“…250,000 periodicals were said to be published in 2005, with an additional figure of 4,300 open access journals (van Dalen & Klamer, 2005;Larsen & von Ins, 2010;Mabe andAmin, 2001 &2002;Ware & Mabe, 2009 The bulk of research published in online-only journals and in self-archiving repositories is predicted to grow not only because it is encouraged by digitalization procedures but also because a different attitude on the researchers' part is evident (Swan & Brown, 2005). In recent surveys on the impact of open access journals (Björk, Welling et al, 2010) and on the role played by English (Ferguson, 2007;Ferguson et al, 2011), researchers showed that in some disciplines, e.g. the earth sciences, medicine, biochemistry, chemistry and physics, online publication is accepted and subscribed by many members of the above mentioned communities to gain visibility and for the easy access to research data it offers to the scholarly audience at large (Björk et al, 2010).…”