Hybrid open access journal
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A newly popular variation on open access journals is the Hybrid Open Access Journal. This refers to a journal where only some of the articles are open access. This status typically requires the payment of a publication fee (also called a processing fee) to the publisher.
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[edit] terminology
Hybrid OA Journal seems to be the customary term, although OA by the Article and Optional OA have also been used. Open Choice, which properly means Springer's scheme, is often used as the generic. From its originators, it has also been called the Walker-Prosser model for open access journals.
[edit] History
The concept was first proposed a few years ago. Thomas Walker first suggested that authors could purchase extra visibility at a pric, in American Scientist (1998). The first journal recognized as using this plan was Walker's own Florida Journal of Entomology; it was later extended to the other publications of the Entomological Society of America. The idea was later refined by David Prosser in 2003, in an article in the journal Learned Publishing.
[edit] Publishers and names
Each publisher that offers this plan uses a distinctive name:
- American Chemical Society AuthorChoice
- American Physical Society Free to Read
- Blackwell Publishing Online Open
- BMJ Publishing Group Ltd BMJ Unlocked
- Cambridge University Press Cambridge Open Option
- Elsevier sponsored article
- John Wiley & Sons
- Oxford University Press Oxford Open
- Royal Society (UK) EXIS Open Choice
- Royal Society of Chemistry (UK) RSC Open Science
- Springer Open Choice (this is also used as the general term, as it was the first one in common use.
- Taylor & Francis iOpen Access
- United States National Academy of Sciences
[edit] Postulated Effect on subscription prices
Since one of the proposed sources for the necessary funds for open access articles might be the library subscription budget, there needs to be a decrease in the subscription cost to the library. Therefore the article payments must not merely add to the normal subscription cost, but rather reduce the cost. Springer's Open Choice was the first to provide a specific way to reduce the subscription price: the proportionate increase in the author-financed articles, would provide a proportionate reduction in the cost (along with a number of complicated provisos and exceptions). This soon prompted most of the other publishers to offer similar provisions, though initially they were still usually indefinite. Because of the processes in pricing journal subscriptions, fees paid for an article would be reflected in prices for the journal only two years later: fees paid for 2006 would be known in 2007, and affect the prices set for the 2008 journal subscription year. In some cases less was offered: the publishers of PNAS promised to use the money to offset some of the increase in future author fees and prices.
[edit] Advantages and Disadvantages for the publisher
One of the difficulties with "full" open access journals, or the subset of them that charge author-side fees, is the difficulty of getting started. The publisher must be ready to take the risk of not having subscription income, in the hope that payments will materialize. But with a hybrid open access journal, the publisher only provides open access to those articles for which the payment is made. To the extent the plan succeeds, the publisher has an adequate revenue stream from fees. To the extent that it fails, the publisher has an adequate revenue stream from subscriptions.
[edit] Advantages and Disadvantages to the Author
The author wanting to publish in an open access journal, is not limited to the relatively small number of "full" open access journals, but can also choose from the available hybrid open access journals.
The author must still find the money. Many funding agencies are ready to let authors use grant funds, or apply for supplementary funds, to pay publication fees at Open Access journals. (Only a minority of Open Access journals charge such fees, but nearly all hybrid Open Access journals do so.) So far, the funding agencies that are willing to pay these fees do not distinguish between full and hybrid open access journals.
[edit] Variations
The American Society of Plant Biologists (ASPB) has adopted a unique policy that articles contributed by society members to its journal Plant Physiology will be made Open Access immediately upon publication at no additional charge. This applies only to mermbers only; non-member authors cannot receive OA by payment, but membership is only $115/year.
[edit] See also
[edit] External links
- Nine questions for hybrid journal programs by Peter Suber, September 2006.