Sessions Printemps de formation organisés par le CNUDST en collaboration avec Thomson reuters du 11 au 14 Avril 2016 en faveur de la communautés des chercheurs tunisien
Sessions Printemps de formation organisés par le CNUDST en collaboration avec Thomson reuters du 11 au 14 Avril 2016 en faveur de la communautés des chercheurs tunisien
Texila American University (TAU), one among the fastest growing Caribbean Medical University has launched its E-journals in the Year 2012. Commonly entitled as Texila International Journal (TIJ), it renders a great opportunity for the researchers who seek academic excellence. Our aim always lies in going beyond borders in ensuring that high quality and informative journals are available to a wide range of audiences. All our journals are open access and the articles submitted will be available as open access to the public, journal articles published are licensed under, authors being the original owners of the copyright for the content published.
Lars Bjørnshauge's presentation to the National Scholarly Editor's Forum of South Africa, Cape Town, 30th July 2014. Questionable publishing practices are not a phenomenon limited to open access publishers. In this presentation, Lars explores the phenomenon of questionable publishing practices, sometimes referred to as predatory publishers. The slides explore some thoughts on guidelines for transparency and what DOAJ is doing in this area. It includes tips on how to spot a questionable publisher in 5 minutes!
Texila American University (TAU), one among the fastest growing Caribbean Medical University has launched its E-journals in the Year 2012. Commonly entitled as Texila International Journal (TIJ), it renders a great opportunity for the researchers who seek academic excellence. Our aim always lies in going beyond borders in ensuring that high quality and informative journals are available to a wide range of audiences. All our journals are open access and the articles submitted will be available as open access to the public, journal articles published are licensed under, authors being the original owners of the copyright for the content published.
Predatory publishing: pitfalls for the unwary. 25 Oct 2013Simon Huggard
Presentation given at the Library Research Forum, La Trobe University, 25 October 2013. Discusses issues with predatory publishers and what to check. Discusses open access publishing in an institutional digital repository
Sessions Printemps de formation organisés par le CNUDST en collaboration avec Thomson reuters du 11 au 14 Avril 2016 en faveur de la communautés des chercheurs tunisien
Texila American University (TAU), one among the fastest growing Caribbean Medical University has launched its E-journals in the Year 2012. Commonly entitled as Texila International Journal (TIJ), it renders a great opportunity for the researchers who seek academic excellence. Our aim always lies in going beyond borders in ensuring that high quality and informative journals are available to a wide range of audiences. All our journals are open access and the articles submitted will be available as open access to the public, journal articles published are licensed under, authors being the original owners of the copyright for the content published.
Lars Bjørnshauge's presentation to the National Scholarly Editor's Forum of South Africa, Cape Town, 30th July 2014. Questionable publishing practices are not a phenomenon limited to open access publishers. In this presentation, Lars explores the phenomenon of questionable publishing practices, sometimes referred to as predatory publishers. The slides explore some thoughts on guidelines for transparency and what DOAJ is doing in this area. It includes tips on how to spot a questionable publisher in 5 minutes!
Texila American University (TAU), one among the fastest growing Caribbean Medical University has launched its E-journals in the Year 2012. Commonly entitled as Texila International Journal (TIJ), it renders a great opportunity for the researchers who seek academic excellence. Our aim always lies in going beyond borders in ensuring that high quality and informative journals are available to a wide range of audiences. All our journals are open access and the articles submitted will be available as open access to the public, journal articles published are licensed under, authors being the original owners of the copyright for the content published.
Predatory publishing: pitfalls for the unwary. 25 Oct 2013Simon Huggard
Presentation given at the Library Research Forum, La Trobe University, 25 October 2013. Discusses issues with predatory publishers and what to check. Discusses open access publishing in an institutional digital repository
There are currently approximately 28,000 journals publishing 1.5 million papers annually. Although the majority of new journals are legitimate, the credentials of some are questionable. Such journals and publishers are referred to as 'predatory'. They commonly send spam emails to potential authors, solicit submissions and request payment of article processing charges, but lack academic rigour or credibility. This presentation will look at examples of publishers, publications and provide practical tips to identify and avoid predatory publishers.
What is meant by ‘predatory publisher’? Who is preyed on and by whom? What are the consequences of this publishing phenomenon? The Director of the US ISSN Center will draw on the experience of the ISSN Network and National Library of Medicine (NLM) to explore these issues. Criteria for inclusion in NLM’s indexes and the Directory of Open Access Journals (DOAJ), as well as criteria for denying or revoking an ISSN, will be outlined. Statistics on the ubiquity and longevity of these publications, their impact on ISSN and NLM, and the role of librarians will be discussed.
