Lauren B. Collister

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Linguistics, scientific community engagement, infrastructure, open scholarship, publishing
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APCs over $1500 USD are unreasonable.

Source: >300 researchers at 4 US R1 institutions
https://www.iastatedigitalpress.com/jlsc/article/id/18184/

An APC Trap? Privilege and the Perception of Reasonableness in Open Access Publishing

Introduction: This article investigates funding sources reported by authors of open access (OA) articles at four R1 (doctoral-granting institutions in the United States with very high research activity) universities, along with these authors’ perceptions of Article Processing Charges (APCs). The study suggests a cognitive dissonance among many respondents, in which there appears to be a desire and willingness to participate in OA publishing, which is at odds with a sense of unreasonableness and an uneven distribution of the ability of researchers to participate. Literature review: Much of the literature on APCs centers on rising prices, how commercial publishers profit from this model, and the resulting inequities in OA publishing. Some information exists about resources for funding APCs, including grant funding, library programs, and fee waivers. Methods: We surveyed authors who published an OA article in the calendar year 2022. The survey asked whether there was an APC, the funding source for the fee, and the author’s perception of the reasonableness of APC prices and their relative ability to pay compared with their peers. Results: From 321 total respondents, grant funding was the largest source of APC funding, and authors reported fees of over $1,500 in U.S. dollars as unreasonable. Discussion: This study confirms the hypothesis that external grants are the primary support for authors paying APCs, and beyond that, authors use a variety of sources to support their publishing fees. Respondents characterized APCs in general as unreasonable for less well-resourced colleagues. Conclusion: Though authors were generally able to find funding or have fees waived, they perceive a threshold of reasonableness for APCs.

Journal of Librarianship and Scholarly Communication
See SPARC's letter to the U.S. Congress in response to efforts to undermine the 2022 OSTP Nelson Memo on #OpenAccess here: https://sparcopen.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/07/Response-to-House-FY26-Report-language.pdf.
The memo does NOT restrict rights of scientists to publish anywhere. It simply requires a copy of taxpayer-funded research be available to the public.
Just found serviceberries growing in the courtyard at Open Repositories so now I'm THAT conference weirdo.
Went way over my presentation time limit and am very embarrassed but happy no one threw things at me.

Today's rabbit hole: publisher / seller return policies on academic textbooks and scholarly monographs.

Any thoughts from the Mastodon hivemind on this one?

IOI's @lbcollister will attend the ACRL 2025 Conference in Minneapolis next week. On Friday, April 4, Lauren will host a panel titled "Realizing public access to federally funded research: Views from a range of academic libraries."

Lauren would be excited to chat with other attendees about open infrastructure and IOI's work and learn about what other peers are doing.

If interested in chatting at the conference , please connect with Lauren via email at lauren [at] investinopen [dot] org

I, along with my wonderful colleagues at @investinopen, have a new article out today in Katina Magazine about the impact of US budget cuts on open research infrastructure. We argue that it's less a "ripple effect" than a chain reaction that could indelibly alter the research landscape: https://katinamagazine.org/content/article/open-knowledge/2025/US-funding-cuts-imperil-open-infrastructure-globally
US Funding Cuts Imperil Open Infrastructure Globally

The impacts of funding cuts to research in the US extend far beyond their immediate targets. We see a chain reaction that could indelibly alter the education and research landscape, including the future of open and sustainable research.

Katina Magazine | Annual Reviews

🚀 Celebrating 100 open infrastructures on Infra Finder!

These infrastructures play a key role in advancing open research, boosting collaboration, and enhancing the sharing of knowledge globally.

Check out the full list and see how they’re contributing to the future of research:
🔗 https://infrafinder.investinopen.org?utm_medium=social&utm_source=Mastodon&utm_campaign=if_jan_2025

Just, you know, sitting OUTSIDE in PITTSBURGH to take a call on November 20th.

A new piece from me is out today - a short opinion piece on "describing open" in Katina: Librarianship Elevated.

They chose a very appropriate headline image, too.

https://katinamagazine.org/content/article/open-knowledge/2024/describing-open

Describing Open

We all want the certainty of definition. But when it comes to “open,” description might be a more useful exercise.

Katina Magazine | Annual Reviews