(Press-News.org) The power of transformative agreements (TAs) to drive the transition to open access (OA), especially in the Humanities and Social Sciences, is revealed in a new report published by Taylor & Francis. Accelerating open access in the UK explores in detail the first two years of Taylor & Francis’ OA partnership with the Jisc consortium and how it has boosted the global impact of research from UK institutions.
Supporting Humanities and Social Sciences researchers to publish OA
One of the report’s standout findings is the benefit of the TA for Humanities and Social Science (HSS) researchers. In the last two years, 7,900 articles by HSS authors at participating UK institutions were published OA in Taylor & Francis journals, more than six times the number in 2019-20. This is a significant result because HSS researchers usually find it harder to publish open access, having less OA funding than their peers in STEM.
The report highlights the example of History which, with 250 open access articles in Taylor & Francis journals, was the subject area with the highest number supported by the agreement. The proportion of OA history articles with an author at a participating UK institution rose from just 10% in 2020 to 74% last year.
Especially high rates of open access acceleration were seen in some specialist areas. In Teacher Education in 2020 there were no OA articles by authors at institutions which later participated in the agreement. After two years that number had risen to 81% of supported authors publishing open access. Similar levels of OA growth were seen in Middle East Studies, Sexual Diversity Studies, and Physical Education.
Jessica Vivian, HSS Publishing Director at Taylor & Francis, says: “I am delighted to see UK scholars in HSS realizing the full benefits of publishing OA via our arrangement with Jisc. We have seen articles gain considerably more impact by being published OA in subject areas that would not have traditionally had any funding, such as Literature, History and Politics”.
More open access articles, citations and full OA journals in Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics (STEM)
The agreement has also increased support for STEM researchers, with both a growth in the number of OA articles and a substantial impact on citations. More than 2,100 STEM articles were published OA through the agreement, more than three times the number of the previous two years. There was a particularly significant rise in OA articles by UK authors in Civil, Structural and Geotechnical Engineering. In 2022, 80% of articles in this area were published OA, compared to just 5% in 2020.
Citations to STEM articles also grew as a result of being published OA. Control and Systems Engineering, for example, saw a 2,800% increase in citations between 2020 and 2022. In Substance Abuse there was a 600% citation growth over the same period.
The report notes that another important impact of the growth of OA articles through the agreement, and other similar TAs, is enabling hybrid journals to convert to fully open access. Journals recently converted include Human Vaccines & Immunotherapeutics, RNA Biology, and Platelets.
Readership, reach and impact
A wealth of additional detail about open access articles supported by the Jisc agreement is presented in the report, including:
432% increase in OA articles between 2020 and 2022.
16.2 million article downloads, including 3.5 million in the US.
Articles published OA via the agreement received an average of 2.18 scholarly citations, whereas non-OA articles by researchers at the same institutions had 1.33 citations.
499 agreement articles cited in governmental, intergovernmental, and think tank policy documents.
4,170 news stories about supported articles by 1,140 outlets in 70 countries.
Over 600 institutions around the world are now making the transition to open access with the support of Taylor & Francis, through more than 25 transformative agreements. In 2021-22 these TAs enabled researchers to publish 21,000+ OA articles in Taylor & Francis journals.
Transformative agreements require substantial investment in resources, system development, and capabilities at both publishers and institutions. However, the evidence presented in the new report is that the result of this investment is a significant boost to research reach and impact.
Read the full report: Accelerating open access in the UK: How our partnership with Jisc is boosting research impact
END
Significant acceleration of humanities and social sciences open access through Taylor & Francis and Jisc Transformative Agreement
Six-fold increase in OA articles by HSS researchers at participating UK institutions
2023-06-19
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
A probiotic could help mitigate mercury absorption in the gut
2023-06-18
Houston, TX – New research by a team at Pennsylvania State University suggests that microbes in the human gut could be harnessed to block absorption of toxic metals like mercury and help the body absorb useful nutritional ones, like iron. The group presents their findings at ASM Microbe 2023, the annual meeting of the American Society for Microbiology.
