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Taylor & Francis launches new platform as successor to informaworld

Taylor & Francis Online (the successor to the award winning Informaworld) launched successfully over last weekend and the site is now fully operational. Well done to everyone who put so much work into this. This multi-million pound investment into the delivery platform for our online content has consumed the business for the last two years. The effort and commitment from so many people has been outstanding and the amazing success of a very complicated system is down to the core of those in the TFO team.

The process of redirecting from informaworld to Taylor & Francis Online ran smoothly and we have experienced no downtime during the transition. The platform is running quickly and is currently performing within times agreed with our provider on how long it should take to download the homepage, perform a search, and access article content.

Delivering 1600 journals and 30,000 e-books online is fundamental to the success of T&F. We are confident that we now have a robust and fast system that will meet and exceed the needs of our customers.

Lots of its offices have been enjoying cakes to celebrate the launch. The picture shows some of the cupcakes they had in Milton Park.

 

Nature most highly cited journal in the Journal Citation Report (JCR)

This week Thomson Reuters published the 2010 Journal Citation Report (JCR). Nature Publishing Group (NPG) achieved outstanding results, with Nature’s Impact Factor for 2010 reaching a new high of 36.101. Nature articles received over 500,000 citations in 2010, making it the most highly cited journal in the JCR.

Nature Chemistry received a first impact factor of 17.927, debuting as the number 1 primary research journal in the multidisciplinary chemistry category. Sixteen titles published by NPG lead their JCR categories, and 17 Nature titles are in the top 50 journals by Impact Factor in the JCR.

“We recognise the limitations and overuse of impact factors, but citations remain a clear indicator of usage, relevance and scientific value,” said Steven Inchcoombe, Managing Director, Nature Publishing Group. “For us the real validation of our journals is more complex. Researchers choosing to submit their best work to us; over 5000 peer reviewers agreeing to review for Nature in 2010; more than 5000 institutions subscribing to our journals; over 7 million unique users a month for nature.com. These are all important indicators that we are achieving our goal to filter and select for scientific significance.”

“We thank our referees for the important part that they play in ensuring that Nature and its sister journals continue to publish a high standard of work,” said Dr Philip Campbell, Editor-in-Chief,Nature and the Nature journals. “We also thank our authors for entrusting their outstanding research to us. The selection criteria of Nature are aimed at scientific significance. That in turn may lead to citation impact and media coverage, but Nature editors aren’t driven by those considerations.”

Nature and its sister journals employ in-house professional editors, all of whom are scientists, with Ph.D.s and in most cases postdoc, faculty or industrial experience. “We believe fast, efficient publishing operations are well served by our full time editorial staff,” said Dr Campbell. “We use our best judgement to avoid unnecessary work for authors. Many authors happily confirm that their article was much improved by rigorous peer review – sometimes necessitating additional work by the researchers – and by the editorial process.”

NPG continues to explore article level metrics and other indicators of quality, impact, reach and value. Above all else, NPG’s goal is serve global science and scientists, and to provide maximum visibility and discoverability for authors and their research.

 

Libraries Offer Tools and Support for Open-Access Publishing

As part of its efforts to promote broader access to academic research, Duke University Libraries has announced a new service to help members of the Duke community create and publish peer-reviewed, open-access scholarly journals.

Open-access journals make published research available for free to anyone who has access to the Internet. With the advent of online publishing, open access has emerged as an alternative to the traditional fee- and subscription-based model of scholarly publishing, which limits access to those who can pay for content and the high overhead costs of printing.

The Libraries are piloting the service with two journals. Greek, Roman, and Byzantine Studies, founded in 1958, is edited by Kent J. Rigsby, professor emeritus of Classical Studies, and Joshua D. Sosin, associate professor of Classical Studies. GRBS’s first issue using the new open-access service has just been published and is now available online.

The second journal, andererseits: Yearbook of Transatlantic German Studies, is a new publication published jointly by Duke’s Department of Germanic Languages & Literatures and the Germanistik/Literatur und Medienpraxis of the Universität Duisburg-Essen in Essen, Germany. That publication will become open-access with its second issue later this year.

