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Learned Publishing, Volume 34
Volume 34, Number 1, January 2021
- Lettie Y. Conrad:
Defining resilience for our industry: Voices of adaptation and reinvention in scholarly publishing. 4-5
- Lisa Cuevas Shaw:
From sensemaking to sensegiving: A discourse analysis of the scholarly communications community's public response to the global pandemic. 6-16 - Charles Watkinson:
University presses and the impact of COVID-19. 17-24
- Josh Brown, Phill Jones, Alice Meadows, Fiona Murphy:
Building resilience through cooperation: Two case studies. 25-29 - Allyson Mower:
Opportunities for eTextbook innovations and partnerships: A case study of the Marriott Library at the University of Utah. 30-34
- Violaine Iglesias, Steven Rathgeb Smith, Dan Gibson:
A lesson in resilience: The abrupt digital transformation of society conferences in 2020. 35-42 - Jeremy Brinton:
The impact of COVID-19 on the UK publishing industry: Findings and opportunity. 43-48 - Jonathan J. Mallett:
The resilience of scientific publication: From elite ancient academies to open access. 49-56
- Haseeb Md. Irfanullah:
So, what does resilience mean for scholarly publishing? 57-63 - Bill Kasdorf:
Why we can be resilient: We have technology and open standards to thank. 64-67 - Niamh O'Connor:
Publishing during a pandemic: Resilience and change. 68-70 - Helena Cousijn, Ginny Hendricks, Alice Meadows:
Why openness makes research infrastructure resilient. 71-75
- Thanking our reviewers 2020. 76-77
Volume 34, Number 2, April 2021
- Xiaoke Cao, Lei Lei, Ju Wen:
Promoting science with linguistic devices: A large-scale study of positive and negative words in academic writing. 82-88 - David S. Mills, Kelsey Inouye:
Problematizing 'predatory publishing': A systematic review of factors shaping publishing motives, decisions, and experiences. 89-104 - Jing Wang, Willem Halffman, Hub A. E. Zwart:
The Chinese scientific publication system: Specific features, specific challenges. 105-115 - Zhiqiang Zhang, Lei Zheng:
Consumer community cognition, brand loyalty, and behaviour intentions within online publishing communities: An empirical study of Epubit in China. 116-127 - Adam Coates:
How often are basic details of the research process mentioned in social science research papers? 128-136 - Sumiko Asai:
An analysis of revising article processing charges for open access journals between 2018 and 2020. 137-143 - Anna Severin, Joanna Chataway:
Purposes of peer review: A qualitative study of stakeholder expectations and perceptions. 144-155 - Maria S. Plakhotnik:
Communication clarity in calls for papers issued by journal special issues: First impressions matter. 156-163 - José Luis Ortega:
The relationship and incidence of three editorial notices in PubPeer: Errata, expressions of concern, and retractions. 164-174 - Thi Thu Ha Nguyen, Hiep-Hung Pham, Quan-Hoang Vuong, Quoc-Thai Cao, Viet-Hung Dinh, Dinh Duc Nguyen:
The adoption of international publishing within Vietnamese academia from 1986 to 2020: A review. 175-186 - Shelly M. Pranic, Mario Malicki, Stjepan Ljudevit Marusic, Bahar Mehmani, Ana Marusic:
Is the quality of reviews reflected in editors' and authors' satisfaction with peer review? A cross-sectional study in 12 journals across four research fields. 187-197 - JungWon Yoon, EunKyung Chung, Janet Schalk, Jihyun Kim:
Examination of data citation guidelines in style manuals and data repositories. 198-215 - Ángel Borrego, Lluís Anglada, Ernest Abadal:
Transformative agreements: Do they pave the way to open access? 216-232 - Ali Gazni, Fereshteh Didegah:
Journal self-citation trends in 1975-2017 and the effect on journal impact and article citations. 233-240
- James L. Nuzzo:
Preliminary evidence that letters to the editor are indexed inconsistently in PubMed and in exercise science and physical therapy journals: Implications and resolutions. 241-252 - Ivan A. Tarkhanov, Denis V. Fomin-Nilov, Michael V. Fomin:
Crypto access: Is it possible to use cryptocurrencies in scholarly periodicals? 253-261 - Jonathan J. Mallett, Debra L. Chin, Iris M. Rush, Justine R. Smith:
The transition of ARVO journals to open access. 262-271
- Heather Staines:
Mission alignment: University presses versus institutional visions. 272-278
- Reza BasirianJahromi, Amrollah Shamsi:
Should we add social media account details to authors' affiliations? 279-281 - Sam McLeod:
Should authors cite sources suggested by peer reviewers? Six antidotes for handling potentially coercive reviewer citation suggestions. 282-286
- Tom Hill:
The production, circulation, consumption, and ownership of scientific knowledge: Historical perspectives: Review. 287-289
Volume 34, Number 3, July 2021
- Jennifer E. Rowley, Laura Sbaffi:
Investigating gender differences in journal selection decisions: A survey of academic researchers. 294-304 - Margaret K. Merga, Shannon Mason:
Perspectives on institutional valuing and support for academic and translational outputs in Japan and Australia. 305-314 - Mona Farouk Ali:
Evaluating the correlation between different impact indicators for library and information science journals: Comparing the journal citation reports and scopus. 315-330 - Weishan Miao, Ying Huang:
Politics matters: The power dynamics behind Chinese English-language humanities and social science journals. 331-338 - Antti Mikael Rousi:
Ethical review and informed consent guidelines of high impact anthropology, business, and education research journals. 339-346 - Magdalena Szuflita-Zurawska, Beata A. Basinska:
