Open access/Related Articles: Difference between revisions
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==Other related topics== | ==Other related topics== |
Revision as of 08:53, 19 October 2010
- 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
- Institutional repository [r]: Add brief definition or description
- Open access journal [r]: An academic journal that publishes its articles via Open access, i.e. such that the content is free to use and reuse for readers. [e]
- Directory of Open Access Journals [r]: A web-based service provided by the University of Lund that lists open-access journals that meet a number of quality criteria, e.g. concerning how they evaluate the scholarly content that they publish. [e]
- Open access mandate [r]: Add brief definition or description
- Gold open access [r]: The practice of publishing articles in scientific journals under an open license; widely used as a synonym for open access publishing. [e]
- Green open access [r]: Add brief definition or description
- Citation advantage of open access [r]: Add brief definition or description
- 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]