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Recent Posts
- Pure hype of pure research helps no one : Nature News & Comment
- Altmetrics for the Nature correspondence on negative metrics of impact
- 56 Indicators of Impact
- Interior Proposes New Rules for Fracking on U.S. Land – NYTimes.com
- Academics: bring your own identity | Amber at Warwick: academic technology
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- We need negative metrics, too / Nature | jbrittholbrook on 56 Indicators of Impact
- Fracking policy | jbrittholbrook on Interior Proposes New Rules for Fracking on U.S. Land – NYTimes.com
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- Why study philosophy? | jbrittholbrook on Why study philosophy?
- What does it take to be ‘liked’ by scientists? | jbrittholbrook on What Representative Lamar Smith Is Really Trying to Do at NSF – ScienceInsider
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Category Archives: Open Access
56 Indicators of Impact
In 2011, several core members of the Center for the Study of Interdisciplinarity (CSID) at the University of North Texas held a meeting during which we imagined different ways to indicate the impact of our activities. We scribbled them on … Continue reading
Academics: bring your own identity | Amber at Warwick: academic technology
Academics: bring your own identity | Amber at Warwick: academic technology. Good post here on academic identity that ties in with much of our own thinking on altmetrics and owning accountability.
Knowing and acting: The precautionary and proactionary principles in relation to policy making, J. Britt Holbrook and Adam Briggle « Social Epistemology Review and Reply Collective
The Social Epistemology Review and Reply collective is now hosting preprints: Knowing and acting: The precautionary and proactionary principles in relation to policy making, J. Britt Holbrook and Adam Briggle « Social Epistemology Review and Reply Collective. Yes! Adam and … Continue reading
Nature Special on The future of publishing: “A new page”.
Nature Special on The future of publishing: “A new page”..
Posted in Basic News, Future of the University, Libraries, Metrics, Open Access
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Everything you ever wanted to know about altmetrics? Bulletin April/May 2013
Well, probably not. But it’s a start! Very informative special issue on altmetrics here, guest edited by Heather Piwowar: Bulletin April/May 2013.
Who Killed the PrePrint, and Could It Make a Return? | Guest Blog, Scientific American Blog Network
A very interesting piece written on preprints here: Who Killed the PrePrint, and Could It Make a Return? | Guest Blog, Scientific American Blog Network. Preprints are essentially working papers that are ‘published’ in order to solicit feedback prior to … Continue reading
The Meme Hustler | Evgeny Morozov | The Baffler
Memes are for losers; the real money is in epistemes. via The Meme Hustler | Evgeny Morozov | The Baffler.
Open Access: Getting Things Right | Ernesto Priego
Open Access: Getting Things Right | Ernesto Priego.
The price of innovation – thoughts from Beyond the PDF | Impact of Social Sciences
The price of innovation – thoughts from Beyond the PDF | Impact of Social Sciences.
Open Access, the Impact Agenda and resistance to the neoliberal paradigm | Impact of Social Sciences
Yesterday’s post introduced the context of neoliberalism as the backdrop of change in higher education. Here Martin Eve provides further clarification of the neoliberal context, linking the impact agenda under the Research Excellence Framework as a key trait of a privatised … Continue reading
Conservatives declare war on college – Salon.com
Good insight from Andrew Leonard: For many conservatives, the humanities departments of public universities are bastions of the “tenured left” busily brainwashing the young people of America into godless socialist postmodernism. They’d much rather for-profit corporations were in charge of … Continue reading
OSTP Open Access Memo — even faster than FASTR
John P. Holdren: Scientific research supported by the Federal Government catalyzes innovative breakthroughs that drive our economy. The results of that research become the grist for new insights and are assets for progress in areas such as health, energy, the … Continue reading
Posted in Accountability, Open Access
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Open Access Creative Commons licences for Cambridge Journals « CJO « Cambridge Journals Blog
Cambridge University Press has announced today that articles in its Open Access journals can be published with a Creative Commons Attribution licence (‘CC-BY‘). This licence allows users and readers to download, read, re-use and re-distribute freely, as long as they … Continue reading
Posted in Basic News, Open Access
Tagged Cambridge, Cambridge Journals, CC-BY, Creative Commons, Finch Report, OA, open access, Press, publishing, RCUK, university, wellcome trust
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Open Access: What is it?
