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Introduction to f1000Research. [Name of institution/audience, month and year] [ Your name ] [Your title/position and institution]. What is F1000Research ? Transparent post-publication peer review Data sharing and publication Article types General information Other services from F1000.
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Introduction to f1000Research [Name of institution/audience, month and year] [Your name] [Your title/position and institution]
What is F1000Research? Transparent post-publication peer review Data sharing and publication Article types General information Other services from F1000 Overview
F1000Research is an Open Science publishing platform for life scientists, offering immediate publication and transparent refereeing, avoiding editorial bias and ensuring the inclusion of all source data. F1000Research has a prestigious international Advisory Panel of more than 200 of the most eminent names in biology and medicine, and over 1,100 expert Editorial Board members. What is F1000Research?
Immediate publication Transparent refereeing No editorial bias Data included Indexed in PubMed Key features of F1000Research
Most journals publish papers after they pass peer review. The peer review process can take months – sometimes years. After rejection, start over again with another journal. This delays publication. The publication process
Can be scooped during review process No recent published work to show for funding applications Lab members leave during revision process, and paper may never be published if the project is abandoned. Slows down research progress Frustrating... Publication delay is a problem
F1000Research articles are published online after an in-house pre-refereeing check, on average, within 6 working days. Peer review and revisions are carried out publicly. Invited referees judge whether the work is scientifically sound. Articles with sufficient positive referee reports are indexed in PubMed. The publication process
All referee names are visible. REFEREE reports are public Referee reports and author comments are visible to anyone.
Visible discussion between referees and authors puts paper in context. Reduces bias amongst referees Referees can take credit for their hard work and demonstrate experience as a reviewer. Studies suggest open refereeing improves quality of review. (See e.g. http://f1000.com/posters/browse/summary/1094564 for supporting evidence) Benefits of transparent review
Approved Approved with reservations Not approved Referee scores
Articles with sufficient positive evaluations are indexed in PubMed, Scopus, and Embase. Indexed papers or Minimal requirements for indexing
Citations to F1000Research papers point to a particular version. Example citation: Spence J, Titov N, Johnston L et al. (2013) Internet-delivered eyemovement desensitization and reprocessing (iEMDR): an open trial [v2; ref status: indexed, http://f1000r.es/zr] F1000Research 2013, 2:79 (doi: 10.12688/f1000research.2-79.v2) If a paper has been updated since it was cited, and readers land on an outdated version of an article, a pop-up message on the article page makes readers aware that there is a newer version: Citing F1000Research papers
Authors of an F1000Research paper can always update their paper, even after it has been indexed. Each version will be sent out to referees for peer review, and all versions of a paper are linked to each other. Amended papers have one of three possible labels: Types of amendments Authors responded to referee or community feedback and amended their article resulting in a new version. Authors updated the article following minor developments.(For example, papers about software can be updated when the software itself is updated.) A new article that follows a previous article, such as an annual update to a review, opinion piece, or systematic review.
“[W]e evaluated the replication of data analyses in 18 articles on microarray-based gene expression profiling published in Nature Genetics in 2005–2006...We reproduced two analyses in principle and six partially or with some discrepancies; ten could not be reproduced. The main reason for failure to reproduce was data unavailability.” Ioannidis, J. P. A. et al.Repeatability of published microarray gene expression analyses. Nature Genetics41, 149–55 (2009) Data sharing improves reproducibility of research
Reproduction/validation of research Getting priority on the data (prove that you found it first) Testing additional hypotheses Teaching Integration with other data sets Increase efficiency, drive new knowledge discovery Funder requirement Academic credit Why share your data?
“Reports of findings of new research are always accompanied by the complete dataset on which they are based, provided in a form enabling confirmation or reuse of the data by other researchers.” from http://f1000research.com F1000Research requires all data to be included
Full data integration with research papers Data sets within paper are citable and downloadable.
Research Articles Original findings in biology and medicine Null/negative findings and replication/refutation findings are also encouraged. Data Articles A dataset (or set of datasets) together with the associated methods/protocol Case Reports Method Articles Articles from a Poster Observation Articles Short Research Articles Correspondence Commentaries / Opinion Reviews / Systematic Reviews Article types accepted by F1000Research
Regular Discounts 50% discount on APCs for referees (within 12 months after refereeing) 10% discount for subscribers (personal or via institute) to F1000Prime HINARI/AGORA waivers for low-income countries Article Processing Charges
Speed of publication Post-publication peer review means that your article can be published within a week. Transparent peer review reduces bias and improves quality of reviews Revise or update your article after publication Newer versions of the paper are linked to previous versions. Help the wider scientific community by sharing data Get credit for a wider range of work Short research articles, data articles, observations, replications, refutations, or negative results are hard to publish elsewhere. Why Publish with F1000Research?
http://blog.f1000research.com News from the journal Discussions about open access, open science, and peer review Interviews F1000Research blog
@F1000Research https://www.facebook.com/F1000Research http://google.com/+F1000Research http://www.linkedin.com/groups?gid=4267793 Follow F1000research
F1000 specialists F1000 Specialists - a global network of science communication enthusiasts helping to develop innovative publishing tools and educate life science researchers about novel tools from F1000. To find out more and to apply visit http://f1000.com/specialists
f1000posters • F1000Posters (http://f1000.com/posters) is a unique open access repository for posters and slide presentations in biology and medicine. This permanent, structured environment keeps researchers’ work visible long after a meeting has ended and maximizes the return on the time, effort and money invested in creating each presentation. • Free to access and free to deposit • Visibility for your research beyond scientific meetings • Enables peers to provide feedback on early work • The majority of leading publishers do not consider posters deposited in F1000Posters to be prior publication, so you can still publish the work as a paper. See: http://f1000.com/posters/journalresponses
F1000Prime (http://f1000.com/prime) is an in-depth directory of top articles in biology and medicine, as recommended by a Faculty of nearly 6,000 experts, assisted by over 5,000 associates. Covers over 40 disciplines and more than 3,700 journals. Articles are rated and expert commentaries explain their importance. Over 150,000 recommendations. On average, 1,500 new recommendations are contributed by the Faculty each month. Subscription service (via institute or personal subscription). f1000Prime
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