Thursday, March 8, 2012

The European Business Schools Women on Board Initiative

Several european business schools (including INSEAD) have come up with a list of:
"3500 board-ready women to bring Europe into the 21st Century and support European Commission Vice President Reding’s initiative to shatter the glass ceiling for women in Europe’s publicly listed corporation’s board rooms. "
Participating schools:

Press release

Monday, February 6, 2012

Coercive Citation in Academic Publishing

A study was released in Science magazine on February 3rd: Coercive Citation in Academic Publishing. 
The authors analyzed 6672 responses from a survey sent to researchers in economics, sociology, psychology, and multiple business disciplines (marketing, management, finance, information systems, and accounting) as well as data from 832 journals in those same disciplines 
The survey results are available in the  supporting material along with a list of journals identified as 'coercers' by survey respondents. 
  1. Journal of Business Research 
  2. Journal of Retailing 
  3. Marketing Science 
  4. Journal of Banking and Finance 
  5. Information and Management 
  6. Applied Economics 
  7. Academy of Management Journal 
  8. Group and Organization Management 
  9. Journal of Consumer Psychology 
  10. Psychology and Marketing 
Conclusion from the paper:
Overall, the empirical results from the author survey and the journal-based data tell a consistent story. Coercive self-citation exists and is more common in the business disciplines than in economics, sociology, and psychology

Tuesday, January 31, 2012

Elsevier under fire...again -- Updated

Update February 28, 2012:

  • In a press release, Elsevier announces that it withdraws its support for the Research Work Act (a bill that was threatening open public access of federally funded research).
  • In parallel it has announced to the Mathematics research community that it would reduce the price of access to articles in its math journals to no more than $11 per article and that it would make the articles in “14 core mathematics journals” free to the public four years after they are first published
This Inside HigherEd article also mentions that hours after Elsevier pulled out of the RWA, lawmakers killed the bill entirely.


This time the action comes from University of Cambrige mathematician Tim Gowers (Fields Medal winner in 1998) Here is his entire blog post: Elsevier — my part in its downfall
I am not only going to refuse to have anything to do with Elsevier journals from now on, but I am saying so publicly.
His call has been answered and a public website The Cost of Knowledge has already received over a thousand signatures from researchers all over the world.


Academics have protested against Elsevier's business practices for years with little effect. The main objections are these:
  1. They charge exorbitantly high prices for their journals.
  1. They sell journals in very large "bundles," so libraries must buy a large set with many unwanted journals, or none at all. Elsevier thus makes huge profits by exploiting their essential titles, at the expense of other journals.
  1. They support measures such as SOPA, PIPA and the Research Works Act, that aim to restrict the free exchange of information.

Monday, January 23, 2012

Apple enters the E-textbook market

While this is initially targeted to the high school market, there are obvious implications and potential for Higher Education.
NEW YORK—January 19, 2012—Apple® today announced iBooks® 2 for iPad®, featuring iBooks textbooks, an entirely new kind of textbook that’s dynamic, engaging and truly interactive. iBooks textbooks offer iPad users gorgeous, fullscreen textbooks with interactive animations, diagrams, photos, videos, unrivaled navigation and much more. [...]Leading education services companies including Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, McGraw-Hill and Pearson will deliver educational titles on the iBookstore℠ with most priced at $14.99 or less [...].
Read the full press release

from Apple site.
For reactions to the announcement (Chronicle of Highed Ed. article.)

Tuesday, January 10, 2012

Can Tweets Predict Citations?

Interesting article in the Journal of Medical Internet Research:
Can Tweets Predict Citations? Metrics of Social Impact Based on Twitter and Correlation with Traditional Metrics of Scientific Impact

The author, Gunther Eysenbach , concludes: 
Tweets can predict highly cited articles within the first 3 days of article publication. Social media activity either increases citations or reflects the underlying qualities of the article that also predict citations, but the true use of these metrics is to measure the distinct concept of social impact. Social impact measures based on tweets are proposed to complement traditional citation metrics. The proposed twimpact factor may be a useful and timely metric to measure uptake of research findings and to filter research findings resonating with the public in real time.'
 

Monday, December 19, 2011

Twitter for Academics, a 'how to' guide from LSE

Can anything of academic value ever be said in just 140 characters?

The LSE Public Policy Group and the LSE Impact of Social Sciences blog seeks to answer this question, and show academics and researchers how to get the most out of the micro-blogging site. The Guide is designed to lead the novice through the basics of Twitter but also provide tips on how it can aid the teaching and research of the more experienced academic tweeter. [full press release]

Monday, December 12, 2011

WRDS community


  .

WRDS is pleased to announce a new WRDS Community & WRDS Research Page

WRDS Community offers the global network of WRDS users a place to share ideas, collaborate, find colleagues with similar interests, link to their publications on SSRN and discuss upcoming research trends. It’s designed to be an interactive knowledge exchange where you can share expertise, network with other top-level financial data researchers and learn from peers.

Tuesday, November 29, 2011

Rent an Article!

Cambridge Journals has announced an article rental offer providing "Low-cost access to peer-reviewed research papers from leading academic journals"

Article Rental is open to anyone, anywhere in the world no subscription to any Cambridge title is required.

After registering on the site users may purchase articles online for just €4.49, $5.99 or £3.99 for a 24h access only. The PDF files cannot be downloaded, printed, or cut-and-pasted.

Cambridge Journals

Thursday, November 17, 2011

Google Scholar Citations open to all!

Use Google Scholar Citation to
  • Track citations to your publications 
  • View publications by colleagues 
  • Appear in Google Scholar search results
From the announcement:
Here’s how it works. You can quickly identify which articles are yours, by selecting one or more groups of articles that are computed statistically. Then, we collect citations to your articles, graph them over time, and compute your citation metrics - the widely used h-index; the i-10 index, which is simply the number of articles with at least ten citations; and, of course, the total number of citations to your articles. Each metric is computed over all citations and also over citations in articles published in the last five years.
You will need to login with a Google account, by default your profile is private but you can decide to make it public.