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ScienceOpen: Scientific Publishing for “Generation Open” Open Access Ambassadors Conference, 03-04 December, Munich Dr. Stephanie Dawson, CEO
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2 We live in a networked world… Image Credit: dee_, Flickr CC BY-NC-SA Why should scientific communication be different?
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3 We now have the opportunity… Provide free and immediate access to knowledge to drive creativity, collaboration, innovation and development.
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4 … to democratize science At ScienceOpen we wanted to fundamentally change how we communicate scientific results – starting with Peer Review
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5 What is ScienceOpen? ScienceOpen is a next generation Open Access communication platform. ScienceOpen offers immediate publication after editorial check with a transparent, network-based peer-review afterward. Suite of social-networking and collaboration tools. All within the context of over 1.3 million aggregated Open Access articles.
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6 Why communication? A publication is the final product of your scientific research. Done, right? Image Credit: Kai Morgener, Flickr, CC-BY-NC-SA
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7 Your work is a call to action It is the beginning of a scientific discourse that starts with Peer Review. Image credin: Kay Gaensler, Flickr, CC-BY-NC-SA
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8 The challenge How to maintain quality of scientific communication in an internet model? Current system derived from paper-based communication depends on anoymous pre-publication Peer Review. But recent cases have highlighted that with the internet, more eyes are more likely to find errors and communicate them more quickly. New modes of network-based evaluation of research are required. New measures for rating and ranking scientific results required.
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9 The core ScienceOpen idea Use the power of professional networks to evaluate scientific results.
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10 Present status The internet has fundamentally changed the scholarly publishing paradigm No need for journals as “container”. Immediate publication and worldwide open access. Impact can be measured on article level and Journal Impact Factors lose meaning. Publishing becomes a service and fees can be based on the real costs of publication. Public discourse on scientific research in blogs, social media, and scientific networks.
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11 Editorial Board Members: 160 <
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12 ScienceOpen as Open Access publisher CINF Webinar August 26, 2014
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13 ScienceOpen advantages Fast After editorial check (ca. 1 week) paper may be published as author pdf with a citable Cross-Ref DOI. Typeset version follows after ca. 10 days. Transparent After publication SO editors initiate an open, public peer review. Network-based – any reader can invite a referee. Transparent – with full name and all comments. Open-ended – supports reproducibility as criterion as comments may come much later.
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14 What we offer young researchers We publish all formats Posters, Mini-Reviews, Negative results. We support discussion of your results Open Access, Open Peer Review Author interviews, blog, video intro to your research – share your ideas with us and we will support you! Real time tracking of social media usage with Altmetric Discussion groups and collections on ScienceOpen
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15 Posters
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16 SO puts researcher at the center
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17 Social-networking tools
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18 Groups and discussion forums CINF Webinar August 26, 2014
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19 Business concept Free services Access: browse, search & comment Network: connect & communicate Organize: draft manuscripts & discuss with colleagues Publishing charge Research: 800 USD DOI assigment Copyediting Language editing XML conversion Hosting Printable PDF A&I / Google Scholar
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20 MPDL Pilot Project We are currently in negotiations with the Max-Planck Digital Library to provide all early career researchers (grad student, post-doc) with free publishing services in 2015. Interested? Register and publish your work today!
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21 Thank you very much! Please tell us what you think with this quick survey: https://www.surveymonkey.com/s/MaxPlanckSO Stephanie Dawson Twitter: @SDawsonBerlin Stephanie.Dawson@ScienceOpen.com
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22 Looking forward to your visit… youtube.com/user/ScienceOpen facebook.com/pages/scienceopencom/151202981751490 twitter.com/Science_Open
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23 Example: Citations to non-elite journals Acharya et al., arXiv:1410.2217 9 Oct. 2014 arXiv:1410.2217
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24 Things are changing… The internet has fundamentally changed the scholarly publishing paradigm Immediate publication and worldwide open access. No need for journals as “container”. Impact can be measured on article level and Journal Impact Factors lose meaning. Public discourse on scientific research in blogs, social media, and scientific networks.
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25 Our answer: ScienceOpen
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