PeerJ
Discipline | Biology, medicine |
---|---|
Language | English |
Edited by | Peter Binfield |
Publication details | |
Publisher |
PeerJ |
Publication history | 2013–present |
Frequency | Upon acceptance |
Yes | |
License | CC-BY 4.0 |
2.112 | |
Indexing | |
ISSN |
2167-8359 |
OCLC no. | 793828439 |
Links | |
PeerJ is an open access peer-reviewed scientific mega journal covering research in the biological and medical sciences.[1] It is published by a company of the same name that was co-founded by publisher Peter Binfield (formerly at PLOS ONE) and CEO Jason Hoyt (formerly at Mendeley),[2] with financial backing of US$950,000 from O'Reilly Media and O'Reilly AlphaTech Ventures.[3] It was officially launched in June 2012, started accepting submissions on December 3, 2012, and published its first articles on February 12, 2013.[1] The company is a member of CrossRef,[4] CLOCKSS,[5] ORCID,[4] and the Open Access Scholarly Publishers Association.[6] The company's offices are in Corte Madera (California), and London.
Business model
PeerJ uses a business model that differs both from traditional publishers – in that no subscription fees are charged to its readers – and from the major open-access publishers in that the publication fees are levied not per article but per publishing researcher and at a much lower level.[7] PeerJ is complemented by a preprint service named PeerJ Preprints which launched on April 3, 2013.[8] The low costs are in part achieved by using cloud infrastructure: both PeerJ and PeerJ Preprints run on Amazon EC2, with the content stored on Amazon S3.[9]
PeerJ charges authors a one-time membership fee that allows them – with some additional requirements, such as commenting upon, or reviewing, at least one paper per year – to publish in the journal for the rest of their life.[10] Submitted research is judged solely on scientific and methodological soundness (like at PLoS ONE), with peer reviews published alongside the papers.[11]
Reception
The journal is abstracted and indexed in the Science Citation Index Expanded, PubMed Central, Scopus, EMBASE, CAB Abstracts, and ACS databases.[12][13][14][15] According to the Journal Citation Reports, it has a 2014 impact factor of 2.112.[16]
In April 2013 The Chronicle of Higher Education selected PeerJ CEO and co-founder Jason Hoyt as one of "Ten Top Tech Innovators" for the year.[17]
On September 12, 2013 the Association of Learned and Professional Society Publishers awarded PeerJ the "Publishing Innovation" of the year award.[18]
See also
References
- 1 2 Van Noorden, R. (2012). "Journal offers flat fee for 'all you can publish'". Nature 486 (7402): 166. doi:10.1038/486166a. PMID 22699586.
- ↑ "New front in open access science publishing row". Reuters.
- ↑ "Tim O'Reilly Backs New Open-Source Publisher PeerJ". dowjones.com.
- 1 2 "Scholarly Publishing 2012: Meet PeerJ". PublishersWeekly.com.
- ↑ PeerJ Preserves with the CLOCKSS Archive (WebCite archive)
- ↑ OASPA - list of members (WebCite archive)
- ↑ "New Open Access Journal Lets Scientists Publish 'til They Perish". sciencemag.org.
- ↑ "PeerJ preprints". worldcat.org.
- ↑ "Pay (less) to publish: ambitious journal aims to disrupt scholarly publishing". Ars Technica.
- ↑ "Pando: PeerJ Raises $950K from Tim O'Reilly's Ventures To Make Biomedical Research Accessible to All". Pando.
- ↑ "New OA Journal, Backed by O'Reilly, May Disrupt Academic Publishing - The Digital Shift". The Digital Shift.
- ↑ PeerJ accepted for indexing by PubMed Central, PubMed and Scopus - PeerJ Blog
- ↑ PeerJ accepted for indexing by CAB Abstracts - PeerJ Blog
- ↑ PeerJ accepted for indexing by the DOAJ - PeerJ Blog
- ↑ PeerJ accepted for indexing by EMBASE - PeerJ Blog
- ↑ "PeerJ". 2014 Journal Citation Reports. Web of Science (Science ed.). Thomson Reuters. 2015.
- ↑ http://chronicle.com/ (2013-04-29). "The Idea Makers: Tech Innovators 2013". Retrieved 2013-05-01.
- ↑ "ALPSP announces award winners". researchinformation.info.
External links
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