Home Blog Page 438

APUC Selects EBSCO as Sole Supplier of Periodicals and Related Information Services

BSCO Information Services (EBSCO) announced today that it has been selected as the sole supplier for print and electronic periodicals, e-journal packages, and associated subscription management and access services for the Advanced Procurement for Universities and Colleges (APUC) Limited. As such, EBSCO will serve 19 universities and more than 45 colleges in Scotland.

The agreement between APUC and EBSCO was initiated through a rigorous and competitive tendering process conducted in accordance with European Union (EU) Procurement Regulations. Following this evaluation, EBSCO was selected for its proven experience in handling big, multisite contracts; its demonstrated expertise in electronic resources management, which attests to its capacity to provide dependable assistance in terms of migration from print to electronic; and its compelling approach to help generate cost savings and eliminate waste.

Ian Middleton, President and European General Manager at EBSCO Information Services, stated, “We are honoured about this opportunity to further support the academic information community in their quest to deliver quality service and value for money solutions to their users and researchers. Being chosen as supplier to APUC members is a great achievement for EBSCO. This emphasises our competitiveness, our financial stability, our expertise and our capacity to support libraries with all of their information needs.”
The two-year renewable1 contract confirms EBSCO’s capability to serve APUC member institutions in accordance with the consortium’s high level of quality requirements. With EBSCO as their approved supplier, APUC members will benefit from:

Close support from EBSCO’s London office, which is staffed by experienced, service-orientated information professionals
Value-for-money pricing on print and electronic periodicals subscriptions and e-journal packages
Traditional value-added subscription services combined with access to innovative technology to support periodicals management, access rights issues, and e-content activation — this includes EBSCONET® Subscription Management, EBSCO’s comprehensive solution to help APUC members save staff time; and effective tools, such as EBSCONET®E-Package Renewals and EBSCONET®Usage Consolidation, to support decision making regarding collection development and to help analyse value for money
EDI to reduce administrative time and effort related to invoices and claims
Interoperability with their Library Management System (LMS) to guarantee smooth deployment

Elsevier launches new version of ClinicalKey designed for individual clinicians

Elsevier, a world-leading provider of scientific, technical and medical information products and services, today announced the availability of a new version of ClinicalKey designed for individual clinicians. ClinicalKey, Elsevier’s clinical insight engine, now provides quick access to highly targeted content for physicians in 41 specialties, drawing on evidence-based information from more than 900 textbooks and 500 medical journals.

Launched in April for institutions, ClinicalKey provides the most current clinically relevant evidence-based answers, as well as expert commentary, MEDLINE abstracts and select third-party journals.

“Physicians want the most accurate answers to their clinical questions in a very short amount of time,” said Donne M. Thomas-Patterson, M.D., family practice, Einstein Healthcare Network and member of ClinicalKey’s editorial advisory board. “By providing a solution that gives them back some of that valuable time and does not disrupt their workflow, we’re helping physicians be more effective and efficient in delivering patient care.”

The new, individual version of ClinicalKey offers specialized content from some of Elsevier’s most popular journals, including The Lancet, Gastroenterology, Journal of the American College of Cardiology, Mayo Clinic Proceedings; as well as Elsevier-published books, including Braunwald’s Heart Disease, Campbell’s Operative Orthopaedics, and Mandell, Douglas and Bennett’s Principles and Practice of Infectious Disease, among others.

ClinicalKey provides faster, smarter access to the relevant online clinical answers physicians seek. After conducting market research with more than 2,000 physicians, Elsevier designed ClinicalKey to meet the three key search requirements those physicians demanded:

Comprehensive – ClinicalKey includes answers based on the largest collection of clinical resources in one place online, representing every medical and surgical specialty and information at all levels, from expert opinion to primary data. Resources include textbooks, journals, monographs, videos and images.
Trusted – ClinicalKey provides access to the latest peer-reviewed and evidence-based information available from Elsevier, the world’s leading provider of science and health information.
Fast – With its unique technology, ClinicalKey’s speed-to-answer is unmatched, providing more relevant answers to clinical questions than those provided by any other conventional clinical search engine.
Information on ClinicalKey is also easily shared, helping colleagues and care teams make the best decisions for patients. For example, the built-in presentation maker allows physicians to dynamically communicate the latest medical and surgical information to colleagues and care teams. Users can easily create a PowerPoint embedded with the text or images they want to share.

