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Suggested Citation:"Appendix A Workshop Agenda." National Research Council. 2005. Are Chemical Journals Too Expensive and Inaccessible?: A Workshop Summary to the Chemical Sciences Roundtable. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/11288.
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Appendix A
Workshop Agenda

ARE CHEMICAL JOURNALS TOO EXPENSIVE AND INACCESSIBLE?

A Workshop Organized by the Chemical Sciences Roundtable

National Research Council

THE NATIONAL ACADEMIES

2101 Constitution Avenue, N.W.

Lecture Room

Washington, D.C.

October 25-26, 2004

MONDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2004

8:00

Introductions and Opening Remarks, Ned Heindel, Lehigh University

Session I

Context and Overview

Ned Heindel, Chair

8:15

Arnold Thackray, President, Chemical Heritage Foundation

Session II

What Are the Unique Scientific Journal Needs of Chemists and Chemical Engineers?

Michael Holland, Chair

9:15

Robert Bovenschulte, American Chemical Society

10:05

Comments and Presentations by Panel Participants

  • Christopher Reed, University of California-Riverside

  • Patrick Jackson, Elsevier

  • Andrea Twiss-Brooks, University of Chicago

  • Gordon Hammes, Duke University

11:25

Break

11:40

Discussion of Issues by Panel and Workshop Participants

12:30

Lunch

Session III

Are Chemists and Chemical Engineers Receiving Needed Access to Chemical Journals?

Ned Heindel, Chair

1:35

Ulrich Pöschl, Technical University of Munich

2:20

Comments and Presentations by Panel Participants

  • Lou Ann Di Nallo, Bristol-Myers Squibb

  • Michael Doyle, University of Maryland

3:00

Break

Suggested Citation:"Appendix A Workshop Agenda." National Research Council. 2005. Are Chemical Journals Too Expensive and Inaccessible?: A Workshop Summary to the Chemical Sciences Roundtable. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/11288.
×

3:15

Comments and Presentations by Panel Participants

  • R. Stephen Berry, University of Chicago

  • Brian Simboli,1 Lehigh University

  • Peter Gregory, The Royal Society of Chemistry

4:10

Discussion of Issues by Panel and Workshop Participants

5:00

Reception

Evening Presentation

 

The Green and Gold Roads to Maximizing Research Access and Impact: Don’t Confuse Them

Michael P. Doyle, Chair

6:00

Stevan Harnad, University of Quebec, Montreal

TUESDAY, OCTOBER 26, 2004

Session IV

What New Approaches Can Be Made to Address Chemical Sciences and Engineering Journal Needs?

Charles P. Casey, Chair

8:00

Bridget C. Coughlin, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS)

Nicholas Cozzarelli, University of California-Berkeley, PNAS

9:05

Comments and Presentations by Panel Participants

  • Martin Apple, Council of Science Society Presidents

  • Michael Keller, Stanford University Press

  • Martin Blume, American Physical Society

  • Vivian Siegel, Public Library of Science

  • Anna Gold, Massachusetts Institute of Technology

10:45

Break

Summary

11:10

Discussion of Issues by Workshop Participants

11:45

Concluding Remarks

12:00

Adjourn

1  

NOTE: Brian Simboli was unable to attend, but his presentation was made available to participants.

Suggested Citation:"Appendix A Workshop Agenda." National Research Council. 2005. Are Chemical Journals Too Expensive and Inaccessible?: A Workshop Summary to the Chemical Sciences Roundtable. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/11288.
×
Page 29
Suggested Citation:"Appendix A Workshop Agenda." National Research Council. 2005. Are Chemical Journals Too Expensive and Inaccessible?: A Workshop Summary to the Chemical Sciences Roundtable. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/11288.
×
Page 30
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On October 25-26, 2005, the Chemical Sciences Roundtable held a workshop to explore issues involving those who use and contribute to chemical literature, as well as those who publish and disseminate chemical journals. As a follow-up to the workshop, a summary was written to capture the presentations and discussions that occurred during the workshop. As a forum to discuss chemistry journals within the larger context of scientific, technical and medical journal publishing, the workshop covered whether chemists and chemical engineers have unique journal needs and, if so, whether these needs are being met in the current journal publishing environment. Workshop participants also tackled how open access publishing might be applied to the chemical literature, such as to provide authors more freedom to distribute their articles after publication and allowing free access to chemical literature archives.

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