The Libraries’ new service helps prospective editors establish their journal online, providing guidance and advice as editors develop the journal’s structure. Journals are built on a free, open-source platform known as Open Journal Systems, which was developed specifically to manage the overhead of creating and sustaining academic journals. The platform is structured to guide editors as they set up their publications, with customizable templates to control the overall design and internal structure. The software also helps editors manage the publishing process, from receiving submissions to peer review, editing, layout, and publication. OJS allows both editors and contributors to track and manage articles as they move through the pipeline, so that the publication process is prompt, efficient, and transparent.

The Open Journal Systems software was developed by the Public Knowledge Project, a partnership of Canadian and U.S. universities. More than 7,500 scholarly journals use the software as their publishing platform. At Duke, the Office of Information Technology hosts the software, and staff from the Libraries manage it.

Deborah Jakubs, the Rita DiGiallonardo Holloway University Librarian & Vice Provost for Library Affairs, noted, “This new service is the just the latest in series of efforts Duke has made to promote open access as an institutional priority. When scholarly research is freely available, it has the potential to reach more people, accelerate new discoveries, and make a bigger impact on the world. It’s one more way we can put knowledge in the service of society.”

In March 2010, Duke’s Academic Council unanimously adopted an open access policy by which scholarly articles written by all Duke faculty members are made freely available to the public for non-commercial use, by default. Then last fall, Duke joined a group of leading research institutions in signing a Compact for Open-Access Publishing Equity (COPE), establishing a special fund to make it easier for researchers to publish their work in open-access journals.

As one of the first faculty members to use the new service, Joshua D. Sosin, Associate Editor of Greek, Roman, and Byzantine Studies, said “The Duke Libraries and the Department of Classical Studies have long collaborated to provide free, web-based access to some of the University’s most ancient materials. We are thrilled to be able to extend that partnership to scholarly research. Socrates famously did not accept fees; this piece of critical infrastructure allows us to do the same!”

For more information about open-access journal publishing at Duke, visit the Duke University Libraries’ website, or contact Winston Atkins, the Libraries’ Preservation Officer.

 

Lindau Nobel Laureate Meeting launches online community

‘Lindau Nobel Community – the interactive home of the Lindau Meetings’ launches today at lindau.nature.com. The site goes live ahead of the 61st annual Lindau Nobel Laureate Meeting, taking place from 26 June – 1 July 2011 on the shores of Lake Constance. This year, blogs in Spanish and Chinese will add to the English and German content on the site.

As in previous years, an international team of bloggers will report from the meeting. The blog roll is hosted by SciLogs (scilogs.de), the leading European science blogging service. SciLogs is part ofSpektrum der Wissenschaft, the Nature Publishing Group (NPG) company that publishes the German edition of Scientific American. Yvonne Buchholz, publisher and editor of Spanish publicationMinMente y Cerebro (Mind and Brain), will be blogging in Spanish. Yvonne’s regular blog ‘Pistas mentales’ is hosted on scilogs. Felix Cheung, Editor of Nature China, will be blogging in Chinese. Felix and Yvonne join a community of bloggers who will be reporting from the meeting in English and German.

The Foundation Lindau Nobelprizewinners Meetings and NPG are once again collaborating to make the Lindau meeting as interactive as possible. Blogs, Facebook, Twitter, Flickr, YouTube and interactive websites from NPG are mobilized to enable young researchers throughout the world to participate in the meeting. Videos of conversations between Nobel Laureates and young researchers and a special Nature Outlook will be freely available to all, thanks to support from sponsors including Mars, Incorporated. Mars, Incorporated is also supporting the translation of the videos into Chinese.

This year’s meeting is dedicated to Physiology and Medicine and brings together 25 Nobel Laureates and 570 young researchers from 80 countries. Panel discussions, lectures, seminars and social events facilitate interaction between Nobel Laureates and the scientific and academic elite of the future.

“The Lindau Nobel Laureate Meetings are not only a window to the world, but for one week in summer mirror the global map of science. Therefore, we are delighted that the social media coverage will include Spanish and Chinese content for the first time, ” comments Professor Wolfgang Schuerer, Chairman of the Foundation Lindau Nobel prize winners Meetings at Lake Constance and Vice-President of the Council for Lindau Nobel Laureate Meetings.

