1.
The Paradox of Online Journals « The Scholarly Kitchen
Phil noted in his 2003 article on student citations a study at Iowa ... in a Networked Age. portal: Libraries and the Academy 3.1 (2003)p. ...
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Framing the Open Access Debate « The Scholarly Kitchen
Messages need to be framed in a way that require little or no explanation or interpretation. If messages are constructed right, they contain ...
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End of Free Access « The Scholarly Kitchen
in blogs End of free access - The Scholarly Kitchen Are you happy with your social network? - Envisa Learning Fertility Treatments Unlikely ...
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The Meatgrinder and eBooks « The Scholarly Kitchen
Their file processing engine they’ve affectionately dubbed “the Meatgrinder.” It works very well, and quickly. You just load your cover and ...
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The Market for Scholarly Articles « The Scholarly Kitchen
Posted by Philip Davis under Authority, Marketing, Peer Review, Reading, ... Comment on Phillip Davis’s “The Market for Scholarly Articles” ...
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The Paradox of Online Journals « The Scholarly Kitchen
The Scholarly Kitchen Says: Sep 10, 2008 at 7:07 am. [...] a previous blog post, The Paradox of Online Journals, we described that scientists may be ...
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The Collapse of Peer Review « The Scholarly Kitchen
Review Collapse Posted on 9 October 2008 by Michael Philip David in his Scholarly Kitchen post asks the important question ‘Is peer review ...
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Scientific Impact Measures Compared « The Scholarly Kitchen
These results should give pause to those who consider the JIF [journal impact factor] the “golden standard” of scientific impact. ...
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The Meatgrinder and eBooks « The Scholarly Kitchen
Feb 18, 2009 ... What’s Hot & What’s Cooking in Scholarly Publishing - from the ... The novel I’ve published is now listed on Amazon.com (in print and for ...
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The Paradox of Online Journals « The Scholarly Kitchen
a previous blog post, The Paradox of Online Journals, we described ... summer I covered an article claiming that more online access to the ...