Cost hurdles to open access publishing: A citizen scientist perspective

lkfitz's bookmarks 2016-09-20

Summary:

Abstract: " [...] Most open access publishers (except eLife) charge a publication fee (in the thousands of dollars per article) to defray the cost of maintaining an online presence for a peer reviewed manuscript as well as those for copyediting during final stages of journal publication. This is a significant barrier to cost constrained citizen scientists who want to contribute to the scientific discourse. For the scientific enterprise, this represent a loss, whose magnitude or severity cannot be quantified since ideas help seed new research or entirely new fields. Thus, can we as a community provide citizen scientists worldwide a chance to publish open access peer reviewed articles without significant cost through a competitive publication fee subsidy scheme where each application is reviewed by the national science funding agency? If the above is possible, it would open up another area where ideas from citizen scientists could percolate into the scientific mainstream, where, as always, vibrancy and diversity of ideas power science forward."

Link:

https://peerj.com/preprints/2463.pdf

From feeds:

Open Access Tracking Project (OATP) » lkfitz's bookmarks

Tags:

oa.new oa.costs oa.obstacles oa.publishing oa.preprints oa.green oa.repositories.disciplinary oa.publishers oa.gold oa.fees oa.funders oa.versions oa.repositories oa.journals

Date tagged:

09/20/2016, 21:57

Date published:

09/20/2016, 17:57