Journal: Learned Publishing

Volume 26, Issue 4

236 -- 238Diane Scott-Lichter. CHORUS: moving research publications in line with US federal funding requirements
240 -- 252David Nicholas, David Clark. The second digital transition: to the mobile space - an analysis of Europeana
253 -- 256David Armstrong. The new engagement game: the role of gamification in scholarly publishing
257 -- 258Jian Ping Lu. Technical and ethical standards in China: long on framework but short on action
259 -- 263Peter Fröhlich. How to spot Ugly Black Ducklings: the next competitive frontiers in scholarly publishing
265 -- 268Laura Stemmle, Keith Collier. RUBRIQ: tools, services, and software to improve peer review
269 -- 271Jane Tappuni. Are online communities the future of bookselling?
272 -- 282Alison Baverstock, Jackie Steinitz. What satisfactions do self-publishing authors gain from the process?
285 -- 302Stephen Pinfield. Medical research charities and open access
303 -- 309Songqing Lin. How the approval system affects Chinese scientific journals
310 -- 0Cindy Clark. Copyright Questions and Answers for Information Professionals: From the Columns of Against the Grain

Volume 26, Issue 3

155 -- 156Alan Singleton. Publishing - is our love here to stay ..
159 -- 165Chad Hutchens. Open access metadata: current practices and proposed solutions
167 -- 171Pieter Borghart. A label for peer-reviewed books? Some critical reflections
173 -- 179Hans Dillaerts, Ghislaine Chartron. 'Héloïse': towards a co-ordinated ecosystem approach for the archiving of scientific publications?
180 -- 185Margo C. Leach, Shaun L. A. Hobbs. Plantwise knowledge bank: delivering plant health information to developing country users
187 -- 188Mriganka Awati. A science editor's wish list
189 -- 196Yuehong Zhang, Xiaoyan Jia. Republication of conference papers in journals?
197 -- 205Xiang Ren. Beyond online preprints: formalization of open initiatives in China
206 -- 210Paula Gantz. Journal print subscription price increases no longer reflect actual costs
211 -- 223Alison Baverstock, Jackie Steinitz. Who are the self-publishers?
224 -- 227Jilan Sun. Vocabulary extraction in foreign-language journals: how natural language processing can help readers
228 -- 229Michael Jubb. Prometheus Assessed? Research Measurement, Peer Review and Citation Analysis
229 -- 230Sanford G. Thatcher. An Introduction to Book History
230 -- 231Mark Ware. The Handbook of Journal Publishing

Volume 26, Issue 2

75 -- 0Diane Scott-Lichter. If you blow a whistle, know the tune
77 -- 0Michael Berry. Much ado about rather little
79 -- 83Jeffrey Beall. Predatory publishing is just one of the consequences of gold open access
85 -- 88Stephen Pinfield. Is scholarly publishing going from crisis to crisis?
89 -- 100Jie Xu, Xiaoqun Yuan. Online scholarly publishing in China: Who? What? How?
101 -- 113Emilio Delgado López-Cózar, Alvaro Cabezas-Clavijo. Ranking journals: could Google Scholar Metrics be an alternative to Journal Citation Reports and Scimago Journal Rank?
115 -- 122Liam Borgstrom. Simplifying e-book and print production
123 -- 131Michael L. Newman, John Sack. Information workflow of academic researchers in the evolving information environment: an interview study
133 -- 134Yateendra Joshi. Style guides that refuse to go away
135 -- 138Fang Qing, Lifang Xu. Market-oriented reform in Chinese scholarly publishing
139 -- 147Benjamin Mudrak. Understanding the needs of international authors
148 -- 0Pippa Smart. The Information Diet: A Case for Conscious Consumption
149 -- 150Richard Balkwill. 3rd edn
150 -- 151Darrell W. Gunter. Social Media for Academics - A Practical Guide
151 -- 152Mark Ware. Academic and Professional Publishing

Volume 26, Issue 1

3 -- 4Alan Singleton. APC - what's in a name?
5 -- 10Kent Anderson. Sustainable independent publishing in a world of increasing funder power
11 -- 17Euan Adie, William Roe. Altmetric: enriching scholarly content with article-level discussion and metrics
18 -- 23David Attis, Colin Koproske. Thirty trends shaping the future of academic libraries
24 -- 27Songqing Lin. Why serious academic fraud occurs in China
28 -- 31Jesse M. Kalwij, Christian Smit. How authors can maximise the chance of manuscript acceptance and article visibility
32 -- 41Emma Bennett. The future of learned associations in the humanities
42 -- 44Xiao-Jun He, Zhen-Ying Chen. Excellent editors need to be good authors too
45 -- 49Hongling Fang. Self-citation rates of scientific and technical journals in SCI from China, Japan, India, and Korea
51 -- 56Santiago Chumbe, Roddy MacLeod. Marketing OA journals now that authors are customers: the role of RSS
57 -- 63Sven Fund. We need integrated publishing
65 -- 67Edward Wates. Book Production
67 -- 69Lettie Conrad. 2nd edition
69 -- 70Joss Saunders. How to Fix Copyright