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PhysMath Central Blog

Monday Feb 25, 2008

Open Access is the answer for interdisciplinary research

A fascinating feature on interdisciplinary research in the lastest issue of Nature. Of particular interest is this quote (section marked in bold by me):

“Younger faculty tend to be concerned that if they get involved [in interdisciplinary work], their colleagues in the departments in charge of promotion and tenure will feel they haven't lived up to the standards of the discipline.” Other problems, he says, include finding places to publish — “it's much easier for people to get published in traditional disciplinary settings” — and finding an audience. A physicist could, say, publish a paper on stock-market patterns in Physical Review E, but how many economists will read it is another matter."

How many economists would subscribe, have access to or search a physics journal? Probably not many. However, research published in open access journals requires no subscription, is available to all and - due to the full-text being available online - is indexed by regular search engines, as well as the more specialist A&I databases. Serendipity is afoot. 

Open access journals in interdisciplinary subjects makes sense. That is why we encourage researchers to get in touch and suggest areas where traditional journals are not working for their field. 

Independent, open access journals on PhysMath Central

 

 

 

Comments:

Gold and Green Open Access

Authors publishing in Open Access journals ("Gold OA") is not the only way to make journal articles OA. The other way -- and the larger and faster growing way -- is for authors to self-archive in their own OA Institutional Repositories articles they publish in any journal (OA or non-OA). This is called "Green OA".

The single most prevalent mistake about OA is to conflate Green and Gold OA (or, worse, to assume that OA means Gold OA).

Stevan Harnad
American Scientist Open Access Forum

Posted by Stevan Harnad on February 29, 2008 at 01:22 PM GMT #

[Trackback] - Microsoft affiche sa volonté d'ouverture
(source: Le Monde)
Le numéro un mondial des logiciels a annoncé, jeudi [28/02/08], qu'il va donner accès librement et gratuitement à la documentation technique associée à la plupart de ses produits phares.
...

Posted by pintiniblog on March 03, 2008 at 07:50 AM GMT #

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