2013
DOI: 10.1002/asi.22772
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Exploring the effects of a transition to open access: Insights from a simulation study

Abstract: The Open Access (OA) movement, which postulates gratis and unrestricted online access to publicly funded research findings, has significantly gained momentum in recent years. The two ways of achieving OA are self‐archiving of scientific work by the authors (Green OA) and publishing in OA journals (Gold OA). But there is still no consensus which model should be supported in particular. The aim of this simulation study is to discover mechanisms and predict developments that may lead to specific outcomes of possi… Show more

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Cited by 13 publications
(11 citation statements)
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References 56 publications
(114 reference statements)
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“…These embargoes are applied in order to avoid putative reductions in subscription income due to such self-archiving." However, empirical evidence fails to support this 'obvious' claim, and we refer you to Berners-Lee et al, 2005;Swan, 2005;Henneken et al, 2007, Houghton et al, 2010, Bernius et al, 2013, and the Committee ), which all indicate that not only is there no loss of subscription for Economic Development, 2012 income from green open access, but that both can indeed coexist as a sustainable business model for publishers. Furthermore, there is little evidence to support the commonly held inference that shorter or zero-length embargoes will have a detrimental effect on publisher incomes (BIS Select ; but see also Jubb, 2011).…”
Section: Discuss This Articlementioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…These embargoes are applied in order to avoid putative reductions in subscription income due to such self-archiving." However, empirical evidence fails to support this 'obvious' claim, and we refer you to Berners-Lee et al, 2005;Swan, 2005;Henneken et al, 2007, Houghton et al, 2010, Bernius et al, 2013, and the Committee ), which all indicate that not only is there no loss of subscription for Economic Development, 2012 income from green open access, but that both can indeed coexist as a sustainable business model for publishers. Furthermore, there is little evidence to support the commonly held inference that shorter or zero-length embargoes will have a detrimental effect on publisher incomes (BIS Select ; but see also Jubb, 2011).…”
Section: Discuss This Articlementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Some publishers require an embargo period before deposition in public repositories is allowed. These embargoes are applied in order to avoid putative reductions in subscription income due to such self-archiving, although there is little evidence to support the existence of such embargoes (Berners-Lee et al, 2005;Bernius et al, 2013;Houghton & Oppenheim, 2010;Henneken et al, 2006;Swan & Brown, 2005). The Green route is also enabled through author rights retention, in which authors pre-emptively grant non-exclusive rights to their institutions before publishing any works.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These embargoes are applied in order to avoid putative reductions in subscription income due to such self-archiving." However, empirical evidence fails to support this 'obvious' claim, and we refer you to Berners-Lee et al, 2005;Swan, 2005;Henneken et al, 2007, Houghton et al, 2010, Bernius et al, 2013, which all indicate that not only is there no loss of subscription for Economic Development, 2012 income from green open access, but that both can indeed coexist as a sustainable business model for publishers. Furthermore, there is little evidence to support the commonly held inference that shorter or zero-length embargoes will have a detrimental effect on publisher incomes (BIS Select ; but see also Jubb, 2011).…”
mentioning
confidence: 98%
“…As open access journals become more established and the benefits of delayed open access publications ( papers of subscription-based journals which become open access by the publisher after a predefined period of 'embargo' time) are better understood (Laakso & Björk, 2013), such obstacles to the dissemination of new information should diminish. In particular, research carried out to understand better the benefits of open access has highlighted a number of advantages to publishers, which in addition to the more obvious, also include an increase in citations and accordingly an increase in the journal impact factor (see Bernius et al, 2013).…”
Section: The Use Of Surveysmentioning
confidence: 99%