Self-Archiving Journal Articles: A Case Study of Faculty Practice and Missed Opportunity

peter.suber's bookmarks 2017-03-28

Summary:

Abstract:  Carnegie Mellon faculty Web pages and publisher policies were examined to understand self-archiving practice. The breadth of adoption and depth of commitment are not directly correlated within the disciplines. Determining when self-archiving has become a habit is difficult. The opportunity to self-archive far exceeds the practice, and much of what is self-archived is not aligned with publisher policy. Policy appears to influence neither the decision to self-archive nor the article version that is self-archived. Because of the potential legal ramifications, faculty must be convinced that copyright law and publisher policy are important and persuaded to act on that conviction.

Link:

https://muse.jhu.edu/article/262847

From feeds:

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

Tags:

oa.green oa.case oa.case.repositories oa.deposits oa.policies oa.versions oa.obstacles oa.repositories

Date tagged:

03/28/2017, 17:04

Date published:

03/28/2017, 13:04