Smart Content Powers Smarter Searches

ClinicalKey is powered by Elsevier’s Smart Content, tagged with EMMeT (Elsevier Merged Medical Taxonomy), which enables ClinicalKey to understand clinical terms and thus discover medical content that is the most relevant, plus find related content that would be missed by other search engines. Elsevier’s Smart Content has been designed to understand the vast number of relationships between clinical concepts. By organizing these relationships in a hierarchical manner, it guarantees that ClinicalKey provides specific, targeted results to physicians’ questions.

Smart Content allows clinicians to filter search results by clinically meaningful subcategories (content type, specialty, and by relevant clinical categories like treatment and diagnosis). Specialty-specific tools enable physicians to quickly go from topic overview to in-depth specialty information to meet clinical challenges.

“By leveraging Smart Content and structural elements designed specifically to use ClinicalKey within the physician workflow, we can offer a product that is unmatched in the industry and a game-changer for physicians who need the best answers quickly,” said Jim Donohue, Elsevier’s Managing Director, Global Clinical Reference. “Access to this amount of specialty information will help physicians quickly get the answers they seek to ultimately deliver better patient outcomes.”

Physicians can request a free 30-day trial by going to https://www.clinicalkey.com/.

IEEE-IEC guidelines for condition monitoring of equipment at nuclear power plants

The IEC (International Electrotechnical Commission) and the IEEE today announced the joint publication of new international guidelines for condition monitoring of electrical equipment installed in nuclear power plants. The organizations have also published three affiliated standards detailing specific techniques that can be used to perform the condition monitoring evaluations.

The series of international standards and guidelines, IEC/IEEE 62582, Nuclear power plants -Instrumentation and control important to safety—Electrical equipment condition monitoring methods, is intended for use by nuclear power plant operators, system evaluators, test laboratories, and licensees of nuclear power plants.

The standards are particularly important because they focus on condition monitoring of electrical equipment that performs vital nuclear power plant safety functions. A very important application is condition monitoring of electrical cables, which not only provide power needed to operate electrical equipment in nuclear power plants but also transmit signals to and from the various instrumentation and control equipment that performs safety and accident mitigation functions.

Historically, nuclear power plant operators have monitored electrical cables through periodic in-service testing of the equipment to which it is attached; however, the testing has not focused on the condition monitoring of cables, nor has it been able to detect all of the various aging and other degradation mechanisms that a particular cable might be susceptible to in the operating environments. While these tests can demonstrate how equipment functions under the test conditions, they do not verify the equipment’s continued successful performance, when fully loaded for extended periods, as they would under normal service operating conditions or design-basis conditions. Nor does in-service testing provide specific information on the status of degradation of equipment due to aging or the physical integrity and dielectric strength of the insulation and jacket materials of cables.

“While many countries and individual power utilities are pursuing smart grid strategies that integrate renewable energy supplies, nuclear plants will continue to provide an important source of power for society for many more years and the industry needs to continue to focus on the safety of these plants,” said Gary Johnson, Chairman of IEC SC45A and Senior Safety Officer at the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA).

“IEC/IEEE 62582 establishes, for the first time, a worldwide common standard of a series of condition monitoring techniques that can be selected and applied, as appropriate, to establish the actual condition of new or installed equipment. This test helps establish a baseline, which in turn allows nuclear plants to determine, with a high degree of confidence, how long equipment will be able to perform as expected, even in the event of a severe accident,” said Satish Aggarwal, Chair of the IEEE Nuclear Power Engineering Committee.

