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Items where Author is "Neylon, Cameron"

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Hendricks, Ginny, Kramer, Bianca, Maccallum, Catriona J., Manghi, Paolo and Neylon, Cameron (2021) Now is the time to work together toward open infrastructures for scholarly metadata. Impact of Social Sciences Blog (27 Oct 2021). Blog Entry.

Montgomery, Lucy and Neylon, Cameron (2018) In a globalised and networked world, what is the unique value a university can bring? Introducing open knowledge institutions. Impact of Social Sciences Blog (17 Sep 2018). Website.

Montgomery, Lucy, Neylon, Cameron, Ozaygen, Alkim and Leaver, Tama (2018) How small open access monograph presses can make the most of an increasingly rich data landscape. Impact of Social Sciences Blog (31 Jul 2018). Website.

Neylon, Cameron (2017) Blacklists are technically infeasible, practically unreliable and unethical. Period. Impact of Social Sciences Blog (21 Feb 2017). Website.

Neylon, Cameron, Roberts, David Michael and Wilson, Mark C (2016) What do mathematicians think about their journals? peer reviewquality tops list of stated issues. Impact of Social Sciences Blog (22 Jun 2016). Website.

Neylon, Cameron (2016) Taking Culture Seriously: how can we build positive change and coherent practice within our research communities? Impact of Social Sciences Blog (28 Apr 2016). Website.

Neylon, Cameron (2014) Fork, merge and crowd-sourcing data curation: tools for collective data processing and analysis. Impact of Social Sciences Blog (05 May 2014). Website.

Neylon, Cameron (2012) Leading or following: Data and rankings must inform strategic decision making, not drive them. Impact of Social Sciences Blog (05 Dec 2012). Website.

Neylon, Cameron (2012) Tracking research into practice: are nurses on Twitter a good case study? Impact of Social Sciences Blog (03 Aug 2012). Website.

Neylon, Cameron (2012) How can scholarly societies survive as we move ever closer to Open Access? Impact of Social Sciences Blog (25 Jul 2012). Website.

Neylon, Cameron (2012) Added value in publishing: I don’t think those words mean what you think they mean. Impact of Social Sciences Blog (11 Jun 2012). Website.

Neylon, Cameron (2012) The real cost of overpaying for journals is that we put highly skilled research scientists in an office looking at science rather than doing it. Impact of Social Sciences Blog (01 Mar 2012). Website.

Neylon, Cameron (2012) We may be closer to ‘Peak Elsevier’, but investors and the stock market need to be spooked by bad publicity before the company’s practices change. Impact of Social Sciences Blog (20 Feb 2012). Website.

Neylon, Cameron (2011) Impact has a bad name among many researchers, but thinking of impact as re-use could be key to uniting both funders and researchers. Impact of Social Sciences Blog (28 Nov 2011). Website.

This list was generated on Thu Mar 28 18:32:32 2024 GMT.