Researcher Survey on Scholarly Communication
A survey was conducted to find out researchers’ publishing habits, the factors they consider when deciding which journal to publish their work, and their views on the author pay-to-publish model.
A survey was conducted to find out researchers’ publishing habits, the factors they consider when deciding which journal to publish their work, and their views on the author pay-to-publish model.
If you use a database to find papers by HKUST researchers, do you key in "HKUST" or spell it out in full? Which way do you think is more effective to find what you want? What if you are looking for HKU papers?
Archiving academic papers in an institutional or subject repository is a major way to make your works openly accessible. In this increasingly open research environment, it is important for academic authors to know how to do self-archiving properly.
What would you do when you discovered you have submitted an article to a predatory journal? Is it possible to request the publisher to retract an article because it was submitted without the consent or knowledge of other co-authors?
Academic publishing companies try to plug “content leakage” caused by article sharing websites like Sci-Hub and ResearchGate. Is plugging a good solution when there is a strong need for scholarly papers behind paywalls?
A recent survey report shows that scientific activity is not declining but are shifting to other research activities.
This week is Fair Dealing & Fair Use Week, a time to celebrate using and sharing the fruits of our minds in a fair way.
Academic publishing has long been a low investment high profit business. How can academic publishers maintain such a successful business model?
At the beginning of 2020, a massive open access (OA) contract was finalized between 700+ research institutions in Germany and the major academic publisher Springer Nature. How does this agreement affect researchers in Hong Kong?
It's still Open Access Week 2019 and how better to celebrate it than to watch a movie?