“These monitoring techniques are important because they can be used at both new and existing nuclear power plants around the world. The decision to use a particular technique or combination of techniques will depend on the type of equipment involved, the type of condition information needed and a variety of site- and plant-specific factors,” explained Kjell Spang, Project Leader of the joint IEC/IEEE Development Team, who represents the Swedish Radiation Safety Authority in IEEE SC-2 and IEC SC45A. “IEC/IEEE 62582 provides very pragmatic approaches that can be used to address important safety needs.”

The IEC and the IEEE Standards Association (IEEE-SA) collaborated extensively to develop these standards to promote international uniformity in the practice of electrical equipment condition monitoring. The IEC/IEEE 62582 series of standards was published under a joint agreement between IEC and IEEE, which was put in place in 2008 to foster the harmonization of technology standards used in different regions and regulatory environments.

The use of standardized condition monitoring approaches and techniques has many benefits for nuclear power plant operators. Standardized methods yield compatibilities for data collected from various sites and regions, facilitate the exchange of information and experiences, make it possible to build databases characterizing the condition of monitored equipment over time, and encourage the broad acceptance of results.

The initial standards also represent the culmination of significant research conducted by the nuclear industry.

This new series of international standards includes the following:

IEC/IEEE 62582-1, Part 1: General
This standard establishes the need for condition monitoring and summarizes the various techniques plant operators can use as applicable and appropriate to their plants.

IEC/IEEE 62582-2, Part 2: Indenter modulus
This standard contains detailed descriptions of condition monitoring based on indenter modulus measurement techniques, which are primarily used to test cable jackets, insulation and o-rings that are installed in low-voltage environments.

IEC/IEEE 62582-4, Part 4: Oxidation induction techniques
This standard specifies methods for using oxidation induction techniques to take samples from organic and polymeric materials in electrical equipment, e.g. cable jackets or insulation.

Two additional methods will be added to IEC/IEEE 62582 as they are developed and completed by IEC and the IEEE-SA. The forthcoming standards, and the techniques they will address, include the following:

IEC/IEEE 62582-3, Part 3: Elongation at break
IEC/IEEE 62582-5, Part 5: Optical time domain reflectometry

Thomson Reuters Predicts 2012 Nobel Laureates

With the eyes of the world firmly fixed on Stockholm and the upcoming announcement of the 2012 Nobel Prize recipients, the IP & Science business of Thomson Reuters, the world leader in intelligent information for businesses and professionals, announced its 2012 “Nobel-class” Citation Laureates today.

Annually, Thomson Reuters citation analysts mine proprietary data from the company’s research platform, Web of Knowledge™, to identify the most influential researchers in the categories of chemistry, physics, physiology or medicine, and economics. Based on a thorough review of citations to their research, the company names these high-impact researchers as Thomson Reuters Citation Laureates and predicts them to be Nobel Prize winners, either this year or in the future.

“Our Citation Laureate selection process operates much like the Nobel Foundation’s selection process,” said David Pendlebury, Thomson Reuters citation analyst. “We recognize fundamental discoveries and identify the most important contributors to these discoveries. Our Citation Laureates have made such important contributions to science that we believe them to be peers of the Nobel Prize winners in every way; they simply have yet to win.”

The Citation Laureates rank among the top one-tenth of one percent (0.1%) of researchers in their fields in terms of citation impact, based on citations of their published papers over the last three decades. The 2012 Laureates include 21 influential researchers whose high-profile discoveries cover pioneering work such as quantum teleportation (Charles H. Bennett of IBM Corporation, Gilles Brassard of the University of Montreal and William K. Wootters of Williams College); the experimental demonstration of “slow light” (Stephen E. Harris of Stanford University and Lene V. Hau of Harvard University); and fundamental discoveries in genetic regulation (C. David Allis of Rockefeller University and Michael Grunstein of University of California, Los Angeles).

Also among the high-profile achievements of this year’s picks is the pioneering work in financial market volatility and the dynamics of asset prices by Robert Shiller of Yale University. Shiller is known as the author of the best-selling book Irrational Exuberance, which warned of the damaging stock and housing market bubbles.

