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New Report: Publishers allow more than authors think
Publishers' agreements are more liberal than journal authors
think, but do not allow self-archiving of the published PDF.
The Publishing Research Consortium has published another in its
series of reports: Journal Authors' Rights: perception and
reality (Summary Paper 5).
Using re-analysis of the recently published ALPSP report
Scholarly Publishing Practice 3 (which looks at the practice of
181 publishers, representing 75% of all articles), and a new
survey of 1163 authors, the report compares what publishers
actually allow authors to do with the different versions of their
manuscript, and what they want to do and believe they are
permitted to do.
For both the submitted and the accepted version of their
manuscript, the majority of publishers' agreements (as calculated
by the number of articles they publish) allow authors to provide
copies to colleagues, to incorporate into their own works, to
post to a personal or departmental website or to an institutional
repository, and to use in course packs; just under 50% also
permit posting to a subject repository. However, far fewer
authors think they can do any of these than are in fact allowed
to do so.
The published PDF version is the version that authors would
prefer to use for all the above purposes; again, publishers'
agreements exceed authors' expectations for providing copies to
colleagues, incorporating in subsequent work, and use in course
packs. However, the picture is turned on its head when it comes
to self-archiving; more than half of authors think that
publishers allow them to deposit the final PDF, whereas under 10%
of publishers actually permit this - probably because of serious
concerns about the long-term impact on subscriptions.
Why do authors have such a poor understanding of publishers'
agreements? The PRC concludes that publishers need to do much
more to make sure that their terms are crystal clear, but also
suggests that the ambiguous term 'preprint' may mislead authors,
and should be dropped in favour of the recommended NISO
terminology.
*Full report: Sally Morris, Journal Authors' Rights:
perception and reality (PRC Summary Paper 5), PRC 2009 (PDF)
http://www.publishingresearch.net/documents/JournalAuthorsRights.pdf
*Summary of findings: Journal Authors' Rights: perception and
reality - a preliminary report, PRC 2009 (PPT)
http://www.publishingresearch.net/documents/SummaryforAPE-final.ppt
*Author survey summary: Author Rights Copyright Project, GfK
Business 2008 (PPT)
http://www.publishingresearch.net/documents/PRC2008v2.ppt
*John & Laura Cox, Publishing Practice 3, ALPSP 2008
(PDF) http://www.alpsp.org/ngen_public/article.asp?id=200
*Journal Article Versions (JAV): Recommendations of the
NISO/ALPSP JAV Technical Working Group, NISO l 2008 (PDF)
http://www.niso.org/publications/rp/RP-8-2008.pdf
The Publishing Research Consortium
(<http://www.publishingresearch.net/> is a group of associations
and publishers, which supports global research into scholarly
communication in order to enable evidence-based discussion. Our
objective is to support work that is scientific and
pro-scholarship. Overall, we aim to promote an understanding of
the role of publishing and its impact on research and teaching.
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