Features
John Murphy profiles Sally Morris, chief executive of the Association of Learned and Professional Society Publishers
The world's biggest pharmaceutical company will not have a single, traditional library by the end of this year. Peter Rees examines the challenges in creating an international, company-wide 'virtual library'
The way scientific information was disseminated in print may hold lessons for the electronic age. Tom Wilkie examines the potential
When information spread across a variety of sources is linked together, there are advantages for researchers and publishers alike. Amy Brand and Kristen Fisher explore recent shifts in linking that promise even more benefits.
While most of us fathom out how to navigate the new digital information landscape, those with foresight are worrying about the past - how to preserve electronic content. Vanessa Spedding reports.
Pages
- « first
- ‹ previous
- …
- 43
- 44
- 45
- 46
Latest issue
Antonia Seymour, chief executive at IOP Publishing, and Andrew Barker, director of library services and learning development at Lancaster University, talk about hybrid working and re-thinking how we work
David Stuart writes: are new ways of measuring research are providing a more realistic picture of scholarly communication?
Siân Harris looks at what role cloud-based services play in libraries today, their benefits and limitations and what challenges remain
Kudos co-founder Charlie Rapple explains her passion for accelerating the dissemination – and impact – of science
Sowmya Swaminathan discusses the implications for publishers in helping to foster open research practices
Nandita Quaderi explains how Covid-19 continues to affect the citation network, and introduces a new kind of citation distortion
Oluchi Ojinamma Okere outlines how researchers in sub-Saharan countries are being hamstrung by economics
Helen Lippell explains why organisations should learn more about taxonomies, ontologies and metadata - and describes her love of a good quiz
Figshare founder Mark Hahnel describes the company's beginnings and raison d’être – and his wider hopes for scholarly communications
If scientists are successful, we are successful, writes Miriam Maus, publishing director at IOP Publishing