Thirteen of the 2012 Citation Laureates hail from American institutions, two are from Canada, three from Japan and three from the United Kingdom. Now in its eleventh consecutive year of predictions, Thomson Reuters has successfully predicted 26 Nobel Prize recipients to date.

For detailed information about the Citation Laureates and their fields of research, and to learn about previously named Citation Laureates who are still contending for a Nobel Prize, visit the Thomson Reuters Citation Laureates website at http://sciencewatch.thomsonreuters.com/nobel.

EBSCO Information Services offers time-saving options via EBSCO Usage Loading Service

With EBSCONET® Usage Consolidation, librarians can collect, consolidate, and report on the usage of their online resources, making vital collection management information readily available in the librarian’s workflow — within EBSCONET® Subscription Management. But EBSCO knows gathering usage data can be time-consuming, and that is why the EBSCO Usage Loading Service can load usage on behalf of Usage Consolidation customers.

The Usage Loading Service is a highly skilled team that can obtain usage reports, load them to the library’s Usage Consolidation account, and match exceptions — allowing librarians to spend more time developing powerful collections that can help users achieve their research objectives.

Usage Consolidation customers who choose to take advantage of the Usage Loading Service can select from two time-saving options: Basic and Complete.

With the Basic Usage Loading Service — in addition to the automatic matching of titles available through Usage Consolidation — each library’s account is assigned to a knowledgeable representative who will:
Retrieve COUNTER reports from content providers
Manipulate reports, cleaning them up to ensure that they load
Load usage reports into the customer’s Usage Consolidation account
The Complete option goes even further. For libraries that choose this service, the Usage Loading Service team will:
Set up platform details within the library’s Usage Consolidation account — including setting up SUSHI, where applicable
Load historical details (up to two years, where available)
Manually match titles that were unmatched during the automated process
Coordinate to ensure that titles are accounted for
Act as the library’s advocate, communicating with content providers to ensure that usage data is correct and problems are resolved in a timely manner
Plus, with the Complete Usage Loading Service, thanks to the high level of integration among EBSCO’s products, librarians are assured that high-quality usage data will automatically be available directly in EBSCONET — the tool used by librarians worldwide for making collection development decisions.

For more information about the time-saving options available through the EBSCO Usage Loading Service, visit www.ebsco.com/uls.

Brill Acquires Language and Linguistics List from Emerald Group Publishing

Brill, the international scholarly publisher, has finalized an agreement with Emerald Group Publishing to acquire the Language and Linguistics titles from their extensive books portfolio. The acquisition comprises six high-quality book series including the prestigious series Current Research in the Semantics/Pragmatics Interface, Studies in Pragmatics and Syntax and Semantics, in addition to a backlist of some 150 titles. The list is expected to add 200,000 Euro in revenue per annum.

The deal also includes established individual textbooks and reference works, especially in the field of Speech and Hearing. Among the most recognized are Fundamentals of HearingAn Introduction to the Physiology of HearingPsychology of Hearing, and The New Handbook of Second Language Acquisition.

The acquisition fits well with Brill´s expanding publishing program in Language & Linguistics. By adding the prestigious book series, the agreement strengthens Brill’s position in theoretical linguistics, particularly in pragmatics. Brill already publishes the International Review of Pragmatics.

Vicky Williams, Director of Business Development for Emerald, notes: “We are delighted that Brill has acquired this vibrant list from Emerald. Given their expertise in this subject field, we are confident that the list will go from strength to strength.”

Brill assumes publishing responsibilities for the Language and Linguistics titles with immediate effect.

OCLC Research scientist Dr. Lynn Silipigni Connaway elected to ASIS&T Board of Directors

Senior Research Scientist Lynn Silipigni Connaway, Ph.D. has been elected to a three-year term on the Board of Directors of the American Society for Information Science and Technology.

