Inferring the causal effect of journals on citations
Author : Vincent A Traag Articles in high-impact journals are, on average, more frequently cited. But are they cited more often because those articles are someh...
Author : Vincent A Traag Articles in high-impact journals are, on average, more frequently cited. But are they cited more often because those articles are someh...
Author : Ibraheem Mohammed Sultan Al Sadi Within nearly two decades after the open access movement emerged, its community has drawn attention to understanding i...
Authors : John Watts, Laura Sare, David E. Hubbard Data literacy education for graduate students can take place in many contexts. One-shot instruction sessions ...
Authors : Marcel Wrzesinski, Patrick Urs Riechert, Frédéric Dubois, Christian Katzenbach Over the last 25 years, scholars around the world have used electronic ...
Author : Rick Anderson Discussion of the ways in which open access (OA) and academic freedom interact is fraught for a number of reasons, not least of which is ...
Authors : Vicki Xafis, Markus K. Labude There is a growing expectation, or even requirement, for researchers to deposit a variety of research data in data repos...
Authors : Balazs Aczel, Barnabas Szaszi, Alex Holcombe Background The amount and value of researchers’ peer review work is critical for academia and publishing....