Methylmercury, a neurotoxin, is particularly worrisome, said Daniela Betancurt-Anzola, a graduate student at Penn State who led the new study. It ...
An oral probiotic can treat dry eye disease
2023-06-18
Houston, TX – In a study by a research group at Baylor College of Medicine, oral administration of a commercially available probiotic bacterial strain was found to improve dry eye disease in an animal model. The findings were presented at ASM Microbe 2023, the annual meeting of the American Society for Microbiology.
Dry eye, a common condition in which tears produced by the eye can’t keep the eye adequately lubricated, afflicts approximately 1 in 20 people in the United States. It can cause eye stinging and burning, inflammation, blurry vision and light sensitivity. Extreme cases can result in damage ...
People with alcohol use disorder impaired after heavy drinking, despite claims of higher tolerance
2023-06-18
While heavy drinkers can tolerate a certain amount of alcohol better than light or moderate drinkers, the concept of “holding your liquor” is more nuanced than commonly believed, according to new research from the University of Chicago.
The researchers conducted the study with three groups of young adults in their 20s with different drinking patterns. They found that drinkers with alcohol use disorder (or AUD, traditionally known as alcoholism) displayed less impairment on fine motor and cognitive tasks than light or heavy social drinkers after consuming a standard intoxicating dose—equivalent ...
Social isolation linked to reduced bone quality in males, mouse study finds
2023-06-18
Social isolation may negatively impact bone health, suggests a study conducted in mice being presented Sunday at ENDO 2023, the Endocrine Society’s annual meeting in Chicago, Ill.
“Social isolation is a potent form of psychosocial stress and is a growing public health concern, particularly among older adults,” said lead researcher Rebecca Mountain, Ph.D., of MaineHealth Institute for Research in Scarborough, Maine. “Even prior to the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, which has significantly increased the prevalence of isolation and loneliness, researchers have been concerned about a rising ‘epidemic ...
Prompt testosterone treatment improves mental health of transgender, gender-diverse people
2023-06-18
Receiving rapid access to testosterone therapy reduced feelings of gender dysphoria and led to a clinically significant reduction in depression as well as a 50% reduction in suicidality among transgender and gender diverse adults, according to research being presented Sunday at ENDO 2023, the Endocrine Society’s annual meeting in Chicago, Ill.
“This is the world-first randomized clinical trial supporting the significant benefits of testosterone in reducing gender dysphoria, depression and suicidality in trans individuals desiring commencement of testosterone,” said Brendan Nolan, M.B.B.S., F.R.A.C.P., a Ph.D. candidate at ...
Single hospital study finds transgender teenagers rarely choose to discontinue hormone therapy
2023-06-18
A three-year-long retrospective cohort study of a single Atlanta hospital’s patient population found transgender and gender-diverse teenagers rarely chose to discontinue gender-affirming hormone therapy, according to a study being presented Sunday at ENDO 2023, the Endocrine Society’s annual meeting in Chicago, Ill.
Among 82 transgender and gender-diverse adolescents treated at an academic pediatric endocrinology center from beginning of 2016 to end of 2018, only three chose to halt gender-affirming hormone therapy. None of them resumed identifying as their assigned sex at birth. One participant stopped hormonal therapy due to insurance ...
Radioactive iodine or surgery associated with increased survival in hyperthyroidism
2023-06-17
Hyperthyroidism treatment like radioactive iodine or surgery was associated with a decreased risk for death, according to research being presented Saturday at ENDO 2023, the Endocrine Society’s annual meeting in Chicago.
“Hyperthyroidism or an overactive thyroid gland is common, affecting up to 3% of the population, and is associated with long-term adverse cardiac and metabolic consequences. The optimal treatment choice remains unclear,” said Kristien Boelaert, M.D., Ph.D., a professor of endocrinology from the University of Birmingham in the United Kingdom.
Boelaert and colleagues identified 55,318 patients ...
