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RE: Graphing the Bergstrom and McAfee Journal Pricing Data
- To: <liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu>, <liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu>
- Subject: RE: Graphing the Bergstrom and McAfee Journal Pricing Data
- From: "David Goodman" <David.Goodman@liu.edu>
- Date: Wed, 7 Dec 2005 18:23:58 EST
- Reply-to: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
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Perhaps I shall partly anticipate Phil on value, but our viewpoints are not identical. We can look at value as a global concept, including all users anywhere, or as it applies to a specific institution. Viewed globally, there are many different meanings mostly not yet understood. We can approach this by incorporating the ones we know. The most obvious one is downloads/readings. The best approximation to this will be the total COUNTER data for a journal. The first obstacle is the technical one that the data are not yet comparable between publishers, but only within the journals of the same publisher; see http://people.cornell.edu/pages/pmd8/interface.pdf This will presumably soon be overcome. But the second obstacle is that almost all publisher refuse to release global usage data. They cite unspecified "business models;" but the only way such data can harm a publisher is if it is lower than it would like us to believe. I challenge any publisher to provide another, on line or off. reason. The next parameter to be considered is total circulation; some publishers do release this because of postal regulations, but most of the expensive one distribute in a manner to avoid needing to state these figures. It would be useful to have a compendium of such figures as are available, including but indicating unverified values from Ulrich's. This is a complicated figure to calculate in the presence of "big deals," but there is usually a difference between the journals paid for at full price, and the ones added. As an excuse for not providing figures, publishers again answer "business model," as if that were a reason rather than a refusal. The only way such data can harm a publisher is if it is lower than it would like us to believe. I challenge any publisher to provide another reason, on line or off. These factors should be included; others have been used, such as the proportion of research libraries owning the journal or interlibrary loan demand. There are surely others, but there is no need for them until we have incorporated the basic ones of downloads and subscriptions. Returning to a local university level, "Value" has a clear functional meaning: it is a summary of the likelihood that a library will continue or add a subscription. It is in fact this understood but not-mentioned meaning which explains the virulence of some recent postings. It is measured by such of the above parameters as apply. In addition, here is where the variation in literature use between disciplines becomes a practical question, but libraries take account of both this variation, as it applies to their local priorities. (Princeton or MIT are not going to buy Diabetes, no matter how good it is in any or all factors. I suppose Cornell Medical or Yale would buy it even if it were a poor value in financial terms.) It is also at this level that the possibility of substituting copyright-paid document delivery, fair use interlibrary loan, or Open Access becomes relevant. Dr. David Goodman Associate Professor Palmer School of Library and Information Science Long Island University dgoodman@liu.edu
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