Diversifying Readership through open access: A usage analysis for open access books | Corporate Affairs Homepage | Springer Nature

peter.suber's bookmarks 2020-09-10

Summary:

"Open access (OA) books are reaching more countries and have greater usage and higher citation numbers than non-OA books. A new analysis collaboratively produced by Springer Nature and COARD (Collaborative Open Access Research & Development) presents these and other key findings in a new white paper that explores how OA affects the geographical diversity of readers. 

It shows that OA books have substantially more readers in low-income and lower-middle-income countries and that OA also helps to increase attention to scholarship about these countries. The study is to date the largest and most comprehensive of its kind; the underlying dataset is based on 3,934 books published by Springer Nature, including 281 OA books.

Confirming previous research looking at the potential usage benefits of OA, this analysis shows more downloads and more citations for every type of book, in every discipline, in each of the three years of publication (2015, 2016, 2017) included in the sample. The report finds that OA books on average achieve ten times more downloads and 2.4 times more citations than non-OA books. Furthermore, download numbers from the open web are generally around double those from institutional network points...."

Link:

https://group.springernature.com/in/group/media/press-releases/white-paper-diversifying-readership-through-open-access/18364402

From feeds:

Open Access Tracking Project (OATP) » peter.suber's bookmarks

Tags:

oa.new oa.dei oa.usage oa.books oa.south oa.advantage oa.citations oa.impact oa.springer_nature

Date tagged:

09/10/2020, 15:14

Date published:

09/10/2020, 11:14