The Last Frontier in Open Access: That’s where Rich Schneider wants to go. For the Associate Professor at the UCSF School of Medicine, the un(der)explored terrain of open peer review offers the chance to “capture all the content that is hidden during the process of scholarly publishing”, the huge amount of intellectual capital that slips constantly through the system’s fingers. Whether it’s pre- or post-publication, the benefits for science and society are many.
Open Access Week 2015: The Playlist
Let’s Collaborate! Boost your Citations and Visibility
- Realtime Open Science on Thinklab & The Horrors of Data Copyright
Daniel Himmelstein, UCSF
- The Relationship Between Collaboration and Citation
Stephanie Dawson, ScienceOpen
- Open & Collaborative Peer Review for Scholarly Communication & Scientific Progress
Rich Schneider, UCSF
- Wikipedia, WikiProject Medicine, and All of Us
Amin Azzam, UCSF
- Making Yourself Visible Online: How to Promote Your Research
Laurence Bianchini, MyScienceWork
- The Open Access Citation Advantage: Is There a Real Effect?
William Gunn, Mendeley
- Publish or Perish: How to avoid predatory publishers & conferences
Marcus Banks, UC Davis & Anneliese Taylor, UCSF
- Citing Software for Academic Credit
Mackenzie Smith, UC Davis
- Open discussion following the talks
Questions, answers and exchanges among all participants
- Full event: Open Access Week 2015/Bay Area
Let's Collaborate! Boost Your Citations and Visibility
- 3 perspectives on open science and OA Week 2015/Bay Area:
* A Career Boost from Open, Collaborative Science - Daniel Himmelstein, UCSF
* Libraries increase access & understanding of rights - Marcus Banks, UC Davis
* Librarians: Open Science Liaisons - Anneliese Taylor, UCSF
Open Access Week 2015/Bay Area was co-organized and sponsored by:
The UCSF Library, MyScienceWork, ScienceOpen, Protocols.io, Mendeley, PeerJ, Collabra/UC Press