Predatory publishing: what it is and how to avoid itUQSCADS
There are currently approximately 28,000 journals publishing 1.5 million papers annually. Although the majority of new journals are legitimate, the credentials of some are questionable. Such journals and publishers are referred to as 'predatory'. They commonly send spam emails to potential authors, solicit submissions and request payment of article processing charges, but lack academic rigor or credibility.
This presentation provides researchers with
an insight into predatory behaviors and and how they can avoid them.
Predatory Publishers are primarily publish online journals which have little or no academic legality.
They exist solely to make money for their owners, and they make that money by charging excessive “article processing fees”.
There is minimal to no peer-review of published articles, despite their claims.
The scholarship of these journals is not reliable.
They aggressively solicit new articles which they publish, for a price.
Get assistance with grant compliance (public access policies), copyright questions, publication agreements, and rights retention from U of Tennessee's Scholarly Communication & Publishing Librarian.
A high-level overview of how Web of Science editors select content. Slides are modified and personalized for publisher meetings and public presentations.
A journey into academic journals and databases: services, policies, standards...Mansour Esmaeil Zaei
The Internet has made it possible for students to access a vast amount of high-quality references to writing papers. However, evidence has shown that the use of reference databases is poor and the quality of student papers is consequently often below expectation. The objective of this workshop is twofold. First, it aims to explain the students’ problems when they search for information by using reference database and publisher websites. Second, it aims to provide some useful and practical techniques to finding some solutions for their mentioned problems.
The workshop has practical implications for reference and instruction to social science students in general to find the most effective, efficient and manageable approach to finding research material on a topic.
Open Access: Identifying Quality Journals & Avoiding Predatory Publishersciakov
Slideshow for presentation on open access. Topics include defining Gold OA (APCs, business models, subsidies), OA citation advantage, predatory publishers, whitelists/blacklists.
The objective of this webinar is to provide a short overview about various aspects of the ORCID.
How can you get or assign ORCID identifiers?
Where and how is the ORCID used?
Who's behind the ORCID?
What is the business model of ORCID?
There are currently approximately 28,000 journals publishing 1.5 million papers annually. Although the majority of new journals are legitimate, the credentials of some are questionable. Such journals and publishers are referred to as 'predatory'. They commonly send spam emails to potential authors, solicit submissions and request payment of article processing charges, but lack academic rigour or credibility. This presentation will look at examples of publishers, publications and provide practical tips to identify and avoid predatory publishers.
What is meant by ‘predatory publisher’? Who is preyed on and by whom? What are the consequences of this publishing phenomenon? The Director of the US ISSN Center will draw on the experience of the ISSN Network and National Library of Medicine (NLM) to explore these issues. Criteria for inclusion in NLM’s indexes and the Directory of Open Access Journals (DOAJ), as well as criteria for denying or revoking an ISSN, will be outlined. Statistics on the ubiquity and longevity of these publications, their impact on ISSN and NLM, and the role of librarians will be discussed.
Predatory publishing: what it is and how to avoid itUQSCADS
There are currently approximately 28,000 journals publishing 1.5 million papers annually. Although the majority of new journals are legitimate, the credentials of some are questionable. Such journals and publishers are referred to as 'predatory'. They commonly send spam emails to potential authors, solicit submissions and request payment of article processing charges, but lack academic rigor or credibility.
This presentation provides researchers with
an insight into predatory behaviors and and how they can avoid them.
Predatory Publishers are primarily publish online journals which have little or no academic legality.
They exist solely to make money for their owners, and they make that money by charging excessive “article processing fees”.
There is minimal to no peer-review of published articles, despite their claims.
The scholarship of these journals is not reliable.
They aggressively solicit new articles which they publish, for a price.
Get assistance with grant compliance (public access policies), copyright questions, publication agreements, and rights retention from U of Tennessee's Scholarly Communication & Publishing Librarian.
A high-level overview of how Web of Science editors select content. Slides are modified and personalized for publisher meetings and public presentations.
A journey into academic journals and databases: services, policies, standards...Mansour Esmaeil Zaei
The Internet has made it possible for students to access a vast amount of high-quality references to writing papers. However, evidence has shown that the use of reference databases is poor and the quality of student papers is consequently often below expectation. The objective of this workshop is twofold. First, it aims to explain the students’ problems when they search for information by using reference database and publisher websites. Second, it aims to provide some useful and practical techniques to finding some solutions for their mentioned problems.
