STM News from The London Book Fair – August 2017

STM News from The London Book Fair – August 2017

Wiley extends content sharing initiative after successful pilot

Wiley has announced that its content sharing initiative, piloted from January this year across 180 of its journals, and powered by ReadCube, will now be extended across its portfolio of more than 1,700 titles. Authors and subscribers, along with selected media outlets, will be able to generate shareable links to free-to-read full-text versions of articles. Over the course of the initial four-month trial, more than 7,000 links to articles were shared globally by subscribers to Wiley Online Library.

ReadCube and its Digital Science stablemate Altmetric have also announced an agreement with the American Academy of Pediatrics to integrate Altmetric badges into their journals platform and index their collections through the ReadCube Discover program. Meanwhile, Digital Science’s research data management software company Symplectic has been gained its first institutional client in Africa, Durban University of Technology.

 

Thomas advances at Clarivate

Annette Thomas, former Chief Scientific Officer for Springer Nature, has been appointed Chief Executive Officer of Clarivate Analytics’ Scientific and Academic Research division, four months after joining the board of the research insights and analytics organisation. Thomas played a key role in the company’s recent acquisition of peer review start-up Publons, shortlisted for next month’s ALPSP innovation awards. The winner will be announced at the ALPSP’s tenth anniversary conference, to be held at Noordwijk in The Netherlands from 13-15 September.

Publons has also announced the shortlist for a new award, to be announced on September 19th as part of the annual Publons Peer Review Awards. The Sentinel Award celebrates ‘outstanding advocacy, innovation or contribution to scholarly peer review’, and the eight-strong list comprises the American Geophysical Union, the Committee on Publication Ethics (COPE), F1000Research, Irene Hames, Kyle Martin and Gareth Fraser, Michèle B. Nuijten (for the StatCheck project), ORCiD, and Retraction Watch.

 

New chemistry preprint server powered by Figshare

The American Chemical Society has launched a fully-functioning open beta of its new chemistry preprint server ChemRxiv. Powered by Digital Science company Figshare, the venture has received strategic input from the Royal Society of Chemistry, the German Chemical Society, and several other scientific publishers and not-for-profit organisations. At the time of writing, the server currently hosts 13 preprints; a Governance and Scientific Board is currently being constituted, and a publishing manager recruited.

 

Other news

A new initiative aiming to simplify and accelerate the process of resubmitting an article to a different journal after rejection by the journal to which it was initially submitted has been announced. Project MECA – Manuscript Exchange Common Approach – is working to develop a common approach to transferring manuscripts and peer review data that can be adopted across the industry. Participants include Clarivate Analytics, Aries Systems, eJournal Press, HighWire, and PLOS. And De Gruyter has adopted River Valley Technologies’ online proofing platform ProofCheck for its online-only journals, replacing its previous PDF-based workflow.


Alastair Horne writes our Academic & STM Newsletter.

Alastair Horne is a PhD student

at the British Library and Bath Spa University.

 

The Academic Newsletter is sponsored by The Copyright Clearance Center.

Copyright Clearance Center (CCC), with its subsidiaries RightsDirect and Ixxus, is a global leader in content workflow, document delivery, text and data mining and rights licensing technology for thousands of publishers, businesses and academic institutions. CCC’s solutions provide anytime, anywhere content access, usage rights and information management while promoting and protecting the interests of copyright holders. CCC serves more than 35,000 customers and over 12,000 copyright holders worldwide and manages more than 950 million rights from the world’s most sought-after journals, books, blogs, movies and more. The company has locations in the US, the UK, the Netherlands, Spain, Romania and Japan.

 

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Alastair Horne is Lecturer in Publishing at the University of Stirling in Scotland, where his research interests include digital and academic publishing. He worked in publishing for thirteen years, firstly at ProQuest and then with Cambridge University Press, where he served as Innovation Manager and led work on the BETT-award-winning Race to Learn software in partnership with the Williams Formula One team. After leaving Cambridge in 2016, he began work on a PhD exploring how smartphones are changing storytelling.

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