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Article-Level Metrics (at PLoS and beyond)
From:
PLoS
Views: 4831
Comments: 9
This was a webinar presented to NISO covering the way in which 'Article-Level Metrics' are being implemented by PLoS. Also see: http: //everyone.plos.org/2009/05/27/article-level-metrics-at-plos/
Art (more)This was a webinar presented to NISO covering the way in which 'Article-Level Metrics' are being implemented by PLoS. Also see: http: //everyone.plos.org/2009/05/27/article-level-metrics-at-plos/
Article-Level Metrics at PLoS takes the view that readers need some way to measure, or at least indicate, the 'worth' (or ‘impact’ etc) of a journal article. With over a million articles published per year it’s impossible to read everything & so filtering tools are needed.
Some journals have been experimenting with providing data on online usage, but PLoS is going further than this. We are at the start of a program to provide citations, usage data, social bookmarking activity, media & blog coverage, commenting activity, 'star' ratings etc on all articles we publish. This slides go into the motivation for this program, as well as the way in which we are rolling it out. (less) |
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ALM presentation for Science Commons
From:
PLoS
Views: 3160
Comments: 0
Presentation to Science Commons salon, 20th Feb 2010. See: http://opensciencefoundation.com/scs/ |
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Let's Have an Awesome Time Publishing Science
From:
PLoS
Views: 3117
Comments: 3
This is a presentation, with audio, on PLoS ONE (http ://www.plosone.org) and to some extent PLoS, given to a conference at UCSF called "Let's Have an Awesome Time Doing Science" (http://awesomescience.wordpress.com/) – an interesting blend of 'regul (more)This is a presentation, with audio, on PLoS ONE (http ://www.plosone.org) and to some extent PLoS, given to a conference at UCSF called "Let's Have an Awesome Time Doing Science" (http://awesomescience.wordpress.com/) – an interesting blend of 'regular' conference and unconference.
In this talk I go into some of our motivations and the reasons for our editorial criteria; quite a bit of detail on the PLoS Article-Level Metrics program (http://article-level-metrics.plos.org/); showed some sneak peaks of some upcoming features and finished up by demonstrating some of the power of Open Access in a world of interlined databases.
In my opinion the presentation was... awesome! (less) |
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thank you