The workshop has practical implications for reference and instruction to social science students in general to find the most effective, efficient and manageable approach to finding research material on a topic.
Open Access: Identifying Quality Journals & Avoiding Predatory Publishersciakov
Slideshow for presentation on open access. Topics include defining Gold OA (APCs, business models, subsidies), OA citation advantage, predatory publishers, whitelists/blacklists.
The objective of this webinar is to provide a short overview about various aspects of the ORCID.
How can you get or assign ORCID identifiers?
Where and how is the ORCID used?
Who's behind the ORCID?
What is the business model of ORCID?
Libre accès pour la publication médicale: expérience du journal tunisien d'ORLBessem Aamira
Libre accès pour la publication médicale: expérience du journal tunisien d'ORL
Pr Sonia Benzarti (rédacteur en chef) et Dr Ali Mardassi (rédacteur adjoint)
Ecouter les enquêtes de terrain : analyse, numérisation, valorisation des arc...Phonothèque MMSH
Intervention le 3 octobre 2010 à Alger de Véronique Ginouvès dans le cadre de deux journées de rencontre internationale autour des sciences du patrimoine immatériel organisées par le CNRPAH (Centre National de Recherches Préhistoriques, Anthropologiques et Historiques), sous l’égide du Ministère de la culture. Ces deux journées seront l’occasion de dresser un bilan des actions de sauvegarde et de mise à dispositions des fonds ethnomusicologiques et de proposer des bonnes pratiques dans le domaine. http://phonotheque.hypotheses.org/3883
Interopérabilité et échanges de données pour les archivesPauline Moirez
L'échange de données pour les institutions culturelles : le protocole OAI-PMH, le format Dublin Core, les portails de ressources culturelles et patrimoniales
Jay patel Open Access TIPPA Midwest presentation june 2013Jay Patel
Hello, this is the presentation I was invited to give about Open Access at TIPPA Midwest on June 13, 2013. The focus of the presentation is how open access is changing scholarly publishing.
Science Communication in the Light of INSA Policy Statement on "Dissemination...Anup Kumar Das
The presentation titled "Science Communication in the Light of INSA Policy Statement on "Dissemination and Evaluation of Research Output in India" was presented in 18th Indian Science Communication Congress (ISCC2018), celebrating 200 Years of Science Journalism in India, at NASC, New Delhi during 20-21 December 2018.
Presentation made, on behalf of the Frontiers Editorial Office, at the Friday Colloquia of the Physics Department at the University of Trondheim. It's about open access and Frontiers.
An Overview of BioMed Central and the Growth of Open Access Publishing_biomedcentraljp
This is the PPT for the presentation at AFFRIT in Japan on 1st July 2013.
It was presented by Dr Nandita Quaderi who is the publisher of Biological Sciences at BioMed Central.
With the progress towards open science, scientific communication is facing a new wave of innovations towards more openness and speed of research publication which will deeply affect the way the peer review function is carried out and the overall role of journals in assuring quality and adding value to manuscripts.
Several initiatives are promoting the generalized adoption of open access preprints as a formal beginning stage of research publication, which has been common since the 90’s in the physics community. And, in the last decade, new ways to carry out the evaluation of manuscripts have emerged either to replace or to improve the traditional methods, which are widely criticized as being slow and expensive in addition to lacking transparency.
Quality nonprofit journals from emerging and developing countries have succeeded to follow the main innovations brought by the Internet. In addition to the technicalities of the digital publishing, there is a wide adoption of Open Access in the international flow of scientific information. The new wave of innovations that affect the peer review function and the changing role of journals pose new challenges to the emerging and developing countries in regard of scientific publishing. The adoption of these innovations is essential for progress of SciELO as a leading open access program to enhance scientific communication.
The scope of this workshop aims at an in-depth analysis and discussion of the state of art and main trends of the peer review function, the modalities of carrying it out as well as of the increasing adoption of mechanisms to speed publication such as preprints and how they affect and potentially renew the role of journals. These recommendations will guide SciELO policies on manuscript evaluation and on the adoption of preprint publications.
How altmetrics can help researchers broaden the reach of their work
Slides from workshop to pepnet (Public Engagement network) at the University of Leeds on 28th November 2018
Assessing Research Impact: Bibliometrics, Citations and the H-IndexFintan Bracken
Talk presented by Dr. Fintan Bracken at the Mary Immaculate College Research Day on 1st September 2015. The talk looked at assessing and maximising the impact of the arts and humanities research conducted at Mary Immaculate College in Limerick, Ireland.
