MY AMERICAN SCIENTIST
LOG IN! REGISTER!
SEARCH
 
RSS
Logo

FEATURE ARTICLE

Free Internet Access to Traditional Journals

Can scientists find ways to share published research without high cost? The experiences of one society suggest it can be done cheaply, even profitably

Thomas Walker

The digital revolution in scientific publishing is now under way, but the endpoint is far from clear. One question is especially problematic: Who will pay for the electronic publication of journals? A recent editorial in Science embraced the pay-per-view model that predominates among commercial journal publishers. Thomas J. Walker endorses an alternative model more suited to many scholarly societies: a system funded by authors and libraries with a free, searchable archive of research results available on the Internet.


 Go to Article

 

EMAIL TO A FRIEND :

Of Possible Interest

Macroscope: The British Longitude Act Reconsidered

Science Observer: Bring on the Soft Robots

Letters to the Editors: Software Engineering: What Works?

Subscribe to American Scientist

Sites of Interest

Duxbury Ventures Website Investments

Social Justice

Find Websites Worth

München Fair Hotels

ABC Fundraising

Promotional Products

Business Cards

Car Hire

Get a Gold Ira at Regal Assets.

Online Shopping