Open Access: Key Strategic, Technical and Economic Aspects / ed.
1. Open Access: Key Strategic, Technical and Economic Aspects / ed. by Neil Jacobs; Oxford, Chandos
Publishing, July 3, 2006, ISBN-10: 1843342030, ISBN-13: 978-1843342038, 264 pages
Part 1: Open Access - History, Definitions and Rationale
Overview of scholarly communication - Alma Swan (Key Perspectives Ltd., UK)
What is open access? - Charles W. Bailey, Jr. (University of Houston, USA)
Open access: a symptom and a promise - Jean-Claude Guédon (University of Montreal, Canada)
Economic costs of toll access - Andrew Odlyzko (University of Minnesota, USA)
The impact loss to authors and research - Michael Kurtz (Harvard-Smithsonian Center for
Astrophysics, USA) and Tim Brody (University of Southampton)
The technology of open access - Chris Awre (University of Hull, UK)
Part 2: Open Access and Researchers
The culture of open access: researchers' views and responses - Alma Swan (Key Perspectives Ltd.,
UK)
Opening access by overcoming Zeno's paralysis - Steven Harnad (Université du Québec à Montréal,
Canada, and University of Southampton, UK)
Researchers and institutional repositories - Arthur Sale (University of Tasmania, Australia)
Part 3: Open Access and Other Participants
Open access to the research literature: a funder's perspective - Robert Terry (Wellcome Trust, UK) and
Robert Kiley (Wellcome Library, UK)
Business models in open access publishing [原書 89 頁至 95 頁] - Matthew Cockerill (BioMed
Central, UK)
Learned society business models and open access [原書 91 頁至 97 頁] - Mary Waltham (Publishing
Consultant, USA)
Open all hours? Institutional models for open access - Colin Steele (Emeritus Fellow, ANU, Australia)
Part 4: The Position Around the World
DARE also means dare: institutional repository status in the Netherlands as of early 2006 - Leo
Waaijers (DARE Programme, the Netherlands)
Open access in the USA - Peter Suber (Earlham College, USA)
Towards open access to UK research - Frederick J. Friend (Scholarly Consultant, JISC, UK, and
Honorary Director of Scholarly Communication, UCL, UK)
Open access in Australia - John Shipp (University of Sydney, Australia)
Open access in India - D. K. Sahu (Consultant Paediatrician and CEO Medknow Publications, India)
and Ramesh C. Parmar (Consulting Paediatric Cardiologist, India)
Part 5: The Future
Open competition: beyond human reader-centric views of scholarly literatures - Clifford Lynch
(Coalition of Networked Information, USA)
The open research web - Nigel Shadbolt, Tim Brody, Les Carr (University of Southampton, UK) and
Steven Harnad (Université du Québec à Montréal, Canada, and University of Southampton, UK)