| blog | https://orgmonkey.net |
| photo blog | https://marie-kennedy.com |
| Google Scholar profile | http://scholar.google.com/citations?user=28zBKI8AAAAJ&hl=en |
| ORCID | https://orcid.org/0000-0001-7090-7319 |
| blog | https://orgmonkey.net |
| photo blog | https://marie-kennedy.com |
| Google Scholar profile | http://scholar.google.com/citations?user=28zBKI8AAAAJ&hl=en |
| ORCID | https://orcid.org/0000-0001-7090-7319 |
My 1 year old son has just started making noises when he plays with cars. He doesn’t say “brrrrm” or similar, he says “eeeee”. We own electric cars.
Think of it, a future where cars, buses, trucks, tractors go “eeeee” instead of “brrrrrm” in the minds of children.
Last night at the French Embassy in DC, I was honored with the Award for Imagination in Service to Society . #africanfuturism
Past winners include Samuel Delaney, Ted Chiang, George RR Martin, Ursula LeGuin, Margaret Atwood, Cixin Liu. I’m honored to join such ranks! 😃
More info here: https://clarkefoundation.org/
Terrific article (and dataset) out now @QSS_ISSI showing just how much the Big 5 publishers made from #APCs over four years - $1.06 Billion!
Also clearly lays out how different publishers pursue different strategies - "Elsevier and Wiley mak[e] most APC revenue from hybrid fees and others focus on gold."
Big congrats to the team! @stefhaustein @leighbutler https://doi.org/10.1162/qss_a_00272
Abstract. This study aims to estimate the total amount of article processing charges (APCs) paid to publish open access (OA) in journals controlled by the five large commercial publishers Elsevier, Sage, Springer-Nature, Taylor & Francis and Wiley between 2015 and 2018. Using publication data from WoS, OA status from Unpaywall and annual APC prices from open datasets and historical fees retrieved via the Internet Archive Wayback Machine, we estimate that globally authors paid $1.06 billion in publication fees to these publishers from 2015–2018. Revenue from gold OA amounted to $612.5 million, while $448.3 million was obtained for publishing OA in hybrid journals. Among the five publishers, Springer-Nature made the most revenue from OA ($589.7 million), followed by Elsevier ($221.4 million), Wiley ($114.3 million), Taylor & Francis ($76.8 million) and Sage ($31.6 million). With Elsevier and Wiley making most of APC revenue from hybrid fees and others focusing on gold, different OA strategies could be observed between publishers.Peer Review. https://www.webofscience.com/api/gateway/wos/peer-review/10.1162/qss_a_00272