Summary:
Open Access and the Association Publisher: Dr. Martin Blume, the American
Physical Society
The American Physical Society (APS) publishes eight titles along with Physical Review Focus (a free service that provides lay-person
explanations of selected articles from the other APS journals) and two
open access journals, Physical Review
Special Topics: Accelerators and Beams (funded with institutional
sponsorship) and Physical Review Special Topics: Physics Education Research (funded
by author charges).
Blume gives a breakdown of submissions to APS journals:
about one third come from the
Blume states that the desire of the public to have speedy
access to discoveries in medicine is not matched in physics.
Blume notes that authors are free to put their articles in open access
preprint archives and to add updates after the APS peer review.
Current APS practices that are improving the speed of publication include
paperless submissions and refereeing and the decoupling of electronic and
paper production.
Blume turns his
attention to the economics of publishing and poses the question: What drives
prices and costs? Factors include:
the number of
submitted articles (in 2004, it was approximately 28,000)
the number of published articles (in 2004, it was approximately 16,000)
salaries and benefits
office costs, “business continuity”
servers, IT, tech
costs
In 2004, the APS
budget was $30 million.
Blume discusses the
APS
On the topic of
open access, Blume notes two possibilities.
In one version, articles are available without barriers, scattered across
the web. In a more desirable
version, a publisher’s content is completely available without barriers on the
publisher’s site. The latter model
presents challenges for cost recovery. Ways
to cover costs and increase open access include payment of publishing costs by
author or author’s institution, subscriptions, sponsorship, and voluntary
subscriber contributions.
APS is
experimenting with offering open access on a limited number of titles.
One title is funded by sponsorship, and one title requires authors to pay
a charge. Funding by author charges is meeting resistance, and Blume himself
feels that author charges are not the best use of researchers’ grant money.
In
his concluding comments, Blume lets us know that for the present, APS is not
pursuing open access beyond what they already do.
What is practical for small journals is not always practical for large
ones. Open access is not a moral imperative—it is just a different business model.
Blume closes with words of caution: do not risk the future on an untested
model.