« Ressources ESPO (en vrac) | Page d'accueil | Encore (et toujours) les relations possibles (probables) entre outils "sociaux" et bibliothèques »

dimanche, 19 août 2007

A propos de l'édition scientifique et de sa "cyberinfrastructure"

Au menu du dernier numéro du CTWatch Quarterly (vol. 3, n° 3, août 2007): The Coming Revolution in Scholarly Communications & Cyberinfrastructure

Introduction
Lee Dirks, Microsoft Corporation; Tony Hey, Microsoft Corporation

The Shape of the Scientific Article in The Developing Cyberinfrastructure
Clifford Lynch, Coalition for Networked Information (CNI)

Next-Generation Implications of Open Access
Paul Ginsparg, Cornell University

Web 2.0 in Science
Timo Hannay, Nature Publishing

Reinventing Scholarly Communication for the Electronic Age
J. Lynn Fink, University of California, San Diego; Philip E. Bourne, University of California, San Diego

Interoperability for the Discovery, Use, and Re-Use of Units of Scholarly Communication
Herbert Van de Sompel, Los Alamos National Laboratory; Carl Lagoze, Cornell University

Incentivizing the Open Access Research Web: Publication-Archiving, Data-Archiving and Scientometrics
Tim Brody, University of Southampton, UK; Les Carr, University of Southampton, UK; Yves Gingras, Université du Québec à Montréal (UQAM); Chawki Hajjem, Université du Québec à Montréal (UQAM); Stevan Harnad, University of Southampton, UK; Université du Québec à Montréal (UQAM); Alma Swan, University of Southampton, UK; Key Perspectives

The Law as Cyberinfrastructure
Brian Fitzgerald, Queensland University of Technology, Australia; Kylie Pappalardo, Queensland University of Technology, Australia

Cyberinfrastructure For Knowledge Sharing
John Wilbanks, Scientific Commons

Trends Favoring Open Access
Peter Suber, Earlham College

Via liste Sigmetrics (S. Harnad)