Archive for August 2012

Remembering Lee Dirks

A tragic accident has taken Lee Dirks and his wife. A remembrance. Continue reading »

An Update from Inside the Kitchen — Progress and Potential

After a summer full of interesting posts and time to think, a bit of reflection seems in order as we head into Fall. Continue reading »

How Did They Get My Email Address? The Accidental and Plentiful Supply of Academic and Scientific Contacts

The open nature of email addresses on journal sites may be feeding the email harvesting machine for academic emails. Worse, it may also be exposing these for potentially fraudulent activity. Continue reading »

Bury Your Writing — Why Do Academic Book Chapters Fail to Generate Citations?

Books and book chapters have a competitive disadvantage in citations, but it’s not accessibility that makes the difference — there are more reasons, and more changes needed. Continue reading »

“A Hazard of New Fortunes” — A Review

A review of William Dean Howells’ 1890 novel, “A Hazard of New Fortunes,” which is about finding new business models for media businesses. The book describes an economic landscape that is eerily similar to our own. Continue reading »

Photography at One Trillion Frames Per Second — Light’s Glamor Shot

A new high-speed camera has the potential to reveal the world of light in completely novel ways. This video is amazing from start to finish. Continue reading »

Publicity at eLife — Are Media Embargoes Part of the Plan?

eLife is beginning to accept papers, but is it proper for them to promote papers they’ve accepted without having published the final versions? What will their approach be to media embargoes? Continue reading »

The “Facebook Fallacy” and Whipsaw Attitudes Toward Web Advertising

Facebook’s IPO has disappointed many, but to think that it presages a complete meltdown of the online ad market is a bit of an overstatement. Continue reading »

Sort of Significant: Are Psychology Papers Just Nipping Past the p Value?

A new paper finds unexpected disturbances around p-value ranges approaching 0.05. Is there something going on beyond mere science? Continue reading »

E-books and the Personal Library

Moving from the West Coast to the East prompts some thoughts on personal libraries and e-books, as it no longer makes economic sense to carry a lifetime of books around with us. But maybe economic sense isn’t the only sense bibliophiles possess . . . Continue reading »

Side Dishes by Stewart Wills

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The mission of the Society for Scholarly Publishing (SSP) is "[t]o advance scholarly publishing and communication, and the professional development of its members through education, collaboration, and networking." SSP established The Scholarly Kitchen blog in February 2008 to keep SSP members and interested parties aware of new developments in publishing.
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