Results 131 to 140 of about 44,987 (258)

Self-archiving survey questions

open access: yes, 2005
Anita Coleman, DLIST 2005 Survey - Self-Archiving and Scholarly Communication Behaviors in LIS - Instrument, self-archived November 25, 2005.
openaire   +1 more source

Beyond a number game: Flat team structures improve inclusion and performance in diverse scientific teams

open access: yesJournal of the Association for Information Science and Technology, EarlyView.
Abstract The promises and perils about scientific team diversity are still debated in the scholarly literature, partly because the importance of underrepresented groups is not fully recognized or valued. In this paper, we summarize two perspectives on team diversity in science: horizontal differences and vertical disparity. Horizontal differences refer
Huimin Xu   +8 more
wiley   +1 more source

Spanish introduction to self-archiving

open access: yes, 2005
Alice Keefer, Los autores y el self-archiving, Thinkepi, October 25, 2005. A Spanish introduction to self-archiving.
openaire   +1 more source

Sleep‐trackers in the wild: A faceted taxonomy for information and interaction design

open access: yesJournal of the Association for Information Science and Technology, EarlyView.
Abstract Consumer‐grade sleep‐tracking technologies (CSTs) have brought sleep into everyday data practices, reframing it from a clinical concern into a site of personal optimization and reflection. Yet existing taxonomies of sleep‐tracking often medicalize users and overlook the complexity of sleep‐tracking technologies. This paper presents SleepTax, a
Sanonda Datta Gupta   +2 more
wiley   +1 more source

Self-archiving policies worldwide

open access: yes, 2008
Hélène Bosc, Le droit des chercheurs à mettre leurs résultats de recherche en libre accès : appropriation des archives ouvertes par différentes communautés dans le monde [ <i> Researchers&#39; Right to Self-Archive Their Articles In Open Access Repositories: Evolving Policy Worldwide </i> ], a preprint self-archived November 22, 2008.
openaire   +1 more source

When AI outputs become documents: Documentation activity in human–AI dialogue

open access: yesJournal of the Association for Information Science and Technology, EarlyView.
Abstract Large language models (LLMs) generate texts that increasingly circulate as documents in knowledge infrastructures, yet their documentary status remains theoretically underdetermined. Unlike traditional documents, LLM outputs lack identifiable authorship, stable provenance, or testimonial grounding.
Sascha Donner
wiley   +1 more source

Connecting authorship with self-archiving

open access: yes, 2006
The University of Rochester has received a grant from the US federal Institute of Museum and Library Services to improve web-based writing tools and automate the deposit of resulting theses, dissertations, and research articles in the author&#39;s institutional repository.
openaire   +1 more source

Affective dimensions in the information behavior of forcibly displaced people: A literature review. An Annual Review of Information Science and Technology (ARIST) paper

open access: yesJournal of the Association for Information Science and Technology, EarlyView.
Abstract This review analyzed 241 scholarly articles published between 2010 and 2025 in information science venues to examine how affect shapes refugees' information behavior during forced migration and to identify additional contextual factors. It identifies seven affective dimensions: anxiety, shame and stigma, grief and loss, frustration, (mis)trust,
Maja Krtalić, Lilach Alon
wiley   +1 more source

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