Sentences with phrase «open access journals do»

Not exact matches

The study, published in open - access journal Frontiers in Veterinary Science, also shows that the dogs did not suffer from a buildup of electrolytes from the drink, suggesting that electrolyte drinks are a safe hydration alternative for sniffer dogs, who are at risk of heat stroke in hot weather.
Eighty percent of a population of Burmese long - tailed macaques on an island in southern Thailand use stone and shell tools to crack open seafood, and do so using 17 different action patterns, according to a study published May 13, 2015 in the open - access journal PLOS ONE by Amanda Tan from Nanyang Technological University, Singapore, and colleagues, under an 8 year field project led by Michael D Gumert, also from NTU.
While most of the open - access journals you've heard of probably are legitimate, there are lots of predatory journals out there that don't do what they promise, including proper peer review.
I am really a fan of open access, but having said that, we do use the money we get from the journals and put it straight back into science.
Desk - based workers would like to spend less time sitting down and more time walking or doing physical activity as part of their working day, research published in the open access journal BMC Research Notes suggests.
A coalition of libraries and open - access publishers that pushed for the language says it does not require scientists to publish in open - access journals — just that their final manuscripts be made public.
The current study, published in the open access journal PLOS ONE, used a similar rationale to ask whether cats, which typically do not eat plants, have maintained the ability to detect bitter taste.
Lederman does not want to create The Journal of Last Resort, and vows to only accept papers about interesting immunology and infectious diseases — his original title for the online, open - access publication.
In journals with public peer review, that process, in which embarrassing, if trivial, errors may be discovered, «does not occur anymore «behind the scenes,»» writes Davide Zanchettin, a postdoctoral researcher at the Max Planck Institute for Meteorology in Hamburg, Germany, who co-authored two papers submitted to two different interactive - review and open access journals of the European Geosciences Union, in an e-mail to Science Careers.
In addition to journals which are fully 100 % Open Access, there are other journals which operate via subscriptions as mainstream journals do, but which offer open access to the electronic versions of their articles after a delay of usually a year, or selectively for individual articles provided the authors have paid an additional charge to «open up» the articOpen Access, there are other journals which operate via subscriptions as mainstream journals do, but which offer open access to the electronic versions of their articles after a delay of usually a year, or selectively for individual articles provided the authors have paid an additional charge to «open up» the artAccess, there are other journals which operate via subscriptions as mainstream journals do, but which offer open access to the electronic versions of their articles after a delay of usually a year, or selectively for individual articles provided the authors have paid an additional charge to «open up» the articopen access to the electronic versions of their articles after a delay of usually a year, or selectively for individual articles provided the authors have paid an additional charge to «open up» the artaccess to the electronic versions of their articles after a delay of usually a year, or selectively for individual articles provided the authors have paid an additional charge to «open up» the articopen up» the articles.
Press releases sometimes don't give an entirely accurate account of a piece or work, so going into the paper itself has to be desirable, and that's as much a challenge for PNAS and other subscription journals as it was when the issue of open - access publishing first arose.
Whereas peer review is traditionally done before a study is published, Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics is an open access journal where peer review takes place after publication.
The open access publication fee does not replace any existing journal policies publication costs to be paid by the author, which are billed separately (e.g. surcharges for color in print, oversized articles, etc.) Customers providing payment from the Americas will be charged in US$ sales tax will be charged if applicable.
Do you believe that outsiders publishing in an open review, open access climate journal, and now asking for scrutiny are doing something crazy?
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.
That is, those journals that are exercising the full extent of their monopoly right to circulate this work do not appear to be contributing to the encouragement of learning on anything like the scale that is now taking place through the circulation of knowledge achieved by those who are not exercising said rights, namely those who provide open access to their work through archiving or publishing.
That is, I don't think the best idea is running a self - serving sting operation run by a subscription - journal intended to expose the unscrupulous and call into a question people's right to knowledge through this model known as open access (Bohannon's tag line — «A spoof paper concocted by Science reveals little or no scrutiny at many open - access journals»).
For the growing proportion of readings used in instruction that are published in an online format, which includes most journals and an increasing number of books, why not have students use the library holding or an open access online version of the reading, either of which they are able mark up and share among their peers, much as their instructors do with their research colleagues.
The majority of the APC journals are in biomedical field, and it is still the case that the majority of open access journals across all field do not charge APC.
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