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Re: Dramatic growth of open access
- To: <liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu>
- Subject: Re: Dramatic growth of open access
- From: "Peter Banks" <pbanks@diabetes.org>
- Date: Tue, 4 Apr 2006 18:55:12 EDT
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This is just quick-and-dirty counting, but I don't think the data show that open access continues to grow dramatically, not in medicine at least. The growth may even have leveled off. These are the number of general medical titles in the DOAJ, listed by start year. 2005 9 2004 30 2003 27 2002 25 2001 25 2000 21 1999 17 1998 9 1997 15 1996 11 1995 9 1994 2 1993 2 1992 2 1991 1 1990 1 In the 5 minutes I had, it was too hard to search by start of publication year in PubMed, but I wonder if the number of new titles pretty much parallels those in the DOAJ. The numbers may overstate the real impact of the new OA journals. Several of the 2005 journals are highly specialized and some publish very little content; in fact, some seem largely titles in search of papers. For example, the Spanish-language journal Archivos de Medicina seems to have published just one paper in 2005. The Biomedical Imaging and Intervention Journal published 13 papers, but only one was of original research. Other journals are more robust, like BMC's Head and Face Medicine, even if of specialized interest. The point is that even if the overall numbers showed the growth of OA--and I am not convinced they do--you have also to look at the number, type, and usefulness of articles. I don't know if the OA tide is coming in or going out; it certainly isn't a tsunami. Peter Banks Publisher American Diabetes Association Email: pbanks@diabetes.org >>> heatherm@eln.bc.ca 04/03/06 8:04 PM >>> Open access - both journals and archives - continues to grow dramatically. New titles are being added to the Directory of Open Access Journals at the rate of more than 2 per day. An OAIster search today looks through more than 700,000 new items than a search three months ago (in total, well over 7 million items). E-LIS, the Open Archive for Library and Information Science, is expanding at the equivalent of about 56% per year. For more details and analysis, please see my blogpost, The Dramatic Growth of Open Access: March 31, 2006 Update, at: http://tinyurl.com/o7zkf Heather G. Morrison http://poeticeconomics.blogspot.com E-LIS Editor, Canada http://eprints.rclis.org/
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