NPG and the Foundation Lindau Nobelprizewinners Meetings at Lake Constance will collaborate for the fourth year to produce films featuring one-on-one or small group discussions between individual Nobel Laureates and young scientists. Produced by Nature Video, the videos will be made freely available on nature.com, one of the world’s most popular scientific websites, and on YouTube.

“The Lindau Meetings offer a unique opportunity for open dialogue between the world’s brightest scientific minds,” said Harold Schmitz, Chief Science Officer of Mars, Incorporated. “Cross-sector collaboration has long been a key tenet of our approach to science and we see such interaction as essential in driving innovation for the benefit of the global community. Mars is therefore very pleased to once again support Lindau and NPG in their efforts to fulfil the Lindau mission of education, inspiration and connection – not only for those attending the meeting, but also for scientists around the world.

STM association sets out five guiding principles for document delivery

The International Association of Scientific, Technical & Medical Publishers (STM) today released a statement on document delivery. In it, STM sets out five guiding principles it believes should be applied in any consideration of document delivery use and services. STM publishers welcome constructive discussion on these principles, and seek participation in wider debates on document delivery.

With the move to online access, STM journal literature is more widely available and accessible that in the print journal era. Publishers offer a wide variety of access mechanisms, including institutional access, pay-per-view and article rental. Digital document delivery should be considered a top-up tool for occasional information provision, according to the STM statement. More structured and systematic information structure serves regular use and users.

STM maintain that document delivery should be the exception. Permitting document delivery through carefully crafted library exceptions is justified in very limited circumstances. Where document delivery is undertaken by libraries, STM calls for five guiding principles to be observed:

1. The Berne Convention 3-step test must govern any discussion of copyright exceptions – including for library supply

2. Cross-border document deliveries by libraries and other document suppliers should be governed by arrangements negotiated directly with publishers or their authorised representatives

3. Digital document delivery direct to end-users is best governed and coordinated by rights-holders

4. Document deliveries to individuals for “private, non-commercial use” should be subject to appropriate due diligence

5. On-site print document delivery to non-commercial patrons is a good compromise

STM believes that by following these five principles “policy makers can ensure that document delivery will continue in its role as a flexible and useful access-enabling tool in a system of scholarly communication that has made more high-quality information available to more people in more ways than at any time in human history.”

The statement is available on the STM website at:

STM Statement on Document Delivery

Sage announces winner of ALPSP International Conference travel grant

SAGE today announced that Patrick Carr has won the SAGE travel grant for a librarian at the Association of Learned and Professional Society Publishers (ALPSP) International conference 2011.

Patrick, Head of Electronic & Continuing Resource Acquisitions at Joyner Library, East Carolina University won the place by answering the question “Why should librarians be talking to publishers in 2011? with the following:

“To foster transformative and sustainable enhancements in patron services through dialogue, collaboration, and innovation”

Two runners up were also selected by the judging panel:

Sharon Duan, E-Content Advisor, Information Management and Innovation Library and Learning Resources Centre entered with:

“To influence and inform the publishing world, so that publishers and libraries are fully prepared to meet current and future scholarly needs”

Judith A. Koveleskie, Periodicals Librarian at Seton Hill University, Reeves Memorial Library entered with:

“They are partners in providing resources which are interesting, attractive, and credible to a world that is drowning in misinformation”

“We received 50 entries from librarians around the world, many of which touched on issues about collaboration, which was the key thing we hope this grant will facilitate,” said Clive Parry, Global Marketing Director, SAGE. “We were delighted to see so much enthusiasm for greater connections between librarians and publishers in developing user-centric content delivery solutions for the future, and look forward to hearing Patrick’s views from the conference.”

The ALPSP conference takes place this year from 14-16th September at Heythrop Park near Oxford. The SAGE travel grant will provide Patrick Carr with a free place at the conference, including entry to the ALPSP awards dinner, plus costs towards his travel and accommodation.

On accepting his grant, Mr Carr said: “I am honoured by my receipt of the SAGE travel grant and am greatly looking forward to attendance at the ALPSP International Conference. Now is a time in which effective communication and partnership between the library and publishing communities is truly essential. I am excited to have the opportunity to participate in that discussion this September at the ALPSP International Conference.”

