Feeds

Closing Session

In addition to providing closing thoughts on the Futures of Academic Publishing Symposium, Anne Kenney will offer her own thoughts on open access, sustainability and academic publishing, drawing on three case studies at Cornell University Library: arXiv (100% OA); Project Euclid, a joint publishing program with Duke University Press for low-cost independent and society journals in theoretical and applied mathematics and statistics (now 70% OA); and Project Signale: Modern German Letters, Cultures, and Thought, a joint book series supported by Cornell Library, Cornell University Press and th

Lunch

Provide a full description of the session. Typically a paragraph or two. Don't include or duplicate information that could reasonably be learned from the other fields available to you.

Break

Provide a full description of the session. Typically a paragraph or two. Don't include or duplicate information that could reasonably be learned from the other fields available to you.

How does Open Access benefit our UNT Community Members?

Open Access increases the visibility and impact of an authors' work, and allows for wider dissemination to colleagues and the greater academic community. Studies have shown increased citations for articles that are available through Open Access instead of those only available through subscriptions. Our UNT Scholarly Works repository also provides viewable statistics, which can give UNT Community Members an additional measure of the impact of their work.