Open access/Related Articles: Difference between revisions

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imported>Daniel Mietchen
imported>Daniel Mietchen
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{{r|Green open access}}
{{r|Green open access}}
{{r|Citation advantage of open access}}
{{r|Citation advantage of open access}}
{{r|Open Access Week}}


==Other related topics==
==Other related topics==

Revision as of 08:53, 19 October 2010

This article is developing and not approved.
Main Article
Discussion
Related Articles  [?]
Bibliography  [?]
External Links  [?]
Citable Version  [?]
Catalogs [?]
Video [?]
 
A list of Citizendium articles, and planned articles, about Open access.
See also changes related to Open access, or pages that link to Open access or to this page or whose text contains "Open access".

Parent topics

  • Publishing [r]: The process of production and dissemination of literature or information - the activity of making information available for public view. [e]
  • Scientific method [r]: The concept of systematic inquiry based on hypotheses and their testing in light of empirical evidence. [e]


Subtopics

Other related topics

  • Academic journal [r]: A regularly-published, peer-reviewed publication that publishes scholarship relating to an academic discipline. [e]
  • Blog [r]: A type of website, usually personal, often organized with posts in reverse chronological order. [e]
  • Fair use [r]: A limitation of United States federal copyright law providing that a greater societal good is achieved when limited material from copyrighted works can be used without prior permission of the copyright holder. [e]
  • Impact factor [r]: A widely used annual measure of how often the papers recently published in an academic journal have been cited in the academic literature. [e]
  • Library science [r]: The study of issues related to libraries and the information fields. [e]
  • Science 2.0 [r]: An umbrella term used to label the use of Web 2.0 tools for scientific purposes. [e]
  • Scientific journal [r]: A publication venue for original research and scholarly review articles — for more than three centuries on paper and now increasingly online. [e]
  • Search engine [r]: An application which accepts a query in a specialized (e.g. MEDLINE) or general language (e.g., Google) and responds with bibliographic references (e.g., medical journals, the public Web). [e]