16-08-21
Challenge the future
Delft University of Technology
The current state of Open
Access
3
Open Access
Bottlenecks transition OA
•
Traditional lucrative business model
subscriptions alive
•
Exclusive transfer of rights hinders Open
Access and reuse of publications
•
Impact and citations for scientists still crucial,
not the way of dissemination
There are two primary vehicles for delivering OA to research articles: OA journals (gold) and
OA archives or repositories (green
)
There are two primary vehicles for delivering OA toresearch articles: OA journals (gold) and OA archives or repositories (green
)
5
Open Access
7
Open Access
Stakeholder Publishers
investments new imprints
• Walter de Gruyter>DG Open (Versita)
• Tayler and Francis>Cogent
Stakeholder publishers-
share OA
Portfolio Elsevier 2500 4*%, Springer 2200, *8% Wiley 1500,*2% NPG 120 *21%
9
Open Access
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Stakeholder-Funders
Running 2014-2020, budget over 70 billion Running 2014-2020, budget over 70 billion
13
Open Access
Stakeholder-funders
15
Open Access
Stakeholders
politicians
Sander Dekker, Dutch State
Secretary for Science
Open Access: Going for Gold
60% OA in 2018
Regulation or legislation?
17
Open Access
Growth repositories
380.000+ full text publications Dutch Universities NARCIS19
Open Access
21
Open Access
Delft Repositories infrastructure
Total: 9 TU Delft repositories 1 to be launched 2014 105.000+ active records
140.000+ files, 5.6 mill page views Number visitors 1.8 mill
23
Open Access
25
Open Access
OA deals
• SCOAP3-OA Particle physics
• Royal Society Chemistry*Gold for Gold
• PLoS- Institutional 2015
• Biomed, Springer15% discount
• SAGE, 90% discount
• IEEE OA program (in progress)
• MDPI, 100% in 2015
• Frontiers 100% in 2015
27 Open Access
Organize
efficient
workflow
thousands
articles per
year
Organize
efficient
workflow
thousands
articles per
year
29
Open Access
Cybercriminals
Hijackers make money by stealing the identities of legitimate
journals and collecting the article processing charges on the papers that are submitted to journals
Cybercriminals have cheated thousands of professors and Ph.D. scholars mostly from developing countries and those who were in the urgent need of publishing their articles in journals that are covered by the Journal Citation Report
Concerns about quality
hijacked titles
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