For more information about the conference please visit: www.alpspconference.org

More than 1 million eBooks now available via SwetsWise

Swets is pleased to announce that SwetsWise, its leading information resource management and procurement platform, has recently expanded its eBook catalog to more than one million publications. Swets has signed agreements with a number of the world’s leading eBooks publishers and aggregators, bringing together an impressive wealth of compelling content and creating an extensive collection of eBooks unparalleled within the information industry.

SwetsWise provides an intuitive interface for librarians and information managers to select and acquire eBook content. Customers are able to purchase both individual titles and eBook collections, under the same pricing and purchase models offered by publishers and aggregators directly.

“Expanding SwetsWise to support the acquisition and management of eBook content has enabled us to offer customers a single, user-friendly interface to acquire and manage both eBooks and journals, which is unique to the information industry,” said Maxim van Gisbergen, Business Development Manager at Swets. “The rapid rate that publishers and other suppliers are signing up to the platform clearly illustrates the unique proposition we offer and showcases the potential, strength and overall value of our SwetsWise platform.”

The following eBooks publishers and aggregators have agreed to make their content available in SwetsWise:

  • 123Library
  • ABC-CLIO
  • ACLS – American Council of Learned Societies Humanities EBook (HEB)
  • Bentham Science Publishers
  • Berghahn Books
  • Bibliotechnia
  • Books 24×7 Skillsoft
  • Brill
  • CABI
  • Canadian Electronic Library
  • ciando eBooks
  • CRCnetBASE
  • de Gruyter
  • Digitalia
  • Duncker & Humblot
  • ebrary
  • e-libro
  • Elsevier
  • Emerald
  • Global Media
  • IGI Global
  • Infobase
  • IOS Press
  • Jaypee
  • Karger
  • Liturgical Press
  • Ingram Content Group, MyiLibrary®
  • Oxford University Press
  • Rittenhouse Book Distributors, Inc./The R2 Digital Library
  • Safari Books Online
  • Sesame Street eBookstore
  • Springer
  • Taylor & Francis
  • Woodhead Publishing
  • World Bank Publications
  • World eBook Library Consortia (WEL)
  • WorldScientific

Further information on the eBooks available through SwetsWise can be found at:www.swets.com/swetswise/ebooks

 

Ingram Content Group and Brill announce e-content management agreement

Ingram Content Group Inc. today announced an e-content management agreement with Brill, a respected scholarly and academic publisher. Brill has selected Ingram’s CoreSource platform to distribute and archive scholarly books to bookselling partners worldwide.

“The demand for electronic products in academia continues to grow in the library and consumer markets, and it is essential to the success of our authors, our company and scholars worldwide to offer our e-books in the desired formats,” said Sam Bruinsma, Director of Business Development and E-Publishing of Brill. “Through our digital distribution collaboration with Ingram, we gain the scalable infrastructure needed to successfully deliver our content timely to any destination.”

Sam Bruinsma continued, “Brill’s role is to focus on the publishing of distinctive and relevant academic content and not to devote scarce resources to the redistribution of e-content to a wide variety of emerging e-book channels around the globe. Through our Ingram Coresource arrangement we are able to fulfill our pledge to authors and customers to simultaneously publish in print and electronically.”

Brill’s publishing program focuses on humanities, international law and select science fields. Annually, the company supplies 500 new books to libraries and academics around the world. Brill will offer titles from its imprints Brill, Global Oriental, Martinus Nijhoff Publishers and VSP for distribution through Ingram’s CoreSource platform.

“Ingram continues to develop and deliver market-leading content distribution solutions,” said Marcus Woodburn, Vice President of Digital Products, Ingram Content Group. “We are pleased that Brill has selected CoreSource to meet the needs of their customers and we look forward to helping them grow.”

Ingram’s CoreSource is an easy-to-use, online solution for the storage, management, and distribution of digital content. CoreSource delivers a secure, searchable content repository and a high-capacity data distribution network, allowing publishers to move digital content easily and swiftly from their organization to any channel partner globally.

 

Cengage Learning EMEA acquires Nelson Thornes’ Nursing & Allied Health list

Cengage Learning EMEA announced today that it has completed the acquisition of Nelson Thornes’ Nursing & Allied Health list.

