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Learned Publishing, Volume 33
Volume 33, Number 1, January 2020
- Lettie Y. Conrad, Peter Richardson, Rebecca Rinehart:
Weathering changes and challenges to society publishing. 2-3
- Elina Late, Laura Korkeamäki, Janne Pölönen, Sami Syrjämäki:
The role of learned societies in national scholarly publishing. 5-13 - Alicia Wise, Lorraine Estelle:
How society publishers can accelerate their transition to open access and align with Plan S. 14-27 - Jonathan Roscoe:
Building new societies: Insights and predictions from the 5th Wiley Society Member Survey. 29-36
- Michael Clarke:
The journal publishing services agreement: A guide for societies. 37-41 - Phill Jones:
A report on the future of independent and scholarly publishing webinar by the Scholarly Kitchen. 43-46
- Sophia Anderton:
Publishing at the British Institute of Radiology: A case study. 48-51 - Emilie Aimé, Erika L. Newton, Catherine Hill:
Publishing perspectives from the British Ecological Society: Partnership, community, collaboration, and innovation. 52-56 - Marc Segers, Brett Rubinstein, Laura FitzGerald, Alix Vance:
GeoScienceWorld: A case study in non-profit collaboration to drive sustainability and growth for independent societies. 57-60
- Edith Holmes:
Society publishing: It's all about the community you serve. 61-63 - Quan-Hoang Vuong:
Plan S, self-publishing, and addressing unreasonable risks of society publishing. 64-68 - Richard Dodenhoff:
Why I value non-profit society scholarly publishing. 69-70 - Dana Compton, Angela Cochran:
Worth the effort: Why societies should make room for books. 71-74 - Malavika Legge:
Towards sustainable open access: A society publisher's principles and pilots for transition. 76-82
- Thanking our reviewers, 2019. 83
- Journal Information. 84
Volume 33, Number 2, April 2020
- Pippa Smart:
Is filtering censorship? 86-87
- Mohammad Salehi, Mohammad Soltani, Hadis Tamleh, Shohreh Teimournezhad:
Publishing in predatory open access journals: Authors' perspectives. 89-95 - Rafael Repiso, Alicia Moreno-Delgado, Daniel Torres-Salinas:
If PLOS ONE were really 101 different specialized journals: A proposed approach to the evaluation of multidisciplinary megajournals. 96-103 - Kent R. Anderson:
bioRxiv: Trends and analysis of five years of preprints. 104-109 - Ehsan Mohammadi, Nilofar Barahmand, Mike Thelwall:
Who shares health and medical scholarly articles on Facebook? 111-118 - Quan-Hoang Vuong:
The limitations of retraction notices and the heroic acts of authors who correct the scholarly record: An analysis of retractions of papers published from 1975 to 2019. 119-130 - David Nicholas, Anthony Watkinson, Abdullah Abrizah, Blanca Rodríguez-Bravo, Cherifa Boukacem-Zeghmouri, Jie Xu, Marzena Swigon, Eti Herman:
Does the scholarly communication system satisfy the beliefs and aspirations of new researchers? Summarizing the Harbingers research. 132-141 - Hamid R. Jamali, David Nicholas, Anthony Watkinson, Abdullah Abrizah, Blanca Rodríguez-Bravo, Cherifa Boukacem-Zeghmouri, Jie Xu, Tatiana Polezhaeva, Eti Herman, Marzena Swigon:
Early career researchers and their authorship and peer review beliefs and practices: An international study. 142-152 - Thomas Gaston, Francesca Ounsworth, Tessa Senders, Sarah Ritchie, Emma Jones:
Factors affecting journal submission numbers: Impact factor and peer review reputation. 154-162 - Remedios Melero, Carolina Navarro-Molina:
Researchers' attitudes and perceptions towards data sharing and data reuse in the field of food science and technology. 163-179
- Raym Crow, Richard Gallagher, Kamran Naim:
Subscribe to Open: A practical approach for converting subscription journals to open access. 181-185
- Xiaofeng Wang, Ying Deng, Xuan Lü, Xinlei Zhang, Lei Yang:
The usage of WeChat to promote academic publishing in China: A case study on Chinese Laser Press. 187-191
- Journal Information. 192
Volume 33, Number 3, July 2020
- Pippa Smart:
Publishing during pandemic: Innovation, collaboration, and change. 194-197
