Unisa 1 publishing in academic journals 2015

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Transcript of Unisa 1 publishing in academic journals 2015

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The UNISA Press co-publishing relationship began in 2007, with ten titles

initially, and has since then grown to include 23 titles in total.

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Overview of what we’ll be covering today

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•What is the readership and usage? The top cited or downloaded papers may be on the journal website

• What is the journal’s policy on repositories?

• Is it in the Thomson Reuters Citation Index or SCOPUS? Does the journal have an Impact Factor? Is that an important consideration for your subject area?

• If your work is publicly funded, is your paper required to be ‘Open Access’?

• Should you send an abstract of your paper to the Editor to assess its quality or ‘fit’?

• Look at previous papers to get a feel for what is accepted

• Take note of maximum extent of the submission

(see the Instructions for Authors/Notes for Contributors)

• Follow any submission guidelines; how should you submit your paper?

-Check if submission should be made via an online editorial office, many journals use ScholarOne Manuscripts or Editorial Manager

• Quote from and reference previous papers published in the journal if relevant. It demonstrates you have read the journal and contextualises your paper within their historic contributions to the field.

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Mention Predatory OA

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•Take care when choosing your title; most readers will access your paper online by way of a search engine or see it via a content alerting service

• Remember, the title and abstract are the most visible parts of your article and therefore require care and attention

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This differs in SSH and S&T

Billsberry, J. 2014. Desk-Rejects: 10 Top Tips to Avoid the Cull. Journal of

Management Education, 38(1):3-9.

1. Domain

2. Contribution

3. Length

4. Underdeveloped Manuscripts

5. Language

6. Relevance/Target journal references

7. Methods & Method Description

8. Evaluation

9. Anonymity

10.Format

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• Article level metrics also created a drive towards author metrics such as

the H-Index.

• The h-index is easy to compute

• E.g. one paper has at least one citation, two papers that each

have at least two citations

• The h-index can be applied to any set of papers, for example Google

Scholar has used as it the basis for their journal level metrics.

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Infographic on our Author Services site

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Taylor & Francis are pleased to be continuing our partnership with Kudos - a

new service that helps researchers and their institutions/funders to measure,

monitor and maximize the visibility and impact of their published articles.

The Kudos initiative fits very well with T&F’s wider support for authors and

their institutions and so we are excited to have been involved from the early

stages of development.

Kudos builds on three core principles:

1. that readers are increasingly struggling to filter the growing quantity

of published research;

2. that information which supports filtering – such as lay summaries

and impact statements – often exists but is not made public;

3. and that authors are best placed to increase awareness and impact

of their work, but don’t always know how to do this. Kudos provides

a platform for assembling or creating information to help filtering, for

sharing information to drive discovery, and for measuring and

monitoring the effect of both activities.

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As part of the pre-pilot phase (September -December 2013), Kudos surveyed

almost 4,000 authors and the results were compelling:

• 84% thought that more could be done to raise the visibility, impact

and usage of their work

• 80% felt that it was their personal responsibility to increase the levels

of impact, usage and visibility of their work

• 75% of respondents said they would be quite likely, likely or very

likely to use Kudos themselves

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T&F Online provides article level metrics such as Article Views and Citation

Counts

• Article views (the combined .pdf downloads and HTML full-text views of

an article on Taylor & Francis Online; this figure updates every 24-hours)

• Citation counts

•The citation count and list of citations is currently only pulled from

CrossRef and the participating CrossRef members, but we’re

working on expanding the sources from which we pull citation data

to include Scopus and the Web of Science, so that the citation

counts and list of citations are more comprehensive;

•we should see the results of that work on Taylor & Francis Online

early next year

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Altmetrics – new metrics proposed as an alternative to Journal Impact Factor and personal citation indices like the H-index.

Term “altmetrics” is a generalization of ‘article level metrics’

Altmetrics are often perceived as just a social media measurement tool.

BUT we do need a tool to effectively answer the question: “what I do I need to read?”

Altmetrics act as a post-publication Filter of research

• More than 1.7 Million articles that were published in 2012 are listed on Scopus

• No one can read everything, even within small fields

• Speed

• Altmetrics are very fast

• Social media attention for articles is normally concentrated around the 1st few weeks after publication.

•There are many types of research and research outputs that serve different roles.

•The metrics we use need to reflect the differing types of output.

•With Altmetrics we also see many different trends emerging per subject area

•Altmetrics Manifesto:

“Altmetrics expand our view of what impact looks like, but also of what’s making the impact”

“This matters because expressions of scholarship are becoming more diverse”

• Different altmetric tools:

• Altmetric

• Impact Story

• Plum Analytic

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Example of article level information on Altmetric.com

The scores are calculated using a proprietary algorithm which is based on a

combination of both the amount and type of mentions, and news articles are

counted differently to tweets.

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Example of detail at article level on altmetric.com

…amusingly about the many kinds of mental illness displayed by characters in

AA Milne’s Winnie the Pooh

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This is an Impact Story report for one authors articles.

Different articles have been picked up in different ways, the highly cited and

highly discussed articles are different.

• Question: Do altmetrics only highlight fashionable articles not the

best in terms of scholarly work?

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• Article level metrics also created a drive towards author metrics such as

the H-Index.

• The h-index is easy to compute

• E.g. one paper has at least one citation, two papers that each

have at least two citations

• The h-index can be applied to any set of papers, for example Google

Scholar has used as it the basis for their journal level metrics.

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• Article level metrics also created a drive towards author metrics such as

the H-Index.

• The h-index is easy to compute

• E.g. one paper has at least one citation, two papers that each

have at least two citations

• The h-index can be applied to any set of papers, for example Google

Scholar has used as it the basis for their journal level metrics.

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