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Publishing your research 101
The effective communication of scientific research is vital both to the scientific community and to a scientist’s career. ACS (American Chemical Society) Publications has launched the Publishing Your Research 101 video series to assist authors and reviewers in understanding and improving their experience with the processes of writing, submitting, editing, and reviewing manuscripts.
Forum on the future of scientific publishing
This all-day Forum was held on Thursday, June 27, 2013, at the Li Ka Shing Center for Learning and Knowledge on the Stanford University Campus. The Forum allowed major stakeholders to present their perspectives on impending federal policy changes regarding open access to scientific research. View the detailed Agenda. Video and slide presentations can also be downloaded via the library catalog.
Article of the future
An introductory movie of the Elsevier's Article of the Future project. For more information, please visit www.articleofthefuture.com
Flow of scientific information
The flow of scientific information: from idea to publication
Source: University of Waterloo Library
About Science-Technology-Medicine (STM) Journals
- Journal articles are one of the most important ways scientists and engineers formally communicate their research results with one another
- Types of Journals: Magazines, Trade Journals, and Scholarly Journals
- Types of publishers: Professional societies, Non-Profit Organizations, Commercial Publishers, Educational Institutions, and Government
- Peer review vs Non-Peer Review
- Types of articles: Rapid Communications or Letters, Research Articles, and Review Papers
Selected publishers:
- Societies: American Chemical Society, American Institute of Chemical Engineers, Royal Society of Chemistry
- Commercial publishers: Elsevier, Springer, Wiley
- Government: National Academy of the Sciences (PNAS)
Academic research process
Visual summary included in an email message from Amazelia Services to Grace Baysinger on 13 January 2006.
Publishing your research
Mastering the Art of Scientific Publishing
Published by the ACS Publications in October 2014, this virtual issue of editor tips for authors has 20 papers for 20/20 vision on publishing.
Key Steps in Composing a Scientifically Effective Paper
Reprinted with permission from Prashant V. Kamat; Jillian M. Buriak; George C. Schatz; Paul S. Weiss; J. Phys. Chem. Lett. 2014, 5, 3519. DOI: 10.1021/jz502010v. Copyright 2014 American Chemical Society."
Books about getting your research published
Please see Sci-tech: Written communication for additional discipline-specific books about writing articles, theses, grant proposals, and technical reports.
Books about publishing
Books about scholarly communication
Books on scholarly publishing
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edited by Suzanne M. Ward, Robert S. Freeman, and Judith M. Nixon. 2016
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Marc Scheufen. 2015
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Marc Scheufen. 2015
Publishing Ethics
Peer review
Is this a peer-reviewed source?
- Most journals published by professional societies are peer-reviewed. The Scholarly Societies Project lists profesional societies by subject.
- Use "Ulrich's Periodicals Directory" online. The black and white-striped referee's shirt icon represents peer-review.
- If available, limit a database search to peer-reviewed journals. All journals in the Web of Science Core Collection are peer-reviewed.
- Look on a journal's website (e.g., Masthead or About).
- Ask a librarian.
Peer review in 3 minutes (from NCSU)
Peer review
Open access (OA)
Open Access Explained (by PhD. Comics)
Types of open access
- Gold Open Access: Publication costs are covered by an 'Article Processing Fees' paid by authors upon acceptance. The final 'article of record' is made available to all, immediately, without any barriers to access. Fees range from $800-$5,000 per article.
- Green Open Access: A version of the paper (often the author's manuscript) is made available via a subject or institutional repository. An embargo period is often involved, typically 6-24 months. No payment is made, and publishers strive to recoup their investment through traditional sales during the embargo period.
- Delayed Open Access: The final version of the paper is made available by the publisher after an embargo period (e.g. publisher deposits the paper in PubMed Central after 12 months).
Open access spectrum
Author rights
More information on copyright is located in Sci-tech: Ethics, IP, and data.
Research funder requirements
Library books on open access
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Marc Scheufen. 2015
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Marc Scheufen. 2015
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Eric T. Meyer and Ralph Schroeder. 2015
Websites about open access
* Publishers & OA
Publisher OA programs - info for Stanford authors
This list is still "under construction." For information about a publisher who is not on the list below or for more details about a publisher's OA program, please consult your Subject Librarian.
* OA repositories
Selected repositories and services
Researcher/article metrics
Featured ebook
Metrics for individuals and for articles
Journal evaluation tools
Books on bibliometrics
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Kim Holmberg. 2016
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Dangzhi Zhao, Andreas Strotmann. 2015
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edited by Ben Showers. 2015
Journal abbreviations & DOIs
Journal abbreviations and DOIs
Standards & guidelines
NISO recommended practices
National Information Standards Organization (NISO) Recommended Practices are "best practices" or "guidelines" for methods, materials, or practices in order to give guidance to the user. These documents usually represent a leading edge, exceptional model, or a proven industry practice. Use of any or all elements of a Recommended Practice is discretionary; it may be used as stated or modified by the user to meet specific needs.