Does the scholarly communication system satisfy the beliefs and aspirations of new researchers? Summarizing the Harbingers research
A study from the Harbingers research project provides a comprehensive assessment of the main features of the scholarly communications system as viewed by early career researchers (ECRs) in the final year of the study (2018). Aspects covered are: discovery and access, authorship practices, peer revie...
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my.um.eprints.372122023-03-10T03:49:28Z http://eprints.um.edu.my/37212/ Does the scholarly communication system satisfy the beliefs and aspirations of new researchers? Summarizing the Harbingers research Nicholas, David Watkinson, Anthony Abrizah, Abdullah Rodriguez-Bravo, Blanca Boukacem-Zeghmouri, Cherifa Xu, Jie Swigon, Marzena Herman, Eti Library science. Information science A study from the Harbingers research project provides a comprehensive assessment of the main features of the scholarly communications system as viewed by early career researchers (ECRs) in the final year of the study (2018). Aspects covered are: discovery and access, authorship practices, peer review, publishing strategies, open access publishing, open data, sharing, collaboration, social media, metrics, impact, reputation, libraries, publishers, and scholarly transformations. Nearly 120 science and social science researchers from seven countries were questioned about these 16 aspects. It was found that some scholarly features work well for ECRs, and in this category can be included: discovery and access, authorship practices, sharing, collaboration, and publishers. Reputation, publishing strategies, and impact are more problematical, and they, in turn, cause tensions regarding some other factors - social media, open access, and open data. Of the rest, libraries are largely invisible, and ECRs have conflicting views concerning ethical behaviour. Few envisage that transformational change will take place in the next 5 years. Wiley 2020-04 Article PeerReviewed Nicholas, David and Watkinson, Anthony and Abrizah, Abdullah and Rodriguez-Bravo, Blanca and Boukacem-Zeghmouri, Cherifa and Xu, Jie and Swigon, Marzena and Herman, Eti (2020) Does the scholarly communication system satisfy the beliefs and aspirations of new researchers? Summarizing the Harbingers research. Learned Publishing, 33 (2). pp. 132-141. ISSN 0953-1513, DOI https://doi.org/10.1002/leap.1284 <https://doi.org/10.1002/leap.1284>. 10.1002/leap.1284 |
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Library science. Information science Nicholas, David Watkinson, Anthony Abrizah, Abdullah Rodriguez-Bravo, Blanca Boukacem-Zeghmouri, Cherifa Xu, Jie Swigon, Marzena Herman, Eti Does the scholarly communication system satisfy the beliefs and aspirations of new researchers? Summarizing the Harbingers research |
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A study from the Harbingers research project provides a comprehensive assessment of the main features of the scholarly communications system as viewed by early career researchers (ECRs) in the final year of the study (2018). Aspects covered are: discovery and access, authorship practices, peer review, publishing strategies, open access publishing, open data, sharing, collaboration, social media, metrics, impact, reputation, libraries, publishers, and scholarly transformations. Nearly 120 science and social science researchers from seven countries were questioned about these 16 aspects. It was found that some scholarly features work well for ECRs, and in this category can be included: discovery and access, authorship practices, sharing, collaboration, and publishers. Reputation, publishing strategies, and impact are more problematical, and they, in turn, cause tensions regarding some other factors - social media, open access, and open data. Of the rest, libraries are largely invisible, and ECRs have conflicting views concerning ethical behaviour. Few envisage that transformational change will take place in the next 5 years. |
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Article |
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Nicholas, David Watkinson, Anthony Abrizah, Abdullah Rodriguez-Bravo, Blanca Boukacem-Zeghmouri, Cherifa Xu, Jie Swigon, Marzena Herman, Eti |
author_facet |
Nicholas, David Watkinson, Anthony Abrizah, Abdullah Rodriguez-Bravo, Blanca Boukacem-Zeghmouri, Cherifa Xu, Jie Swigon, Marzena Herman, Eti |
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Nicholas, David |
title |
Does the scholarly communication system satisfy the beliefs and aspirations of new researchers? Summarizing the Harbingers research |
title_short |
Does the scholarly communication system satisfy the beliefs and aspirations of new researchers? Summarizing the Harbingers research |
title_full |
Does the scholarly communication system satisfy the beliefs and aspirations of new researchers? Summarizing the Harbingers research |
title_fullStr |
Does the scholarly communication system satisfy the beliefs and aspirations of new researchers? Summarizing the Harbingers research |
title_full_unstemmed |
Does the scholarly communication system satisfy the beliefs and aspirations of new researchers? Summarizing the Harbingers research |
title_sort |
does the scholarly communication system satisfy the beliefs and aspirations of new researchers? summarizing the harbingers research |
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Wiley |
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2020 |
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http://eprints.um.edu.my/37212/ |
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1761616811948769280 |