Journal: Learned Publishing

Volume 31, Issue 4

329 -- 0. Table of Contents
331 -- 333Pippa Smart. A sting in the tail?
335 -- 344Lucy Montgomery, Cameron Neylon, Alkim Ozaygen, Tama Leaver. Getting the best out of data for open access monograph presses: A case study of UCL Press
345 -- 354Cherifa Boukacem-Zeghmouri, Hans Dillaerts, Thierry Lafouge, Pascal Bador, Aude Sauer-Avargues. French publishing attitudes in the open access era: The case of mathematics, biology, and computer science
355 -- 365Mahmood Maniati, Alireza Jalilifar. Strategies for publishing in English journals: A study of the perceptions of Iranian scholars
366 -- 367. ALPSP Awards 2018
369 -- 374Radovan Vrana. Editorial challenges in a small scientific community: Study of Croatian editors
375 -- 380James R. Scott, Mark Gibson, Rebecca S. Benner. Contemporary drug advertising in leading US medical journals
381 -- 389Margaret K. Merga, Shannon Mason, Julia Morris. Early career experiences of navigating journal article publication: Lessons learned using an autoethnographic approach
391 -- 401Julius Tanyu Nganji. An assessment of the accessibility of PDF versions of selected journal articles published in a WCAG 2.0 era (2014-2018)
403 -- 411Jingfeng Xia, Megan P. Smith. Alternative journal impact factors in open access publishing
413 -- 416Camillo Lamanna, Stevan Bruijns. Measuring regional impact: The case for bigger data
417 -- 419Rachel Kessler. Whitepaper: Practical challenges for researchers in data sharing: Review
421 -- 422Tom Hill. Blockchain for research: Review
424 -- 0. Journal Information

Volume 31, Issue 3

186 -- 188Pippa Smart. Collection, curation, and quality: The editor's responsibility
189 -- 197Thomas Gaston, Pippa Smart. What influences the regional diversity of reviewers: A study of medical and agricultural/biological sciences journals
199 -- 204Marta Somoza-Fernández, Josep Manuel Rodríguez Gairín, Cristóbal Urbano. Journal coverage of the Emerging Sources Citation Index
205 -- 214Yuandi Wang, Yu Chen 0015, Meijun Liu, Ruifeng Hu 0001. Growth and quality of Chinese journals from 1949 to 2013
216 -- 221Yan Liang 0003. Should authors suggest reviewers? A comparative study of the performance of author-suggested and editor-selected reviewers at a biological journal
222 -- 229Ahmed Shehata, Mohammed Fathy Mahmoud Elgllab. Where Arab social science and humanities scholars choose to publish: Falling in the predatory journals trap
230 -- 234Jeroen Sondervan, Fleur Stigter. Sustainable open access for scholarly journals in 6 years - the incubator model at Utrecht University Library Open Access Journals
236 -- 240Robin Dunford, Bruce Rosenblum. Keeping it authentic: Reconciling ORCID iDs gathered at submission with the author manuscript
243 -- 248Michael Bisaccio. Cabells' Journal Whitelist and Blacklist: Intelligent data for informed journal evaluations
249 -- 253David Nicholas, Anthony Watkinson, Abdullah Abrizah, Cherifa Boukacem-Zeghmouri, Jie Xu 0005, Blanca Rodríguez Bravo, Marzena Swigon, Eti Herman. What publishers can take away from the latest early career researcher research
254 -- 260Samira Rhoods, Anca Babor. The future of global research: A case study on the use of scenario planning in the publishing industry
261 -- 266Weishu Liu, Fang Liu 0013, Chao Zuo, Junwen Zhu. The effect of publishing a highly cited paper on a journal's impact factor: A case study of the Review of Particle Physics
267 -- 269Gert Helgesson, Stefan Eriksson. Revise the ICMJE Recommendations regarding authorship responsibility!
270 -- 275Francis Dodds. The changing copyright landscape in academic publishing
276 -- 0. Journal Information

Volume 31, Issue 2

91 -- 94Pippa Smart. Question all assumptions: Learned Publishing at 30
95 -- 106Yun Zhang, Weina Hua, Shunbo Yuan. Mapping the scientific research on open data: A bibliometric review
107 -- 119Weishu Liu, Yanchao Li. Open access publications in sciences and social sciences: A comparative analysis
121 -- 129Faramarz Soheili, Ali Akbar Khasseh, Afshin Mousavi Chelak, Mohammad Tavakolizadeh-Ravari. An evaluation of information behaviour studies through the Scholarly Capital Model
131 -- 139Joshua R. Nash, Rafael J. Araújo, Geoffrey S. Shideler. Contributing factors to long-term citation count in marine and freshwater biology articles
141 -- 147Serhat Kurt. Why do authors publish in predatory journals?
149 -- 154Weilang Wang, Lv-xiang Deng, Bin You, Ping Zhang, Yifeng Chen. Digital object identifier and its use in core Chinese academic journals: A Chinese perspective
157 -- 160Michael Upshall. Combining human input with machine learning: A case study
163 -- 168Francis Dodds. The future of academic publishing: Revolution or evolution?
169 -- 171James Hartley. Some observations on the current state of book reviewing in the social sciences
173 -- 179Jacob Wilcock. Putting an end to download-and-go: The website's role in a content marketing ecosystem
181 -- 183Stefan Eriksson, Gert Helgesson. Time to stop talking about 'predatory journals'

Volume 31, Issue 1

3 -- 4Lettie Y. Conrad, Bill Kasdorf. Making accessibility more accessible to publishers
5 -- 10Alistair McNaught, Ruth MacMullen, Sue Smith, Vicky Dobson. Evaluating e-book platforms: Lessons from the e-book accessibility audit
11 -- 18Bill Kasdorf. Why accessibility is hard and how to make it easier: Lessons from publishers
21 -- 24Lauren Trimble. Accessibility at JSTOR: From box-checking to a more inclusive and sustainable future
25 -- 29Brad Turner. Benetech global literacy services: Working towards a 'born accessible' world
31 -- 34Emma House, Richard Orme, Mark Bide. Towards universal accessibility: The UK policy landscape and supporting technology
35 -- 38Frederick Bowes III. An overview of content accessibility issues experienced by educational publishers
39 -- 44Jamie Axelrod. Making materials accessible to students in higher education institutes: Institutional obligations, methods of compliance, and recommendations for future action
45 -- 47Madeleine Rothberg. Publishing with accessibility standards from the inside out
49 -- 54Violaine Iglesias. Beyond the mandates: The far-reaching benefits of multimedia accessibility
57 -- 62Jo Burges. CAL Download - an innovative approach to making books more accessible
63 -- 68Caroline Manis, Huw Alexander. The secrets of failing better: Accessible publishing at SAGE. A case study
69 -- 76Ted Gies. The ScienceDirect accessibility journey: A case study
79 -- 82George Abbott. How publishing has helped and hindered me: Experiences and advice from a blind reader and publisher
83 -- 85George Kerscher. Do you have a broken link in your accessibility chain?