Drug-resistant Candida auris infection rates continue to rise
2023-06-17
Houston, TX – Candida auris, an emerging fungal pathogen resistant to many antimicrobial agents, continues to threaten U.S. public health. Researchers at bioMérieux Inc. conducted a retrospective analysis of blood cultures positive for C. auris and found an upsurge in detection of this pathogenic yeast between 2021 and 2023. The average detection rate of 0.014% before October 2022 (July 2020 to September 2022) rose to 0.057% after October 2022 (October 2022 to March 2023). They presented their findings at ASM Microbe 2023, the annual meeting of the American Society for Microbiology.
The researchers investigated changes in C. auris infection rates geographically and over ...
Treatment with enzyme inhibitor can help combat antimicrobial resistance
2023-06-17
Houston, TX – New research by investigators in Ghent, Belgium shows that intravenous treatment with MK-3402, a metallo-beta-lactamase inhibitor, can be an effective strategy in fighting antimicrobial resistance. The findings are presented at ASM Microbe 2023, the annual meeting of the American Society for Microbiology.
Antimicrobial resistance is a major threat to public health. Some bacteria are resistant to treatment because they produce the enzyme metallo-beta-lactamase, which make a certain class ...
Better tests needed to identify Candida auris susceptibility
2023-06-17
Houston, TX – Matching an infection with Candida auris, a pathogenic yeast, to an effective antifungal is a critical clinical decision. That decision relies on susceptibility testing, but commercially available antifungal tests perform poorly for many treatments, researchers at Indiana University and Indiana University Health have found. The investigators, who tested the accuracy of 4 available tests for use with C. auris, present their findings at ASM Microbe 2023, the annual meeting of the American Society for Microbiology.
C. ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Opening borders for workers: Abe’s profound influence on Japan’s immigration regime
How skills from hospitality and tourism can propel careers beyond the industry
Research shows managers of firms handling recalls should review media scrutiny before deciding whether to lobby
New model system for the development of potential active substances used in condensate modifying drugs
How to reduce social media stress by leaning in instead of logging off
Pioneering research shows sea life will struggle to survive future global warming
In 10 seconds, an AI model detects cancerous brain tumor often missed during surgery
Burden of RSV–associated hospitalizations in US adults, October 2016 to September 2023
Repurposing semaglutide and liraglutide for alcohol use disorder
IPK-led research team provides insights into the pangenome of barley
New route to fluorochemicals: fluorspar activated in water under mild conditions
Microbial load can influence disease associations
Three galactic “red monsters” in the early Universe
First ever study finds sexual and gender minority physicians and residents have higher levels of burnout, lower professional fulfillment
Astronomers discover mysterious ‘Red Monster’ galaxies in the early Universe
The secrets of fossil teeth revealed by the synchrotron: a long childhood is the prelude to the evolution of a large brain
Obesity-fighting drugs may reduce alcohol consumption in individuals with alcohol use disorder
Does AI improve doctors’ diagnoses? Study puts it to the test
Extreme weather accelerates nitrate pollution in groundwater
Burden of liver cancer attributable to hepatitis B and alcohol globally, in China, and for five sociodemographic index regions from 1990 to 2021
Lehigh partners with North Carolina A&T to enhance flood damage mapping with AI and advanced radar
2024 AAAS Kavli Science Journalism Award winners named
Collaborative of prominent academic institutions launches groundbreaking healthcare AI challenge
American Federation for Aging Research announces 2024 AFAR grants for junior faculty
Potential single-dose smallpox and mpox vaccine moves forward
Mass General Brigham Gene and Cell Therapy Institute names Spark Grant recipients
New discovery may lead to more effective treatment for cardiovascular disease
Developing advanced recycling technology to restore spent battery cathode materials
An advance toward inhalable mRNA medications, vaccines
A step toward safer X-rays with new detector technology
[Press-News.org] Significant acceleration of humanities and social sciences open access through Taylor & Francis and Jisc Transformative AgreementSix-fold increase in OA articles by HSS researchers at participating UK institutions