However, the more common form of
green open access publishing is «self - archiving»: the author publishes her work in a standard journal, but retains permission either to upload (archive) a version of her publication — ideally a PDF of the final, edited paper as published in the journal but usually a pre-publication version («pre-print»)-- to an institutional repository or other repository, eg, the private Social Sciences Research Network (SSRN).
Not exact matches
Kaiser points out that,» [l] ike other analysts, Archambault defines papers
published in immediately free journals as the «gold» version of
open access, and those posted in archives, sometimes after a delay, as «
green»; other forms his team dubbed «hybrid.»»
By CHRIS LONG and CLAIRE NEESHAM With well over 15 million readers, a catchment area reaching from Paris to Peking and a readership profile that would turn most high - brow publications
green with envy, the Internet — the world's largest
open access computer network — looks like the perfect
publishing medium for many of today's academic -LSB-...]
Like other analysts, Archambault defines papers
published in immediately free journals as the «gold» version of
open access, and those posted in archives, sometimes after a delay, as «
green»; other forms his team dubbed «hybrid.»
A common variation on this option is a
green - gold hybrid option: though the journal is not
open access and authors do not pay to be
published there, an author can pay the publisher an APC fee to obtain permission to self - archive a PDF copy of his
published article in an institutional or other publicly - accessible repository.
The ideal
green option is to
publish in one of the increasing number of quality, peer - reviewed, fully
open access journals.
For more information on
open access options and compliance at SAGE, including self / author archiving deposits (
green open access) visit SAGE
Publishing Policies on our Journal Author Gateway.