“It is an honor to be elected to the ASIS&T Board of Directors,” Dr. Connaway said. “I look forward to working with the ASIS&T board and the membership to provide value to information researchers and professionals by more fully developing an association that engages participation in ASIS&T conferences and ASIS&T-sponsored professional and research activities.”

The ASIS&T Board of Directors constitutes the policy-making body for the organization, and generally oversees the affairs of the Society. Two of the six Directors-at-large are elected annually by ballot from among the voting members of the Society for terms of three years. The new board convenes following the organization’s annual business meeting, which will occur this year on October 30 at the close of the 75th Annual Meeting in Baltimore Maryland. The board meets at least twice a year.

“We are really pleased that the ASIS&T community has bestowed this honor on Lynn,” said Lorcan Dempsey, Vice President, OCLC Research, and Chief Strategist. “We hope it enriches the interactions between OCLC Research and the diverse information communities it serves.”

Dr. Connaway leads the OCLC Research User Behavior Studies & Synthesis activities theme. Her responsibilities include research projects that directly involve OCLC libraries and users as well as collaborative investigations of digital information seekers, users in the virtual research environment, and digital “visitors” and “residents”; and IMLS-funded grant projects to study virtual reference and social question and answer services and the behavior patterns of college and university information seekers.

She earned the Ph.D. in Library and Information Studies from the University of Wisconsin, Madison, a Master of Library Science degree from the University of Arizona, and a Bachelor of Science degree in Library Science from Edinboro State University. In addition to her activities with ASIS&T, Dr. Connaway has been actively involved in numerous committees within the American Library Association, including its Association for College and Research Libraries Research Planning and Review Committee, and the ALA Committee on Accreditation. She also is a member of the Association of Library and Information Science Educators (ALISE).

The American Society for Information Science and Technology (ASIS&T) supports a range of efforts to improve access to information and advance the information sciences and related applications of information technology. The Society seeks to stimulate participation and interaction among its members, encourages and supports personal and professional growth, works to increase the influence of information professionals among decision-makers, promotes informed policy on national and international information issues, and supports the advancement of research and development in basic and applied information science.

ProQuest Named to 2012 InformationWeek 500

Ann Arbor-based ProQuest® has been named in the 2012 InformationWeek 500, an annual listing of the nation’s most innovative users of business technology. ProQuest is best known for its creation of information and technology tools that support research. InformationWeek is a premier source of news and analysis of leading-edge products and vendors in the business IT industry. Its InformationWeek 500 list is considered unique among industry rankings for its spotlight on the power of innovation in information technology.

“We are proud to be recognized again as an innovative company that is making a meaningful difference in our customers’ research experiences and helping librarians fulfill their important missions,” said Kurt Sanford, ProQuest CEO.  “We continuously challenge ourselves to find better ways to connect people to information and advance scholarly research around the world.”

This is ProQuest’s fourth consecutive appearance in the InfoWeek 500. The company is being recognized for its ability to navigate in a highly competitive industry, where new market entrants come from non-traditional sources and where customers are overwhelmed, at times, by the exponential growth in information. Particularly noted is the company’s creation of an efficient, unified resource management system for libraries. Being developed through ProQuest business unit Serials Solutions®, this web-scale venture – called Intota – provides the library market with a single, centrally-provisioned solution to manage the entire resource lifecycle, regardless of format. Intota captures and manages each element of the library’s collection, enabling librarians to focus on the important business of evolving their library during a time of rapidly changing user expectations and information growth.

“The InformationWeek 500 has recognized the most innovative users of business technology for 24 years, and this year’s innovations were particularly impressive,” said InformationWeek Editor In Chief Rob Preston. “What the editors looked for are unconventional approaches – new technologies, new models, new ways of grabbing business opportunities and solving complex business problems with IT.”

InformationWeek identifies and honors the nation’s most innovative users of information technology with its annual 500 listing, and also tracks the technology, strategies, investments, and administrative practices of America’s best-known companies. Past overall winners include PACCAR Inc., The Vanguard Group, CME Group, National Semiconductor, Con-Way, and Principal Financial Group. The InformationWeek 500 rankings are unique among corporate rankings as it spotlights the power of innovation in information technology, rather than simply identifying the biggest IT spenders.