Cengage Learning, a leading provider of education solutions for the academic, professional, and library markets, is already known as an innovative force in health care education in the US. It publishes under the imprints of Delmar, Wadsworth and Gale well known titles such as Gloria Pickar’s Dosage Calculations, The Delmar Nursing Skills DVD series and Gale’s Nursing Resource Center.

The Nursing & Allied Health list acquired from Nelson Thornes strengthens the healthcare portfolio by increasing the range of titles suited to local markets. Flagship titles transferred today include Quinn’s Principles and Practice of Nurse Education,Physiotherapy in Respiratory Care and the Foundations in Nursing and Health Careseries.

“This acquisition supports our strategy to accelerate growth in the healthcare education market,” said Jill Jones, President and CEO for Cengage Learning EMEA. “Our customers can look forward to a blended publishing programme that addresses the specific needs of our local markets.”

‘’Following a strategic review, Nelson Thornes is delighted that Cengage Learning EMEA has acquired the list and is confident that it will prosper with them,’’ said Paul Howarth, MD of Nelson Thornes.

Terms of the acquisition were not disclosed.

 

AIP and NIST Make Semiconductor Research Freely Available Online

AIP Publishing, a division of the American Institute of Physics (AIP) (www.aip.org), announces that through an agreement with the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), proceedings papers from the entire International Conference on Frontiers of Characterization and Metrology for Nanoelectronics (formerly Characterization and Metrology for ULSI Technology) series are now freely available from both organizations’ websites.

“Publishing papers from these NIST conferences is the most effective way to disseminate the breakthroughs in semiconductor research presented at these meetings. To maximize the reach of these papers, we are now offering them to the public free of charge,” said John Haynes, AIP vice president, publishing. “We hope that our decision will help to bring this vital information to the desktops of researchers worldwide and speed the rate of innovation in semiconductor technology.”

David Seiler, chief of NIST’s Semiconductor Electronics Division, characterizes this agreement to make the proceedings freely available as a major breakthrough, as it will help professionals in the fast-paced semiconductor industry get up to speed on unfamiliar measurement and characterization issues. In addition, they can learn about new techniques and equipment being introduced to characterize semiconductors.

“These collected proceedings represent research and overviews of critical topics collected from worldwide experts in the field of semiconductor characterization and metrology,” says Seiler. “As there is frequent turnover in the industry, there is constant need for training and retraining of employees. Improved access to this background will ease that process dramatically.”

Proceedings volumes are available in PDF format, up to and including the 2009 conference, on AIP’s website at http://proceedings.aip.org/semiconductor_metrology, and on NIST’s website athttp://www.nist.gov/pml/semiconductor/conference/archives.cfm.

Thomson Reuters To Sell Its Healthcare Business

Thomson Reuters, the world’s leading source of intelligent information for businesses and professionals, today announced its intention to divest its Healthcare business, which has been part of the company’s Healthcare & Science segment. The Healthcare business provides data, analytics and performance benchmarking solutions and services to companies, government agencies and healthcare professionals.

With leading assets and solutions such as MarketScan, Advantage Suite, Micromedex, CareDiscovery and ActionOI, coupled with expert services and analysis, the Healthcare business provides its customers with solutions to identify savings, improve outcomes, fight fraud and abuse and more efficiently manage their healthcare operations.

“Our Healthcare business is recognized for its innovative solutions, like incorporating cloud based phone system australia, and its expertise which are critically important to its customers,” said Thomas H. Glocer, chief executive officer of Thomson Reuters. “We are grateful for the hard work and dedication of our talented employees who have built the Healthcare business into a successful and profitable unit.”

“Thomson Reuters has strong positions in our chosen markets and we believe we will achieve better all-in returns for our shareholders by divesting the Healthcare business and re-deploying the proceeds in our core franchises. We have leading positions in global markets, including legal, tax and accounting, science and intellectual property, financial services and media, working with great services like Charlotte accountant which specialize in this. While a growing and profitable unit, our Healthcare business lacks the integration with and global scale of our other units, and our disciplined approach to capital allocation convinced us that the expected proceeds from a sale into a consolidating market could be better applied elsewhere in our portfolio,” said Mr. Glocer.

