Messages de Rogue Scholar

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Publié in Open Access Brandenburg
Auteur Anja Zeltner

Unter dem Leitthema „Open Access und die Frage der Teilhabe“ fand am 3. Dezember 2021 der 18. Open-Access-Smalltalk mit 15 Beteiligten statt. Diesmal diskutierten wir, wie fair und frei zugänglich Open Access wirklich ist. Ein Ausgangspunkt des Diskussion waren aktuelle Entwicklungen wie die Übernahme des vormals nicht-kommerziellen Unternehmens Knowledge Unlatched durch Wiley.

Publié in Sauropod Vertebra Picture of the Week

As I was clearing out some old documents, I stumbled on this form from 2006: This was back when Paul Upchurch’s dissertation, then only 13 years old, contained much that still unpublished in more formal venues, notably the description of what was then “ Pelorosaurus becklesii . As a fresh young sauropod researcher I was keen to read this and other parts of what was then almost certainly the most important and comprehensive

Zur Rubrik „OA Takeaways“ in diesem Blog Eine Aufgabe der Vernetzungs- und Kompetenzstelle Open Access Brandenburg liegt, ihrem Namen entsprechend, in der gezielten Vermittlung von Open-Access-Kompetenz und damit für Open Access und Open Research relevanten Wissen. Dazu gehört auch der regelmäßige Blick in die Fachliteratur.

Publié in GigaBlog

As an Open Science journal, one of the main aims of GigaScience has always been to break down barriers. Both in the access of research and the underlying data and code supporting it, and the barriers holding back the researchers themselves. See our recent Review centering on inclusivity on the organization of meetings to see how it is important from an Open Science perspective.

Publié in GigaBlog

This week is International Open Access Week, and with the theme “It Matters How We Open Knowledge: Building Structural Equity”. This aims at highlighting the individual and collective action required alongside the decisions, actions, and investments in knowledge sharing to ensure that equity is foundational.

Publié in Sauropod Vertebra Picture of the Week

Last time, we looked at the difference between cost, value and price, and applied those concepts to simple markets like the one for chairs, and the complex market that is scholarly publication. We finished with the observation that the price our community pays for the publication of a paper (about $3,333 on average) is about 3–7 times as much as its costs to publish ($500-$1000)? How is this possible?

Publié in Sauropod Vertebra Picture of the Week

We have a tendency to be sloppy about language in everyday usage, so that words like “cost”, “value” and “price” are used more or less interchangeably. But economists will tell you that the words have distinct meanings, and picking them apart is crucial to understand economic transaction. Suppose I am a carpenter and I make chairs: The cost of the chair is what it costs me to make it: raw materials, overheads, my own time, etc.

Publié in OpenCitations blog
Auteur Chiara Di Giambattista

On September 27, OpenCitations’ director Silvio Peroni, together with Niels Stern (DOAB/OAPEN) and James MacGregor (PKP), held the online workshop “How Open Infrastructure Benefits Libraries” during the Open Access Tage 2021. Open-Access-Tage (Open Access Days) are the annual central platform for the steadily growing Open Access and Open Science community from Germany, Austria and Switzerland ,

Publié in OpenCitations blog

Authors: Ludo Waltman, Bianca Kramer, David Shotton In this blog post, Ludo Waltman, Bianca Kramer, and David Shotton, co-founders with colleagues of the Initiative for Open Abstracts, celebrate the first anniversary of the initiative. On September 24 last year, the Initiative for Open Abstracts (I4OA) was launched.