To learn more about ProQuest, visit www.proquest.com. Additional details on the InformationWeek 500 can be found online at www.informationweek.com/iw500/.

Wiley Signs Collaboration Agreement with the Asian Federation of Biotechnology

John Wiley & Sons, Inc., has announced the signing of a new collaboration agreement between Biotechnology Journal and the Asian Federation of Biotechnology (AFOB). From 2013 the Federation will contribute two special issues to the journal annually, while representatives from the AFOB will join the editorial board.

Since launching in 2006 Biotechnology Journal has become a truly international title. Edited by Professor Sang Yup Lee, from KAIST University in South Korea, and Professor Alois Jungbauer from BOKU University in Austria, the journal attracts international authors, a global readership and will be awarded an official Impact Factor in 2013.

As a partner journal of the AFOB, the Biotechnology Journal will work with the Federation to disseminate scientific knowledge from Asian research communities to a global audience by dedicating special issues to research and breakthroughs on topics that are relevant to all biotechnologists.

A new “AFOB Highlights” section will also be introduced to the journal as a forum for reporting Federation news, announcements, prizes and awards. The AFOB will also contribute news and views to Wiley’s BiotecVisions e-magazine, which will be circulated to all Federation members on a monthly basis.

Biotechnology Journal will continue to collaborate with the European Federation of Biotechnology section on Biochemical Engineering, placing it in a unique position to serve as a bridge between European and Asian biotechnologists.

“Wiley’s mission is to bring the best of science to an international audience,” said Carol Bacchus, Vice President and Publishing Director, Life Sciences, Wiley. “This AFOB collaboration is a new milestone, which will foster greater international co-operation between Asian and non-Asian scientists to enhance our knowledge in all areas and applications of biotechnology and engineering technologies.”

“Working with Biotechnology Journal has always been a pleasurable and successful experience for the AFOB,” said Professor Ho Nam Chang, AFOB’s incoming president. “We are therefore delighted to have this official agreement, which will further promote research from Asia to an international audience.”

Universities have improved access to mobile services, new report shows

This week a UCISA survey, funded by JISC, shows that UK higher education has made notable progress in helping students and staff access library services, email and course announcements from their mobiles.

The sixth survey of technology enhanced learning for higher education focuses on the current provision of technology for learning within universities and colleges, and the emerging and planned patterns across the higher education community.

Encouragingly, the report reveals that academic staff knowledge is considered far less of a barrier to technology enhanced learning development than in other years, indicating greater progress with staff training and awareness of technology enhanced learning.

However, the top two barriers to technology enhanced learning development remain the same as those identified in the previous survey: lack of time and insufficient financial resources.

Heather Price, programme manager at JISC, said: “We are very pleased to have again funded this important biennial survey run by UCISA which explores the trends in technology enhanced learning. The findings of this survey always provide lots of very useful baseline information for the HE sector and this latest 2012 survey is no exception.”

The survey results are available here for universities and colleges to use to benchmark their own work against national trends.

Sam Brenton, acting director of The Learning Institute, Queen Mary, University of London, commented: “The publication of this report is very timely for us and will be immensely useful. It’s rare to see something of this scale that is done so well, and keys so directly into our in house conversations.”

Richard Walker, e-learning development team manager at the University of York and co-author of the report, said: “For this year’s survey report we included an additional layer of data on university mission groups, offering a different perspective on technology enhanced learning trends across the sector.

“The Survey sheds light on long standing areas of interest such as strategies and motivations for technology enhanced learning provision whilst touching on new concerns such as the economic climate that UK institutions are working in (post-Browne review) and how funding issues may impact on central and local support, on staffing provision, and training and development opportunities.”