- David Nicholas, Hamid R. Jamali, Eti Herman, Anthony Watkinson, Abdullah Abrizah, Blanca Rodríguez-Bravo, Cherifa Boukacem-Zeghmouri, Jie Xu, Marzena Swigon, Tatiana Polezhaeva:
A global questionnaire survey of the scholarly communication attitudes and behaviours of early career researchers. 198-211 - Eti Herman, John Akeroyd, Gaelle Bequet, David Nicholas, Anthony Watkinson:
The changed - and changing - landscape of serials publishing: Review of the literature on emerging models. 213-229 - Fangfang Wei, Guijie Zhang:
Measuring the scientific publications of double first-class universities from mainland China. 230-244 - Jie Xu, Chen He, Jing Su, Yuanxiang Zeng, Zixian Wang, Fei Fang, Wenhui Tang:
Chinese researchers' perceptions and use of open access journals: Results of an online questionnaire survey. 246-258 - François van Schalkwyk:
Normative drift and self-correction in scholarly book publishing: The case of Makerere University. 259-268 - Sumayyia D. Marar, Muaawia Ahmed Hamza:
Attitudes of researchers towards plagiarism: A study on a tertiary care hospital in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. 270-276 - Margaret K. Merga, Shannon Mason:
Sharing research with academia and beyond: Insights from early career researchers in Australia and Japan. 277-286 - Mike Downes:
Thousands of Australian academics on the editorial boards of journals run by predatory publishers. 287-295
- Clare Hodder:
Selling rights: Changes and challenges for rights professionals. 296-298
- H. Frederick Dylla, Jeffrey Salmon:
Collaborating for public access to scholarly publications: A case study of the partnership between the US Department of Energy and CHORUS. 300-306
- Jirí Kratochvíl, Lukás Plch, Martin Sebera, Eva Koritáková:
Evaluation of untrustworthy journals: Transition from formal criteria to a complex view. 308-322 - Jongwook Lee, Kiduk Yang, Dong-Geun Oh:
Factors influencing the choice of a publication venue in library and information science. 323-332 - Artyom Kosmarski, Nikolay Gordiychuk:
Token-curated registry in a scholarly journal: Can blockchain support journal communities? 333-339
- Serge P. J. M. Horbach, Wytske M. Hepkema, Willem Halffman:
The Platform for Responsible Editorial Policies: An initiative to foster editorial transparency in scholarly publishing. 340-344
- Tom Hill:
Four reports on the OA monograph: Review. 345-347
Volume 33, Number 4, October 2020
- Megan Ainsworth:
The need for change and the problems of change: Continuity and the 'new normal'. 350-351
- Simone Taylor, Susan Spilka, Kristen Monahan, Isabel Mulhern, Jeri Wachter:
Evaluating equity in scholarly publishing. 353-367
- Award. 368
- Award. 369
- Hamid R. Jamali, David Nicholas, Eti Herman, Cherifa Boukacem-Zeghmouri, Abdullah Abrizah, Blanca Rodríguez-Bravo, Jie Xu, Marzena Swigon, Tatiana Polezhaeva, Anthony Watkinson:
National comparisons of early career researchers' scholarly communication attitudes and behaviours. 370-384 - Jack A. Helliwell, William S. Bolton, Joshua R. Burke, Jim P. Tiernan, David G. Jayne, Stephen J. Chapman:
Global academic response to COVID-19: Cross-sectional study. 385-393 - Guijie Zhang, Fangfang Wei:
Analysing the research performance of province-level administrative regions in China. 395-409 - Bojan Macan, Lea Skoric, Jelka Petrak:
David among Goliaths: Open access publishing in scientific (semi-)periphery. 410-417 - Thao-Phuong-Thi Trinh, Trung Tran, Hien-Thu-Thi Le, Tien-Trung Nguyen, Hiep-Hung Pham:
Factors impacting international-indexed publishing among Vietnamese educational researchers. 419-429 - Ozan Karaca, S. Ayhan Çaliskan, Halil Ibrahim Durak:
The publication of health sciences theses in Turkey: A study of Ege University. 431-436
- Khaled Moustafa:
Reforming science publishing. 437-440 - Mike Downes:
Why we should have listened to Jeffrey Beall from the start. 442-448 - Alison Baverstock:
What significance does Publishing Studies have right now? 449-452
- Sue Thorn:
Obituary: Bernard Donovan, 1927-2020. 454-455
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