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LIBSENSE : Renforcer la Science Ouverte en AfriqueBessem Aamira
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Retour d’expérience sur l’utilisation de OJS et un récapitulatif et démonstration des fonctionnalités et les nouveautés de la toute dernière version 3.3
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Session de formation organisé par le CNUDST en partenariat avec Springer traitant les thèmes suivants:
- Les e-ressources de Springer
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Comment publier votre article? des sessions de formation organisés par le CNUDSt en collaboration avec Elsevier en faveur des chercheurs tunisien.
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JELA 2015,
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For more information, visit-www.vavaclasses.com
4. Why we Publish
Diffusion of Knowledge
Promotion
Sharing Ideas
Community belonging
Research Valorization
Getting Feedback
Professional Profile
5. Where to Publish
• Which journal? Indexed?
• How journals are classified? Which is better?
• Should I look at the Impact factor?
• Would my publications be accepted in high-IF journals?
• Open Access?
9. Citation Index, A Benchmark
American Documentation, Vol. 14, No.3 , p. 195-201 1963
Eugene Garfield Derek J. de Solla
Price
Price, DJD
Archives Internationale d'histoire Des Sciences
No 14, p 85, 1951
12. Millions of Records
SCIENCE CITATION
INDEX EXPANDED
• 41.2 million records
• 1900-present
SOCIAL SCIENCES
CITATION INDEX
• 7.9 million records
• 1900-present
ARTS & HUMANITIES
CITATION INDEX
• 4.6 million records
• 1975-present
CONFERENCE
PROCEEDINGS
CITATION INDEX
• 8.2 million records
• 1990-present
BOOK CITATION
INDEX
• 977,199 records
• 2005-present
CURRENT CHEMICAL
REACTIONS
• 212,622 records
• 1985-present
INDEX CHEMICUS
• 337,305 records
• 1993-present
DATA CITATION
INDEX
• 2.8 million records
• 1900-present
CURRENT
CONTENTS
CONNECT
• 18.1 million records
• 1998-present
BIOSIS CITATION
INDEX
• 22.8 million records
• 1926-present
ZOOLOGICAL
RECORD
• 4 million records
• 1864-present
MEDLINE
• 22 million records
• 1950-present
DERWENT
INNOVATION INDEX
• 22.9 million basic
inventions
• 1963-present
A comprehensive gateway to the most
relevant research information: reliable,
integrated, multidisciplinary
13. Thomson Reuters Journals Selection Policy
•Publishing Standards
– Peer review, Editorial conventions
•Editorial content
– Addition to knowledge in specific subject field
•Diversity
– International, regional influence of authors, editors, advisors
•Citation analysis
– Editors and authors’ prior work
16. When to publish
0
20
40
60
80
100
120
0 1000 2000 3000 4000 5000 6000
# of journals
%ofdatabase
Articles Citations
40% of the journals:
• 80% of the publications
• 92% of cited papers
4% of the journals:
• 30% of the publications
• 51% of cited papers
17. When not to publish
Should I wait before publishing?
35 USD billions has been wasted developing things that are already
documented in a patent specification.(Source: British Patent Office, 2000)
Never forget to say when I should stop research on a given topic !
21. Please contact us on
Twitter: @Walid_Hassan_TR
or LinkedIn Dr. Walid Hassan
Editor's Notes
Dr Eugene Garfield, the founder of ISI, in 1955 published a paper in the journal Science that exposed the concept of citation indexing to a wide audience within the scientific community. This paper communicated a philosophy that is the core of the Web of Science (and Web of Knowledge for that matter) today – the provision of links between published works on a multidisciplinary scale. A resource for driving discovery.
WHY IS THIS VALUABLE TO THE SCIENTIFIC COMMUNITY/TO RESEARCHERS? Because it allows to draw the complete picture, prior art.
Allows you to move forward and backward in time, discovering relationships between published works as determined by the articles authors
Find new, unknown information based on older, known information
Track use of your research or a competitor’s research
Backward through “Cited References”
Uses cited references as subject terms
Explore hidden connections between research papers.
Citations symbolize the association of scientific ideas. Taking into account citations is very important because they show how others use a work in subsequent research and therefore can give us valuable clues as to how/and in which direction science is evolving in given fields.
.
* IMPORTANT NOTES ABOUT DCI: New records are constantly being added to DCI. Please verify the latest count with GSS/Product Management is specific stats are required by a customer. Also note that 1900 represents the earliest data set in the collection and does not imply comprehensive coverage from 1900.