Visegrád countries' scientific productivity in the European context: A 10-year perspective using Web of Science and Scopus. 347-357 - Robyn Price, Yusuf Ozkan:
Characteristics of Imperial College London's COVID-19 research outputs. 358-369 - Cary Moskovitz:
Standardizing terminology for text recycling in research writing. 370-378 - Graham Kendall:
Beall's legacy in the battle against predatory publishers. 379-388 - Jan Higgins, Robert D. Steiner:
Author preprint behaviour and non-compliance with journal preprint policies: One biomedical journal's experience. 389-395 - Kelsey Inouye, David S. Mills:
Fear of the academic fake? Journal editorials and the amplification of the 'predatory publishing' discourse. 396-406 - Sefika Mertkan, Gulen Onurkan Aliusta, Nilgun Suphi:
Knowledge production on predatory publishing: A systematic review. 407-413 - Binh Pham-Duc, Trung Tran, Hien-Thu-Thi Le, Nhi-Thi Nguyen, Ha-Thi Cao, Tien-Trung Nguyen:
Research on Industry 4.0 and on key related technologies in Vietnam: A bibliometric analysis using Scopus. 414-428 - Dezhong Duan, Qifan Xia:
Evolution of scientific collaboration on COVID-19: A bibliometric analysis. 429-441
- Jonathan Roscoe:
Opportunities for open access: Insights from the Wiley Practitioner Survey. 442-449 - Phil Hurst, Sarah Greaves:
COVID-19 Rapid Review cross-publisher initiative: What we have learned and what we are going to do next. 450-453 - Sean C. Rife, Domenic Rosati, Joshua M. Nicholson:
scite: The next generation of citations. 454-456
- Jiao Zhang:
Did anthropause generate a research pause during the pandemic? The experiences of a non-medical journal. 457-460
- Sin Wang Chong:
Improving peer-review by developing reviewers' feedback literacy. 461-467
- Tom Hill:
Research4Life: Landscape and situation analysis: Review. 468-473
Volume 34, Number 4, October 2021
- Jade Holt, Andrew Walker, Phill Jones:
Introducing a data availability policy for journals at IOP Publishing: Measuring the impact on authors and editorial teams. 478-486 - Quan-Hoang Vuong, Huyen Thanh T. Nguyen, Manh-Toan Ho, Minh Hoang Nguyen:
Adopting open access in an emerging country: Is gender inequality a barrier in humanities and social sciences? 487-498 - Youngseek Kim:
A study of the determinants of psychologists' data sharing and open data badge adoption. 499-509 - Maria S. Plakhotnik:
Has IMRD become IMRDi in management journals? Implications as an independent structural component of research articles. 510-518 - Tomas Koch, Raf Vanderstraeten:
Journal editors and journal indexes: Internationalization pressures in the semi-periphery of the world of science. 519-527 - Lu Chen, Min Zhang, Wan Xiong, Qian Liu:
Performance of China's journals indexed in SCIE: An evaluation based on megajournal metrics. 528-536 - Anna Severin, Joanna Chataway:
Overburdening of peer reviewers: A multi-stakeholder perspective on causes and effects. 537-546 - Rafael J. Araújo, Geoffrey S. Shideler, Marcus B. Reamer:
Chief editors in aquatic science and communication are more likely to oversee editorial boards from their own regions. 547-557 - Cristóbal Urbano, Sara Tafalla, Ángel Borrego, Ernest Abadal:
Preprints as an alternative to conference proceedings: A hands-on experience at EDICIC Iberian Meeting 2019. 558-567 - Amandeep Khatter, Michael Naughton, Hajira Dambha-Miller, Patrick Redmond:
Is rapid scientific publication also high quality? Bibliometric analysis of highly disseminated COVID-19 research papers. 568-577 - Haoran Zhu:
Home country bias in academic publishing: A case study of the New England Journal of Medicine. 578-584 - Janne Pölönen, Sami Syrjämäki, Antti-Jussi Nygård, Björn Hammarfelt:
Who are the users of national open access journals? The case of the Finnish Journal.fi platform. 585-592 - Rafael Repiso, Jesús Segarra-Saavedra, Tatiana Hidalgo-Marí, Victoria Tur-Viñes:
The prevalence and impact of special issues in communications journals 2015-2019. 593-601 - Victoria Hayes, Emma Williams, Kathleen M. Fairfield, Carolyne Falank, Dina McKelvy, Robert Bing-You:
Impact of a new institutional medical journal on professional identity development and academic cultural change: A qualitative study. 602-611 - Miriam Wanjiku Ndungu:
Scholarly journal publishing standards, policies and guidelines. 612-621 - Frederique Bordignon, Liana Ermakova, Marianne Noel:
Over-promotion and caution in abstracts of preprints during the COVID-19 crisis. 622-636 - Erwin Krauskopf:
Article processing charge expenditure in Chile: The current situation. 637-646 - Itamar Ashkenazi, Oded Olsha:
Honorific authorship and approval of the ICMJE criteria: A survey with a convenience sample. 647-654 - Margaret K. Merga:
The academic labour of knowledge mobilization: What scholarly publishers need to know. 655-665 - Josip Simic, Matko Marusic, Marijana Gelo, Nikolina Saravanja, Aleksandra Misak, Ana Marusic:
Long-term outcomes of 2-day training on planning and writing research on publication output of medical professionals: 11-year cohort study. 666-674
- Helina Marshall, Maria Fernandes:
Early-career researchers shaping publishing strategy. 675-678
- Gert Helgesson:
The two faces of the corresponding author and the need to separate them. 679-681 - Yu Wang, Liangbin Zhao:
Blockchain for scholarly journal evaluation: Potential and prospects. 682-687 - Salim Moussa:
Journal hijacking: Challenges and potential solutions. 688-695 - Philippe C. Baveye:
Objectivity of the peer-review process: Enduring myth, reality, and possible remedies. 696-700
- Award. 701-702
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