| EGU Open Acces Journals Succesful |
| Saturday, 03 October 2009 | |||||||
Open access more successful than traditional publishingEGU's interactive open access journals among the world's highest ranking scientific journalsThe open access journals published by the European Geosciences Union have become very succesful in a matter of a few years. Among them are Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics (ACP), Biogeosciences (BG), Climate of the Past (CP), Hydrology and Earth System Sciences (HESS), Ocean Science (OS), and a rapidly growing number of new journals as detailed below. To the surprise even of the editors who pioneered this new publishing philosophy, it took only a few years for the new journals to move to the ranks of the world's highest impact journals.
Dr Ulrich Pöschl, the editor in chief of ACP and chairman of the EGU publications committee says: "We
are very pleased that the results of the Science Citation Index confirm
the high standards and success of our journals. For example, ACP
started in 2001 and from 2005 onwards has had one of the highest ISI
impact factors (average number of citations per paper and year) of
several hundred journals across the fields of “Meteorology and
Atmospheric Sciences”, “Geosciences”, and “Environmental Sciences”. We
had expected the journal to break even financially in 2010, but we
reached the break-even point already in 2008." The interactive two-stage publication process resolves an apparent dilemma between rapid communication and quality control. It promotes open scientific discussion with great advantages for the scientists involved and other interested parties. Firstly, the Discussion Papers allow authors to speak freely and publish their results almost instantly. Secondly, the users of the Discussion Forums have immediate access to new data and developments. Quite often, the publication and documentation of controversies and background information is as interesting as the paper itself. Thirdly, the completely public and transparent review process is a stimulus for referees to produce high-quality comments thus fostering a high quality of the final publications. Finally, authors will think twice before submitting papers that are not ready for publication since they can expect to be publicly critcised. This leads to low rejection rates and helps saving referee capacities, which are the most limited resource in scientific publishing. While traditional journals from commercial publishing houses often charge extremely high subscription rates, EGU's open access journals are completely free to read. This gives scientists from anywhere in the world, including developing countries, in fact anyone interested in science including policy makers, access to scientific information that may benefit society. Because the journal production is very cost effective, the process is financed by relatively modest paper charges payed by the authors or their institutions. Today, the EGU publishes nine interactive open access journals, and more are in the pipeline:
Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics, Atmospheric Measurement Techniques,
Biogeosciences, Climate of the Past, e-Earth, Geoscientific Model
Development, Hydrology and Earth System Sciences, Ocean Science, The
Cryosphere. Information for editorsEGU Mission Statement for Publications and list of publications: http://www.egu.eu/publications/statement.html See "Most commented papers" in the ACPD online library: www.atmos-chem-phys-discuss.net/most_commented_papers.html European Geosciences Union (EGU) www.egu.eu Contact:Dr Ulrich Pöschl, Max Planck Institute for Chemistry, D-55128 Mainz, Germany, This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it
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