Sentences with phrase «embargo periods of»

New bestsellers drive circulation, and embargo periods of three months or longer will likely quash demand.
Data become accessible to other authorised users only after a predefined embargo period of six months which allows researchers priority to access to their own data.

Not exact matches

1973 - An oil embargo by the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries led Congress to enact a test period of year - round daylight - saving time in 1974 and 1975.
It also plans to table an extension of the intervention period from the maximum 210 days until the end of the one - year Russian embargo.
As a non-profit organization with its mission to advance science and serve society, peer - reviewed research content becomes freely available with registration on our website after a 12 - month embargo period from the date of publication.
«We'd like to see the policy strong on the embargo period,» says Swan of SPARC.
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.
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.
Penguin's Director of Online Sales and Marketing Tim McCall confirmed to the AP that prices would not be raised as a result of the change to the embargo period.
When asked to rate several ebook lending models — including hypothetical lending models, models that are currently in use, and models that employ embargo periods — a majority of respondents ranked only one as «reasonable.»
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.
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.
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