Some Recent Issues on the Business of Journal Publishing:An Independent Point of View Klaus Kaiser Houston Journal of Mathematics kkaiser@uh.edu http://math.uh.edu/~hjm... • Should Ind
Trang 1Some Recent Issues on the
Business of Journal Publishing:An Independent
Point of View
Klaus Kaiser Houston Journal of Mathematics
kkaiser@uh.edu http://math.uh.edu/~hjm
Trang 2• Should Independent Journals do their own Electronic Archiving
• Management of the Archive and Delivery of
Electronic Documents
• Various Ways to Sell a Journal
• Some Thoughts on the Pay-Per-View Option
• The Problem of Assigning ISSN Numbers for
Electronic Editions
• Data Object Identifier, CrossRef and Metadata
• Conclusion
Trang 3Should Independent Journals Do Their
Own Archiving?
• The most prominent publishers have come up with
different answers:
• Springer journals are archived (for free?) by the GDZ
GDZ provides free access!
• GDZ invites also smaller, independent journals Primarily from Central Europe.
• Elsevier has an in-house program with the Archive as an additional commercial unit.
• AMS uses JSTOR which is very expensive.
• Archiving contributes to the idea of The Digital
Mathematics Library, DML.
Trang 4• After a careful analysis, HJM decided to do its own archiving:
• HJM had already established a comprehensive index of all
published issues:
http://www.math.uh.edu/~hjm/v01-v05.html Recent titles were already linked to TOC’s
• The blueprint for the Archive had already been laid out The
digitizer could work from the index in order to create TOC’s For HJM there was only some minor additional work: Like, to correct
on TOC’s last page number for papers with an odd number of
pages
• Besides the usual costs of scanning, there were only $250 for programming setup
Trang 5• Most important benefit of having the archive on the premises:
Continual forward/backward linking of related articles
• Technical Issues: Choice of File Format and additional features
• HJM chose PDF The only other serious contender, DjVu, is far less popular and has advantages that are important only for
photographs and graphics Not an issue for journals like HJM
• 400 dpi is fully sufficient Many volumes of older issues were
originally prepared as camera ready copies from IBM ballhead
typewriters and simple lasers Also JSTOR uses 300 dpi and is
known for decent printouts The GDZ uses 600 dpi
• OCR can become very important, e.g., when files are eventually stored at large repositories, e.g., DMLs or file servers run by the
subscription agencies JSTOR has added OCR but the GDZ has
not HJM has added OCR
Trang 6• File unit: Individual papers for posting on the WEB
Individual issues or volumes can be delivered on CD’s
•HJM funds paid for the Archive HJM tried to get outside
funding but it didn’t work out HJM had offered free
unrestricted access in exchange
• HJM provides now access to its Archive for free, but only for subscribing libraries that have agreed to the HJM License
Agreement Form:
http://www.math.uh.edu/~hjm/license02.html
• Most important points: No ILLs Immediate access to all
previous issues regardless of subscription history All access privileges cease with cancellation
Trang 7• Pay-Per-View has been put on the backburner Currently
only publishers can provide a PPV service that also includes requests from individuals Accepting credit card payments is a stumbling block Requests from individuals are currently
honored as a matter of courtesy
• Archived issues lack individual abstracts Should links to MR and Zentralblatt serve as substitute? Sounds like a good idea Some journals (e.g., those archived by Project Euclid and the French digitizing project Numdam) are doing this
• Because only a link is provided, this is probably not a
copyright issue But should papers be linked to reviews?
• Problem: A reviewer writes his assessment with the
understanding to be published in the reviews and not become
in any way a fixture of the reviewed paper
Trang 8• Confronted with this issue, an overwhelming majority of
HJM editors voted that HJM should not provide links from
papers to reviews
• Links from reviews to papers are less problematic and even desirable.
