The Director-General is calling all CERN editors and authors to a meeting to contribute to the discussion on the direction that CERN should take in its experimentation with new publishing models.
The current subscription-funded publishing model for journal articles (where access to a particular journal is granted upon payment of a subscription, often arranged by the institutional library) has been the status quo for many years. However, new evidence suggests that removing this subscription barrier gives access to a greater number of readers and so leads to a higher citation rate and therefore greater impact. New so-called Open Access models are emerging but these require the support of authors and editors to be successful. A number of presentations have been solicited which will explain the background to the current situation and Chief Scientific Officer, Jos Engelen, will lead a discussion about the pros and cons of CERN following a particular model.
Your input and support is crucial to the success of such a discussion and your views will be fed into a European follow-up meeting with potential collaborators which CERN will host later in the year. If you are a scientific author or editor please attend on the 16th September.
Agenda:
Leader of the discussion: Chief Scientific Officer Jos Engelen, CERN.
Particle physicists are again contributing to change by Director-General Robert Aymar, CERN. A general presentation of the CERN policy and visions.
Improving the impact of your research by Former Editor-in-Chief Alex Bradshaw, New Journal of Physics.
Springer Open Choice by Chief executive officer Derk Haank, Springer.
The JHEP experience by Scientific director Hector Rubinstein, JHEP. The impact of the J series, existing and coming journals: JHEP JCAP JSTAT JINST.
National libraries ensuring long-term archiving of digital information speaker to be decided.