The Scholarly Kitchen

  • About
  • Archives
  • Collections
    Scholarly Publishing 101 -- The Basics
    Collections
    • Scholarly Publishing 101 -- The Basics
    • Academia
    • Business Models
    • Discovery and Access
    • Diversity and Inclusion
    • Economics
    • Libraries
    • Marketing
    • Metrics and Analytics
    • Open Access
    • Organizational Management
    • Peer Review
    • Strategic Planning
    • Technology and Disruption
  • Chefs
  • Podcast
  • Follow

What’s Hot and Cooking In Scholarly Publishing

Can We Re-engineer Scholarly Journal Publishing? An Interview with Richard Wynne, Rescognito

In today's post, chefs Alice Meadows and Tim Vines interview Richard Wynne, Founder of Rescognito, a free service for recognizing and promoting Open Research.

  • By Alice Meadows, Tim Vines
  • Mar 8, 2021
  • Leave a Comment

Recent

Reuse Rights: Disney’s History of Recycling Animation

A historical look at Disney’s reuse of its own content.

  • By David Crotty
  • Mar 5, 2021
  • 1 Comment

Guest Post — The Words We Live By: Our Ideas and Values as the Catalyst for Action

Dawit Tegbaru offers ideas on how the scholarly communications community can take action to address inequity.

  • By Dawit Tegbaru
  • Mar 4, 2021
  • 5 Comments

Guest Post — Putting Publications into Context with the DocMaps Framework for Editorial Metadata

The DocMaps Project offers a machine-readable, interoperable and extensible framework for capturing valuable context about the processes used to create research products such as journal articles.

  • By Jessica Polka, Gary McDowell, Tony Ross-Hellauer, Gabe Stein
  • Mar 3, 2021
  • 2 Comments

Driving Responsibly with Identity Management (Part 2: A Case Study)

Emerald Publishing’s identity strategy aims to re-conceive their publishing platform as a digital experience that builds emotive connections with users and seamlessly delivers the answers they need.

  • By Lettie Y. Conrad, Tim Lloyd
  • Mar 2, 2021
  • 3 Comments

A Framework for the Future of Conferences

The sudden virtualization of conferences sparked a flurry of experimentation. It is now time to build the future of the scholarly meeting.

  • By Roger C. Schonfeld, Laura Brown
  • Mar 1, 2021
  • 6 Comments

Perseverance Lands on Mars

NASA offers up stunning footage of the Perseverance Rover landing on Mars.

  • By David Crotty
  • Feb 26, 2021
  • 1 Comment

What’s Next for Open Science — Making the Case for Open Methods

Transparency around research methodologies is essential for driving public trust and accurate, reproducible research results.

  • By David Crotty
  • Feb 25, 2021
  • 10 Comments

Open Access, Conspiracy Theories and the Democratization of Knowledge

Robert Harington asks if we need more than Open Access (OA) to truly democratize science? 

  • By Robert Harington
  • Feb 24, 2021
  • 14 Comments

Guest Post – Scientific Output in the Year of COVID, An Update

An update and a correction for an earlier post on research publication growth in 2020.

  • By Christos Petrou
  • Feb 23, 2021
  • 0 Comments

Guest Post — Towards Accessible Conferences: A Conversation

Following our conversation about Neurodiversity in December, Publishing Enabled return with a discussion about how to make academic conferences more accessible to people with disabilities.

  • By Ruth Wells, Simon Holt, Katy Alexander, Mark Carden, Violaine Iglesias, Erin Osborne-Martin
  • Feb 22, 2021
  • 2 Comments

Plan S Rights Retention Strategy, Copyright and the Academic Community – Part Two

Robert Harington talks to a range of expert stakeholders with differing views about the Plan S Rights Retention Strategy and Creative Commons Licensing. Part 2. of 2 interview posts.

  • By Robert Harington
  • Feb 19, 2021
  • 10 Comments

Plan S Rights Retention Strategy, Copyright and the Academic Community – Part One

Robert Harington talks to a range of expert stakeholders with differing views about the Plan S Rights Retention Strategy and Creative Commons Licensing. Part 1 of 2 interview posts.

  • By Robert Harington
  • Feb 18, 2021
  • 3 Comments

Explaining the Rights Retention Strategy

Unpacking each word — rights, retention, and strategy — enables understanding what this policy is and how it functions within the Plan S compliance framework.

  • By Lisa Janicke Hinchliffe
  • Feb 17, 2021
  • 24 Comments

Guest Post — Lessons Learned: A Year with GetFTR

Ralph Youngen and Todd Toler look back on what’s been learned over the course of the first year of implementing GetFTR, a solution to enable faster access for researchers to the published journal articles.

  • By Ralph Youngen, Todd Toler
  • Feb 16, 2021
  • 0 Comments

Off for President’s Day

We’re off today for the US holiday, regular posting to resume tomorrow.

  • By David Crotty
  • Feb 15, 2021
  • 0 Comments
Browse Archives

Official Blog of:

Society for Scholarly Publishing (SSP)

The Chefs

  • Rick Anderson
  • Todd A Carpenter
  • Michael Clarke
  • Angela Cochran
  • Lettie Y. Conrad
  • David Crotty
  • Phil Davis
  • Joseph Esposito
  • Robert Harington
  • Siân Harris
  • Haseeb Irfanullah
  • Lisa Janicke Hinchliffe
  • Phill Jones
  • Scholarly Kitchen
  • Judy Luther
  • Alice Meadows
  • Ann Michael
  • Alison Mudditt
  • Jill O'Neill
  • Charlie Rapple
  • Roger C. Schonfeld
  • David Smith
  • Tao Tao
  • Tim Vines
  • Jasmine Wallace
  • Karin Wulf

Recent Tweets

Retweet on TwitterScholarly Kitchen Retweeted
lisalibrarianLisa Janicke Hinchliffe@lisalibrarian·
6h

Hearing more and more that publishers plan to route papers with the RRS to their OA (APC) journals and, if authors do not wish to be considered for the OA (APC) journals, the manuscripts will be rejected.

Wonder if we'll see a coordinated day of PRs?

https://scholarlykitchen.sspnet.org/2021/02/17/rights-retention-strategy/

Retweet on TwitterScholarly Kitchen Retweeted
sadpresspoetrySad Press@sadpresspoetry·
7 Mar

Retweet on TwitterScholarly Kitchen Retweeted
CyrilPediaThiago Carvalho@CyrilPedia·
17h

I think the majority of Institutional approaches to DORA can be most charitably described as "nudge nudge wink wink" https://twitter.com/pbeldade/status/1368916800424017922

Patrícia Beldade@pbeldade

Ah, that time of the yr when the institution adds the IF (yes, the IF, #DORA) of papers co-authored (regardless of position in author list, nr co-authors, and/or if paper is from one's lab) and decides how much institutional support one gets. <1.5 K€ for 2021. OA fees, anybody?

Follow the Scholarly Kitchen Blog Follow Us
Society for Scholarly Publishing (SSP)

The mission of the Society for Scholarly Publishing (SSP) is to 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.

The Scholarly Kitchen is a moderated and independent blog. Opinions on The Scholarly Kitchen are those of the authors. They are not necessarily those held by the Society for Scholarly Publishing nor by their respective employers.

  • About
  • Archives
  • Chefs
  • Podcast
  • Follow
  • Advertising
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use
  • Website Credits
ISSN 2690-8085