenheim, Ann O'Brien, Rachel Hardy, Fytton Rowland, Sheridan Brown:
Developing a model for e-prints and open access journal content in UK further and higher education. 25-40 - Pauline Yu:
On synthetic technologies: the book, the university, the Internet. 41-50 - Karen Hunter:
Critical issues in the development of STM journal publishing. 51-55 - David Tempest:
The effect of journal title changes on impact factors. 57-62 - Brian Hemmings, Peter Rushbrook, Erica Smith:
To publish or not to publish: that is the question? 63-65 - Simeon Anguelov, Pierre Baruch, Françoise Praderie:
Spreading the word: who profits from science publishing? A symposium held at the EuroScience Open Forum. 67-74 - James Hartley:
Down with 'op. cit.'. 75-77
Volume 18, Number 2, April 2005
- Heather Joseph:
Guest Editorial: As far as the eye can see. 83-84 - Evan Harris:
Institutional repositories: is the open access door half open or half shut? 85-90 - Roger Elliott:
Who owns scientific data? The impact of intellectual property rights on the scientific publication chain. 91-94 - Hélène Bosc, Stevan Harnad:
In a paperless world a new role for academic libraries: providing open access. 95-100 - Mary Waltham:
Open access - the impact of legislative developments. 101-114 - Sally Morris:
The true costs of scholarly journal publishing. 115-126 - Robert D. Simoni:
Serving science while paying the bills: the history of the Journal of Biological Chemistry Online. 127-130 - John Sack:
HighWire Press: ten years of publisher-driven innovation. 131-142 - Hans-Dieter Daniel:
Publications as a measure of scientific advancement and of scientists' productivity. 143-148 - Claus Montonen:
The European physics publications scene: avant-garde and traditionalism. 149-151 - Gill Davies:
Training for publishing. 152-156
Volume 18, Number 3, July 2005
- Sue Corbett:
Publish or Perish? 163-164 - Bo-Christer Björk:
A lifecycle model of the scientific communication process. 165-176 - Simeon Warner:
The transformation of scholarly communication. 177-187 - Li Li:
Advantages of university journals in China. 188-192 - Mark Ware:
E-only journals: is it time to drop print? 193-199 - Williams Nwagwu:
Mapping the landscape of biomedical research in Nigeria since 1967. 200-211 - David Nicholas, Hamid R. Jamali M., Paul Huntington, Ian Rowlands:
In their very own words: authors and scholarly journal publishing. 212-220 - Martin Richardson:
Post-print archives: parasite or symbiont. 221-223 - Alan Singleton:
Open access and learned societies. 223-228 - Lewis Irving:
The pharmaceutical industry, researchers and publishers: the realities of competing interests within specialty journals. 228-230 - Kurt Paulus:
2005 International Learned Journals Seminar. 231-234 - Robert H. Marks:
Open access: a new name for an old concept. 235-236
Volume 18, Number 4, October 2005
- Robert M. Goldwyn:
Do we reject too little and publish too much? 243 - Mark Ware:
Online submission and peer-review systems. 245-250 - David Nicholas, Paul Huntington, Bill Russell, Anthony Watkinson, Hamid R. Jamali, Carol Tenopir:
The Big Deal - ten years on. 251-257 - Cristina Márquez Arroyo, Laura Munoa, Fernando A. Navarro, María Verónica Saladrigas, Karen Shashok:
Panace@ - a successful open access journal from the STM translation community. 258-269 - Liping Wang:
Challenges and opportunities: China's university presses in transition. 271-274 - George S. Yacoubian:
Publishing in American legal and social science periodicals: an ethical comparison. 275-278 - Simon Inger:
Production and content management implications for archival projects: a snapshot in May 2005. 279-285 - Peter T. Shepherd:
COUNTER 2005: a new Code of Practice and new applications of COUNTER usage statistics. 287-293 - Frank Gannon:
Open access: scientists as paradoxical consumers. 295-299 - Fytton Rowland:
Scholarly journal publishing in New Zealand. 300-310 - Robert Scholes:
Personal View: What is happening in literary studies? 311-315 - Robert Parker:
Review. 318
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