The Healthcare business in 2010 had revenues of approximately $450 million and an operating margin comparable to the company’s consolidated margin of 19.3%. Following adjustment for this divestiture by removing Healthcare’s results from ongoing businesses, no material impact is expected to the company’s previously announced 2011 outlook. The company expects the divestiture to close before the end of the year.

This divestiture will result in a realignment of the company’s existing Intellectual Property and Science businesses into a single operating unit of the Professional division. Both are global and support scientific research, discovery and innovation. Details related to the realignment can be found in the “Investor Relations” section of the Thomson Reuters website. Thomson Reuters will provide restated historical financial information on its website, which reflects this realignment and which excludes results from the Healthcare business, early in July and its second quarter reported results will reflect these changes.

Morgan Stanley and Allen & Company are acting as financial advisors to Thomson Reuters for the proposed divestiture.

AMA Names Dr. James Madara New EVP/CEO

The American Medical Association (AMA) today named James L. Madara, M.D., as its new Executive Vice President and Chief Executive Officer. Dr. Madara will assume leadership of the nation’s oldest and largest physician group on July 1.

Dr. Madara, 60, is an accomplished academic medical center physician, medical scientist and administrator who served as Timmie Professor and Chair of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine at the Emory University School of Medicine before assuming the Thompson Distinguished Service Professorship and deanship at the University of Chicago Pritzker School of Medicine,  where he was the longest serving Pritzker dean in the last 35 years. Subsequently, he added the responsibility of CEO of the University of Chicago Medical Center, bringing together the university’s biomedical research, teaching and clinical activities. As CEO, he engineered significant new affiliations with community hospitals, teaching hospital systems, community Federally Qualified Health Centers on Chicago’s South Side, as well as with national research organizations including the Janelia Campus of the Howard Hughes Medical Institute in Bethesda and the Ludwig Foundation of New York.

“The AMA is a venerable institution, and I am honored to lead it during this challenging and exciting time,” Dr. Madara said. “The AMA has been at the forefront working to improve public health, physician practice, patient care and our American health care system for the past 164 years. Today more than ever, America’s patients and physicians need a strong and vibrant AMA to tackle the many challenges facing them. I look forward to leveraging my skills and experience to help the AMA succeed and fulfill its core mission to promote the art and science of medicine and the betterment of public health.”

While at the University of Chicago from 2002-2009, Dr. Madara oversaw a significant renewal of the institution’s biomedical campus, including the Comer Children’s Hospital, the Gordon Center for Integrative Science, a new adult hospital pavilion, and the Knapp Center for Biomedical Discovery. His deanship also extended to the University’s renowned Biological Sciences Division.

“The American Medical Association is thrilled to have a proven medical leader like Dr. Madara serve as our next EVP/CEO,” said Ardis D. Hoven, M.D., chair, AMA Board of Trustees. “Dr. Madara is a strong strategic thinker and planner who has a track record of bringing people together to accomplish significant, ambitious, health-related goals and projects. Having overseen a $1.6 billion integrated academic medical center, Dr. Madara understands many of the complex clinical, academic and business-related issues confronting medicine and health care today. His insight and perspective will be invaluable in helping the AMA tackle its agenda.”

Dr. Madara is a noted academic pathologist and an authority on epithelial cell biology and on gastrointestinal disease.  He has published more than 200 original papers and chapters, making important contributions to understanding the biology of the cells that line the digestive tract. His work has garnered both national and international awards.

Dr. Madara has served as President of the American Board of Pathology, as Editor-in-Chief of the American Journal of Pathology, has received a prestigious MERIT Award from the NIH,  has been elected to membership in the Association of  American Physicians, and recently received the Davenport Award for lifetime achievement in gastrointestinal disease from the American Physiological Society.

Most recently, Dr. Madara served as senior advisor with Leavitt Partners, a highly innovative health care consulting firm started by former Secretary of Health and Human Services Mike Leavitt.

Dr. Madara earned his medical degree from Hahnemann Medical College in Philadelphia. He completed his internship and residency at New England Deaconess Hospital in Boston. He subsequently completed a fellowship in anatomy and cell biology at Peter Bent Brigham Hospital in Boston (now Brigham and Women’s Hospital). Following his fellowship, Dr. Madara joined the faculty of Harvard Medical School where he rose to a full tenured professor and served as director of the Harvard Digestive Diseases Center.