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University Research Distribution: From Option to NecessityShulenburger, David 16 October 2009 (has links)
This presentation was given during Open Access Week in October 2009.
Open Access Week is a world-wide event where academic institutions explore Open Access – the ideal of free, full-text, immediate, online access to peer-reviewed scholarship and research results so new ideas and information can be obtained rapidly and freely by everyone.
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Innovation in Health Care Through Open Source ResearchHurwitz, Bonnie 23 October 2012 (has links)
This presentation was given at the 2012 Open Access Week program, “The Open Data Revolution: Challenges and Innovations” on October 23, 2012.
Open Access Week is a world-wide event where academic institutions explore Open Access – the ideal of free, full-text, immediate, online access to peer-reviewed scholarship and research results so new ideas and information can be obtained rapidly and freely by everyone.
Many funding agencies, such as the National Science Foundation, and journal publishers, such as Nature, require researchers to share data produced during the course of their research. When researchers share their data, other researchers can reuse it to answer new questions, opening up new interpretations and discoveries. Sharing data may also lead to sharing research processes, workflows and tools and may make research articles and papers more useful and citable by others.
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Open Data Challenges in Interdisciplinary ResearchBarton, Jennifer K. 23 October 2012 (has links)
This presentation was given at the 2012 Open Access Week program, “The Open Data Revolution: Challenges and Innovations” on October 23, 2012.
Open Access Week is a world-wide event where academic institutions explore Open Access – the ideal of free, full-text, immediate, online access to peer-reviewed scholarship and research results so new ideas and information can be obtained rapidly and freely by everyone.
Many funding agencies, such as the National Science Foundation, and journal publishers, such as Nature, require researchers to share data produced during the course of their research. When researchers share their data, other researchers can reuse it to answer new questions, opening up new interpretations and discoveries. Sharing data may also lead to sharing research processes, workflows and tools and may make research articles and papers more useful and citable by others.
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The Open Access (Open Journal Systems) paradigm and the production of scholarly journals in developing countries /Esseh, Samuel Kwaku Smith. January 2006 (has links)
Project Report (M.Pub.) - Simon Fraser University, 2006. / Theses (Master of Publishing Program) / Simon Fraser University. Also issued in digital format and available on the World Wide Web.
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Digitizing Rangelands: Providing Open Access to the Archives of Society for Range Management JournalsHan, Yan, Pfander, Jeanne, Bracke, Marianne Stowell 05 1900 (has links)
The University of Arizona Library is a vital participant in the AgNIC Rangelands project and has contributed to the initiative in many ways. For example, in the mid-to-late 1990â s the Library digitized the backfiles of the Journal of Range Management for open access on the web. Funding and completing digitization projects such as this is a complicated process and requires many decisions along the way. This paper outlines the process taken by the Library to manage a more recent project to scan back issues of the journal Rangelands. It starts with the decision to develop a project plan and request funding from the National Agricultural Library (NAL). It continues on to describe negotiating agreements with project partners, the process for outsourcing of scanning, the design of the technical infrastructure needed to support digitized content, and issues of sustainability that any digital library encounters.
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Innovation in Health Care Through Open Source ResearchHurwitz, Bonnie 10 February 2014 (has links)
Presented at the 2012 Open Access Week program, "The Open Data Revolution: Challenges and Innovations" in the Fall 2012.
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Making your publications open access: Resources to assist researchers and librariansDawson, Diane January 2013 (has links)
No description available.
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Open Access an Schweizer Hochschulen : ein praxisorientierter Massnahmenkatalog für Hochschulbibliotheken /Bürgi, Beatrice. January 2007 (has links) (PDF)
Chur, Hochsch. für Technik und Wirtschaft, Diplomarb., 2007.
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Open Access an Schweizer Hochschulen : ein praxisorientierter Massnahmenkatalog für Hochschulbibliotheken zur Planung und Errichtung von Institutional RepositoriesBürgi, Beatrice. January 2007 (has links) (PDF)
Diplomarbeit im Studiengang Information Science an der Hochschule für Technik und Wirtschaft Chur.
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Towards a sustainable open access scholarly publishing model in the South African contextDu Toit, Ina Maria January 2015 (has links)
This thesis reports on a study towards a sustainable open access scholarly publishing model in South Africa. The researcher defined the traditional scholarly publishing model as a foundation for scholarly publishing workflows and processes and the continuation of the publishing workflow as a sustainable business model. This model is simplified in this study to allow for further discussion in the investigation of the various business models of scholarly publishing. The researcher conducted a literature study to identify and define business models used in open access scholarly publishing in the international context and also developed a set of factors contributing to sustainability in this environment. These factors were then used to evaluate and investigate typical examples of open access role players in the South African context, using a desk study and interviews documented as case studies of the various initiatives.
The researcher combined all these findings to make suggestions towards a sustainable open access scholarly publishing by identifying and exploring the various factors associated with open access models in South Africa, considering the roles of all the role players towards output of high quality research articles.
The study found that South African scholarly publishers find the shift from a traditional subscription model to an open access model difficult, because they are not addressing their new client segment and also not acknowledging their own expertise within the publishing cycle.The research also indicates that the approach of either subscription or open access hinders a sustainable open access publishing model, but that the publishing community should instead encourage an approach a publishing environment that allows for both of these models to exist and function. Open access should not replace the traditional model but instead, enhance it. / Dissertation (MIS)--University of Pretoria, 2015. / Information Science / Unrestricted
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