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Social and Behavioral Sciences Commons™
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Full-Text Articles in Social and Behavioral Sciences
The Need To Return The Values Of Human Inquiry To Scholarly Communication With Emily Ford, Emily Ford
The Need To Return The Values Of Human Inquiry To Scholarly Communication With Emily Ford, Emily Ford
PDXPLORES Podcast
Corresponding published article https://pdxscholar.library.pdx.edu/ulib_fac/346/.
In this episode of PDXPLORES, Emily Ford, a professor in the Millar Library at Portland State University, discusses the lived experiences of peer review, a small but landmark part of scholarly communications. Ford argues that proprietary publishing has influenced many of the processes in the scholarly publishing ecosystem, resulting in a need to reapply the values of human inquiry to scholarly communications. Drawing from her research, Ford suggests how the academic community might address this need.
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Human Inquiry In Scholarly Communication: Reconnecting With The Foundations Of Research, Emily Ford
Human Inquiry In Scholarly Communication: Reconnecting With The Foundations Of Research, Emily Ford
Library Faculty Publications and Presentations
This column discusses refocusing our scholarly communication work on human inquiry and provides actions we can take that will allow us to move forward on that path.
Popcast: A Music Podcast With Unexpected Scholarly Angles. A Review And Highlighted Episode Selection, Arthur J. Boston
Popcast: A Music Podcast With Unexpected Scholarly Angles. A Review And Highlighted Episode Selection, Arthur J. Boston
Faculty & Staff Research and Creative Activity
Short review with episode highlights of the New York Times Music Popcast podcast. Written specifically for librarians with an interest in the similarities/disparities between popular digital media content models and scholarly digital media. This includes a short overview of the podcast, its general relation to scholarly communication, a highlight of seven episodes that relate to copyright, archiving, peer-review, vertical integration, metrics, open repositories, and piracy.
D-Lib Magazine Pioneered Web-Based Scholarly Communication, Michael L. Nelson, Herbert Van De Sompel
D-Lib Magazine Pioneered Web-Based Scholarly Communication, Michael L. Nelson, Herbert Van De Sompel
Computer Science Faculty Publications
The web began with a vision of, as stated by Tim Berners-Lee in 1991, “that much academic information should be freely available to anyone”. For many years, the development of the web and the development of digital libraries and other scholarly communications infrastructure proceeded in tandem. A milestone occurred in July, 1995, when the first issue of D-Lib Magazine was published as an online, HTML-only, open access magazine, serving as the focal point for the then emerging digital library research community. In 2017 it ceased publication, in part due to the maturity of the community it served as well as …