A video from PhD Comics. What is PhD Comics? Piled Higher and Deeper – Life (or the lack thereof) in Academia (also known as PhD Comics), is a newspaper and web comic strip written and drawn by Jorge Cham that follows the lives of several grad … Continue reading
Posted in Open Access
Tagged communication, copyright, digital scholarship, education, oer, open, pedagogy, policy, reflection, research, technology, technology and tagged academia
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“The Individual and Scholarly Networks” webinar: Notes from the not-so-underground philosopher
My initial reaction is that the single-day webinar in which I presented on Tuesday (and in which I was the only humanist – !) was a success. Excepting some minor and very intermittent technical difficulties with sound and visual, the presenters … Continue reading
“The Individual and Scholarly Networks” — Research Trends Webinar
Just finished listening to this webinar, in which CSID’s own Kelli Barr participated as a presenter. One of the most interesting aspects of the webinar was the discussion of the use of new ways for the individual researcher to extend … Continue reading
Value all Research Products « Research Remix
Heather Piwowar (aka @ResearchRemix) has just published a pre-print version of her recently published Nature article on NSF’s new bio-sketch requirements. First draft of just-published Value all Research Products « Research Remix. This version is as interesting from the meta-standpoint … Continue reading
Posted in Accountability, Future of the University, Metrics, NSF, Open Access, STEM Policy
Tagged altmetrics, Piwowar
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Faculty appointments and the record of scholarship | eLife
The paper is well worth reading for those interested in scholarly communications. The journal, eLife, is also worth checking out. Faculty appointments and the record of scholarship | eLife.
Posted in Future of the University, Metrics, Open Access, Peer Review
Tagged authorship
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My library is already an open access publisher! Is yours? – bjoern.brembs.blog
News / Comments / My library is already an open access publisher! Is yours? – bjoern.brembs.blog.
From Peer Review to the Wisdom of Crowds? Open Access & Peer Review | History Workshop
Open Access, for some at least, goes hand in hand with a move towards Open Evaluation. From Peer Review to the Wisdom of Crowds? Open Access & Peer Review | History Workshop.
The End of the University as We Know It – Nathan Harden – The American Interest Magazine
In fifty years, if not much sooner, half of the roughly 4,500 colleges and universities now operating in the United States will have ceased to exist. The technology driving this change is already at work, and nothing can stop it. … Continue reading
A new paradigm of scholarly communications is emerging: A report from the Future of Impact conference | Impact of Social Sciences
Policymakers and academics agree that the economic or public impact of research can’t be demonstrated through just citations and bibliometrics yet open access publishing, altmetrics and online methods must be further developed before we can rely on them to prove … Continue reading
Science is “being harmed,” but all I can muster is a bit of schadenfreude…
A somewhat alarmist outcry went up Monday on HuffPost regarding the state of scientific publishing, and it’s dripping with cynicism. Here’s a snippet that I think is representative of the author’s perspective; he seeks to draw an analogy between the … Continue reading
On Live Tweeting Your Own Lecture – The Long Road
Autotweeting a lecture and getting folks actively involved through social media… Anyone who actually uses twitter recognizes that its power comes not from what one pushes out, but from what one receives. This is felt most palpably when one invites … Continue reading
More Than Just Access: Delivering on a Network-Enabled Literature
Cameron Neylon (@CameronNeylon on Twitter) delivers a clear argument for allowing commercial reuse of your research: PLOS Biology: More Than Just Access: Delivering on a Network-Enabled Literature.
Posted in Open Access
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