The LSE Impact of Social Sciences blog published my rebuttal of that Science magazine article on predatory journals.
The LSE Impact of Social Sciences blog published my rebuttal of that Science magazine article on predatory journals.
Yesterday I published my response to the recent article on Science Magazine titled “Who’s Afraid of Peer Review?”, on The Comics Grid blog.
A comment on ‘building’ and the critique of “discursive formations” in the digital humanities.
I have set up a blog at City blogs. It’s at http://blogs.city.ac.uk/epriego/. There I will keep track of my academic and extra-curricular activities and I will also use it to share ideas and references relevant to the courses I lead or participate in at City University London.
Yesterday I posted on the Comics Grid blog a call for papers for a digital comics panel to take place within the Academic Programme of Loncon 3, 72nd World Science Fiction Convention.
On my blog at HASTAC, I shared a post with some quick thoughts on the the UK Parliament BIS Committee’s Open Access Recommendations.
On Digital Humanities, Transparency and Collaboration.
Yesterday we sent out a newsletter linking to the recent activity around The Comics Grid.
I just got the nicest decline to review ever: That’s how you retire from science: you get to work like normal people. Awesome!
I’ve just been invited to edit a special issue in the MDPI journal ‘publications‘ on a topic I can specify. If I do it, I thought it should revolve around replacing journal rank (i.e., altmetrics, ALM, etc.) and other (technical?) means to transcend a journal-based literature towards a coherent knowledge-dissemination infrastructure that incorporates of course text, but also software and data.