5. Henry Oldenburg (1615—1677) the first Secretary
of the Royal Society and the first editor of
The Philosophical Transactions of the Royal
Society (Phil. Trans). It was established in 1665.
http://www.flickr.com/photos/salyangoz/413603194/
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Henry_Oldenburg.jpg
6. Vilnius Gediminas Technical University
Lithuanian Physical Society
Association of Lithuanian Serials
Lithuanian Academy of Sciences
Publishing House Technologija
Vytautas Magnus University
7. The Lithuanian Academy of Sciences is the only
governmental institution which is not a
university that publishes 12 journals.
Currently, only 57
Lithuanian journals
receive a partial state
funding from the
Academy (funding
will last until 2014).
8. What do organizations outside
<Lithuania> need to know to do
business with <Lithuania>
The Law on Public Procurement regulates the use of
funds in state institutions including universities.
The budget cycle starts in January and ends in
December.
Only small tenders can be conducted in the form of
an inquiry (asking no less than three suppliers to
submit a proposal), while larger ones require for an
open tender.
A successful tenderer can sign a contract for no
longer than three years. Once the contractual period
is over, all procurement procedures have to be
9. Which CrossRef Services do we
participate in?
VGTU Press started CrossRef services in 2008
In order to register DOIs, we restructured the journal
websites following the rules set by CrossRef, which
resulted in bigger visibility of VGTU journals on the
Internet.
Reference Linking is done in PDF files as VGTU
journals are not yet published in HTML format.
10. Which CrossRef Services do we
participate in?
VGTU Press staff uses The Simple Text Query
and recommends it to journals‘ editorials and
authors
11. Which CrossRef Services do we
participate in?
VGTU Press launched
CitedBy with the widget
written by our programmer in
2011
Some issues we encounter:
local language and lack of
DOIs metadata for local
12. Which CrossRef Services do we
participate in?
CrossCheck has been used by all editors of
the VGTU journals since spring of 2009.
CrossCheck is actively promoted in events of
the Association of Lithuanian Serials.
This year, the Lithuanian Research Council
gave a small grant to the Association for
promotion of the system.
CrossCheck is also used by previously
mentioned 57 journals, the publishing of
which is partially funded from the budget.
14. To what types of content are you
assigning CrossRef DOIs?
How many of each?
Journals articles
Books – 170 annually (about 500 in general)
Some of conference proceedings
15. What are some of the benefits you
have seen from participating in
CrossRef?
With each new CrossRef service we implemented,
we have learned a lot about scholarly publishing
Minimum investments are required to improve journal
circulation and visibility in the global academic
community if CrossRef and its initiative are followed.
With CrossRef we can always be sure to be up to
date with the latest innovations that are important to
our journals and their authors.
16. The JournalSeek
database contains
99,408 journals from
5,526 different
publishers
Small publishers
produce about 70%
of research journals
globally, so we rule.
We rule only if
we are initiative and
innovative.
17. We are happy to have
CrossRef and its team
Eleonora Dagienė
eleonora@vgtu.lt
Hinweis der Redaktion
Today I represent Vilnius Gediminas Technical University Press and the Association of Lithuanian Serials. They are both proud to be members of CrossRef.I understand that some of my thoughts or comments might seem evident or simple; however this experience comes from working at VGTU Press as well as from collaborating with a number of academic publishers in Lithuania and Eastern Europe.
VGTU Press publishes 19 research peer-reviewed journals: 12 are co-published with Taylor and Francis whereas 7 — without any partners. We also annually publish about 170 academic books (textbooks, monographs, doctoral theses, study books, etc.) both in print and electronic format as well.Mostly universities develop and oversee the traditional scholarly publishing in Lithuania. They receive practically no funding for publishing from the state or commercial organisations. In addition, even though researchers produce numerous books, there are no separate trade publishers in Lithuania. The size of the Lithuanian market might be the reason. Due to the system of assessment, the Lithuanian researchers are forced to submit their articles to prestigious journals often published by foreign publishers. To survive, the Lithuanian research journals are looking for not only foreign authors but publishing partnership as well.
There are more than 250 peer-reviewed research journals publishedin Lithuania. The Association of Lithuanian Serials is an umbrella organisation for approximately 90 Lithuanian research journals. The current data shows that 210 research journals have at least websites and could be findon the Internet in 2012. However, publishing quality is hardly improving. The Lithuanian journals were well rated by well-known databases. There are about 30 Lithuanian journals in the Web of Science and about 37 in Scopus. We could say that this shows the content quality of journals.
In contrast with the UK, where journal publishing has a deep traditions and journals are publicisedby experienced professional publishers, Lithuanian research journals’ publishing is in the hands of academics mostly. They are not only responsible for peer-reviewing and content managing, but also for language polishing, typesetting, copy-editing, printing, dissemination, on-line publication, etc. Obviously, the Lithuanian journals published by researchers are not properly presented on the Internet as e-publishing requires professional knowledge. However, when e-publishing has reached its maternity and started implementing alt-metrics and nano-publications, Lithuanian journals’ publishing is still there in the past.
Meanwhile, it was just recently that the many of the Lithuanian journals started registering DOIs. Yet the breakthrough has already taken place and the number of CrossRef members in Lithuania is growing fast with their e-publishing improving as well.it should be said that innovations have become essential in contemporary journal publishing; however, they require considerable financial and human resources which are usually problematic for small publishers in small countries. Fortunately, we have CrossRef. It is so much easier to follow the steps of organisation which is much more experienced in academic e-publishingand is confident.
Other scholarly societies publish only one or two journals each, thus publishing is only an additional activity. Only a few small private companies publish several academic journals.Currently, only 57 Lithuanian journals receive a partial state funding which will last until 2014. Unfortunately, this funding usually covers copy-editing and traditional typesetting only. The Lithuanian Research Council initiated a project for funding researchers involved in Open Access publishing. However, journals have to be highly rated.
The Law on Public Procurement regulates the use of funds in state institutions including universities.The budget cycle starts in January and ends in December. Only small tenders can be conducted in the form of an inquiry (asking no less than three suppliers to submit a proposal), while larger ones require for an open tender. A successful tenderer can sign a contract for no longer than three years. Once the contractual period is over, all procurement procedures have to be started again.
Although DOI implementation did not require huge investments, but are veryimportant for journals that are published on-line. In 2008, we had a primitive journals’ website created by VGTU IT specialists who were good at creating websites in general but were not aware of features required for research journal e-publishing and their importance for academics. I noticed that once our journal websites were restructured according to simple CrossRef requirements and, required indexing lines were added to metadata, the website attendance has increased (according to Google Analytics). My experience shows that help of a smart and skilful IT specialist is necessary to make the journalsystems to operate fluently. While only a detail-oriented and smart personis required to implement CrossRef Services for your journals.
Our staff predominantly consist of young employees, many of whom are students. This has both advantages and disadvantages. A young team is always happy to do something new; however, after graduation from university they tend to leave our team and we must go forward with the initiatives already started and new employees who have no knowledge in scholarly publishing. So we need supervising and guidance. It’s easy because we can direct them to the manuals, instructions, webinars of all the CrossRef services implemented in our journals. So we are going to implement as many CrossRef services as we are able to do.
We provide DOIs to all the journals’ articles, e-books, some conference proceedings and their articles, but not to tables and pictures just yet. I believe, we will do this in the future.
At the CrossMark Workshop yesterday I said that small publishers produce about 80% of research journals globally, so we rule. Yet I should say that we rule only if we are initiative and innovative.CrossRef will help us avoid useless investment, something which is really important for small publishers.