KISTI and IOP Publishing sign agreement to widen scientific research in Korea

The Korea Institute of Science & Technology Information (KISTI) and IOP Publishing (IOP) have signed a memorandum of understanding (MOU) on a new strategic collaboration for the provision and dissemination of scientific research.

As a result of this partnership Korean researchers will get access to over 400,000 articles in the IOP Journal Archive, the definitive electronic collection for the scientific, technical and medical research community covering the years 1874-2011, and the Turpion Journal Archive covering the years 1958-2011. All institutions who are members of the KESLI (Korean Electronic Site License Initiative) will benefit from this new arrangement and Korean institutions that are not members of KESLI will now have access to both archives via a pay-per-view scheme.

The archives include important research in physics, mathematics and associated fields influenced by Nobel Prize-winning and Fields Medal-winning authors. Available electronically, the archives contain fully searchable PDF articles with linked HTML references and citations throughout so that researchers can easily find what they are looking for.

The memorandum of understanding was signed by Dr Young-Seo Park, President of KISTI, and Dr Olaf Ernst, Commercial Director of IOP on 13 September at the KERIS & KESLI 2012 Online Expo, Seoul, Korea. It follows the recent licence and pay-per-view agreement, which provides Korean institutions with access to the IOP Journal Archive and the Turpion Journal Archive.

Dr Young-Seo Park said, “This MOU between IOP and KISTI will allow Korea researchers to have the service for access to full text and pay per view. It will promote the partnership between KISTI and IOP; therefore, I believe that the MOU has great value as a starting point of building the advanced circulation model for scholarly information, which is based on the KESLI consortium.”

Dr Olaf Ernst said, “Digital archives open a window into the past and enrich current and future research. Library users in Korea engaged in academia, government research and medical environments will be able to exploit the full richness of this high quality content in scientific, technical and medical subjects for the benefit of learning and research. We are delighted to be working with KISTI to offer a better research experience to researchers in Korea and look forward to building on our successful partnership.”

EBSCO Releases 2013 Serials Price Projection Report

Each year, EBSCO releases its Serials Price Projections. This report, based on surveys of a wide range of publishers and reviews of historical serials pricing data, provides serials price projections that will assist information professionals as they make budgeting decisions for the upcoming renewal season.

2013 Price Projections
EBSCO anticipates the overall effective publisher price increases for academic and academic/medical libraries for 2013 (before currency impact) to be in the range of 5 to 7 percent.

Market Dynamics

Within the academic library and academic publishing markets, this past year in many ways represented the continuation of trends previously addressed by EBSCO in previous Serials Price Projection reports. Expected trends for the 2013 subscription year:

  • Library budgets will continue to be under pressure
  • Large publishers will continue to aggressively push the Big Deal, while smaller publishers will work hard to maintain their share of the remaining funds
  • Packaged content remains preferred over individual subscriptions, but the share of budget demanded by packages plus annual price increases will result in modest acceleration of package cancellations

Emerging Trends

The open access (OA) movement appears to be gaining momentum. While the concept of OA publishing has been in the market for the past decade, the model has gained traction in recent years due to a confluence of factors, including improvements in technology and digital publishing; governmental and funding policies regarding the broadest possible access to scientific research; and the budget crisis within academic libraries for subscription content. Evidence that OA has gained a significant foothold in the market:

  • Approximately 8 percent of all articles published in peer-reviewed journals in 2009 were OA, and the number is growing
  • Almost all of the top science, technology, and medical (STM) publishers now offer an OA platform or an OA option within certain subscription journals

Budget Factors

Most library budgets are not expected to rise by the same annual percentage as publisher price increases. As a result, the following trends are likely:

  • Librarians will continue to prune their content purchases
  • Content-purchasing evaluations will increasingly be based on usage analytics
  • Librarians will increase exploration and testing of alternative purchasing methods, such as patron-driven-acquisition and content lease and/or rental

To read EBSCO’s 2013 Serials Price Projection Report in its entirety, visit www.ebsco.com.

*While based upon careful analysis, EBSCO recommends caution when using these projections, as they rely on historical trends and current estimates.