Sentences with phrase «embargo period for»

Meanwhile, SPARC is cheering the reintroduction in the House of Representatives and Senate today week of a bill, known as the FASTR (Fair Access to Science and Technology Research) Act, which would shorten the required embargo period for sharing federally funded research papers from 12 months to just 6 months.

Not exact matches

That secular bear market continued through the Vietnam War, Watergate, the oil embargo, President Nixon's resignation, and stagflation — a long and frustrating time period for stocks and the economy that rivals our problems today.
For articles made publicly accessible through CHORUS, the Final Published Version will be made publicly accessible to nonsubscribers following a one - year embargo period.
This embargo period effectively eliminates for libraries the benefits of any positive early buzz about the book, or any marketing push by the publisher.
Unfortunately for libraries, that growth has led many of the largest publishing houses to take a very guarded approach with the field — offering libraries ebook titles at a significant markup, licensing titles only with restrictive terms or embargo periods, or simply refusing to enter into ebook agreements with libraries at all.
Coal is usually a very cheap source of energy as demonstrated by the chart found at (29) with a high average cost of $ 50.92 per short ton (2000 pounds) for a brief period in 1975 (remember the Arab oil embargo of 1973 - 74) to a cost of $ 18.34 per short ton as of 2004.
The Iraq - Turkey Crude Oil Pipeline runs from Kirkuk, Iraq, to the Ceyhan marine terminal in Turkey; it began operation in 1976 and has operated continuously, except for the 1990 to 1996 period when the United Nations embargo on Iraq was in effect.
Because of all the media attention that Webster et al. (2005) received, during the press embargo period, journalists sent the Hoyos et al. paper out for review to apparently quite a large number of climate researchers, mathematicians, and statisticians, a number of whom were quoted in media articles or who emailed us personally with questions.
More than that, when my colleagues and I studied 336 physicians» use of research, we found that while only a third of them took advantage of the complete access we provided them for a year, fully half of what they looked at (an article - a-week on average) was recent enough to fall within the 12 - month embargo period.
Stone's revisions would remove the original bill's expiry date (2020), extend its coverage from the health sciences to all state - funded research, and reducing the maximum post-publication embargo period that publishers could impose on public access to the «peer - reviewed manuscript» to six months from its current twelve (as opposed to the published version, for which there is no provision for making public).
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