• Should libraries be able to buy the whole Archive? I think the answer should be YES But currently most libraries are
satisfied with buying access and not files However, amongst major libraries, Berkeley has already expressed strong interest
Of course, price could be a factor, as well as copyright
agreements
Trang 9Various Ways to sell a Journal
Traditionally: In print to libraries as volumes in form
of annual subscriptions
More recent: Online access to current and previous issues With or without print subscription
Latest Trend: Pay-Per-View, sale of files for
individual papers
Extreme Commercialism: Sale of enhanced abstracts, that is abstracts as PDF files together with the list
of references
Trang 10Some thoughts on the Pay-Per-View Option
• PPV is gaining popularity Offered by commercials as well as academic publishers
• But is PPV useful? Not according to a 2001study of Stanford University Libraries Only 12% of
respondents found it useful Urgent need only reason Control group consisted primarily of medical
researcher Restricted to mathematicians need for PPV
is probably minimal
• Libraries may consider PPV as only option to make an expensive journal partially available
• For non academic institutions substitute for
Trang 11for libraries
•PPV ranges between $15-$30 for math papers, this amounts
to a ppp between $1 and $2 Not unusual for commercial
journals but for independent journals, $0.1 -$0.17 is the
volume.
• PPV raises academic concerns: Possible conflict with
offprints and authors posting files
• The Wiley solution: No more free offprints; authors receive
a low resolution PDF file and are allowed only a limited
number of printouts
Trang 12• PPV as service for non-academic institutions and for
providing files of archived papers does not cause conflicts
with the authors rights to distribute their own papers freely.
• Most subscription agencies provide PPV only for their own academic clientele and only when they are allowed to host the journal.
• To be effective, PPV must be provided on the journals
Website For academic journals this poses the problem of
accepting credit card payments and of related bookkeeping HJM is in holding mode.
• Possible Solution: Journal Delivery Services might work
directly with files and not only from hard copies
Trang 13The Problem of Assigning ISSN
Numbers for Electronic Editions
• Do electronic editions of a print journal need an
additional ISSN number?
• Depends on your point of view If it is like paperback versus hardcover: YES
• If it is like a CD included in a book: No
• For various other reasons, I feel the answer can be
NO
• Primary Reason for NO: Nobody has asked so far for another dumb number Five Year Review of ISSN
standard is now also leaning towards NO
Trang 14DOI, CrossRef, MetaData
• Basic idea: A unique number can be used to
identify a file with its location (URL) on the
WEB
• Problem: URLs are not stable, usually change
when publishers change Publisher may move files around.
• Solution: Create for every document a unique #, the DOI (DataObjectIdentifier) An organization will keep track of its location on the WEB.
Trang 15• Implementation: A Publisher applies through an agency, e.g., CrossRef for a publisher ID The DOI organizations assigns a nmber, say 10.1007 which here identifies Springer Verlag
The DOIs of all publications of Springer Verlag then have this number as prefix prefix/suffix then constitutes the full DOI
which must be submitted to CrossRef, together with MetaData
in a specific format For example
•http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00211-002-0445-6
•serves as URL for an article in Numerische Mathematik while
•http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00134-003-1821-0
links to an article about SARS in Springers Intensive Care
Medicine
Trang 16• Benefits: CrossRef provides reference linking, but only
amongst its members Members are the big commercial
publishers plus members of Project Euclid AMS has sent out mixed signals
• Disadvantages: All sorts of fees for initial memberships,
annual dues and individual registrations Plus personnel costs For math journals there are no immediate benefits Reviews and Zentralblatt provide already to a high extent interlinking
of the whole math literature which includes the past
• HJM maintains a wait and see attitude Currently, there are
no tangible benefits
•Off the Record: Is DOI/CrossRef already the white elephant
of the internet?
Trang 17Conclusion
• Recent developments, like DOI and PPV have been embraced
by all major commercial publishers Most of the independents have ignored DOI and PPV, for academic as well as economic reasons
• I feel that Archiving should be done by the publisher I don’t see any compelling reason why an Archive should reside
outside the publishers domain
• Having all issues under one roof increases the value of the journal’s WEB site Smaller publishers can do this more easily than larger ones.