Skip to content Skip to navigation

Scholarly Communication

Elsevier Access Suspended

Wed, July 10, 2019 9:50 AM

The University of California has been out of contract with Elsevier since January, but until now the publisher continued to allow access to 2019 articles via ScienceDirect. As of today, July 10, 2019 UC’s direct access to new Elsevier articles has been discontinued.

What is affected: Members of the UC community no longer have direct access to:

  • 2019 articles in all Elsevier journals
  • Older articles in certain journals (download the list)

What is not affected: Articles published before 2019 in most Elsevier journals (covering about 95% of historical usage) should continue to be available via ScienceDirect.

*Please note that the process for discontinuing access is complex, so access to specific journals or articles may fluctuate until Elsevier’s rollout of these changes is complete.*

The systemwide faculty Senate has encouraged stakeholders across UC to use alternative access methods or contact their campus library for assistance in obtaining articles, and to refrain from any new independent subscriptions to Elsevier journals at this time. “By ‘holding the line,’” the Senate leadership writes, “the UC can help change the system of scholarly communication for the betterment of all.”

How to get the articles you need

Information about other ways to access Elsevier articles is available on the library’s website and summarized below. There are several options — plus, the library is always here to help.

What happens next?

We will be carefully evaluating the impact of losing access to new articles on ScienceDirect over the coming months, and will do our best to ensure that you have access to the articles you need. Meanwhile, UC is hoping to reenter formal negotiations with Elsevier if the publisher indicates that they are willing to discuss a contract that integrates our goals of containing costs and facilitating open access to UC research.

If you have any questions or need help accessing an article, please don’t hesitate to contact the library at any time.

Haipeng Li, University Librarian
Kurt Schnier, Chair, Academic Senate
Teenie Matlock, Vice Provost for the Faculty
Maria DePrano, Chair, Committee on Library and Scholarly Communications

Updated "Starting Your Research Series" Library Tutorials

Mon, January 13, 2025 11:10 AM

 

Text: Updated Library Tutorials.

During Fall 2024, UC Merced librarians worked to update and refresh these tutorials, including adding upgrades to ensure that they meet current accessibility standards. These tutorials can be used as standalone assignments, or in conjunction with each other to meet your instruction needs. Import instructions are available on the Library website. You can also find them by searching ‘SYRS’ in Canvas Commons: 

Canvas Commons magnification of filter. Filtering to University of California, Merced.

Each tutorial module comes with a quiz for students to check their understanding of the content. Instructors can modify the quiz point values or unpublish them as needed to fit course needs. The tutorials are also available outside of CatCourses on the Library’s online research guides

In addition, the Library makes several other tutorials available through Canvas Commons. We also offer the Library DIY tutorials, which are videos and self-guided tutorials, and our online research guides include the “Learn About…” guides for various topics and skills. 

If you have questions or would like assistance, please contact the Research & Learning Services Unit at library@ucmerced.edu.  

Journal Open Access Lookup Tool (JOLT) Now Available

Sat, March 1, 2025 5:25 PM

With the Journal Open Access Lookup Tool (JOLT), UC authors can search for a journal title to determine if there is full open access fee coverage or a discount. JOLT is intended to make open access publishing support for UC authors easier to surface. To date, Open Access Publishing Agreements and Discounts information has been available at the Office of Scholarly Communication (OSC).

The California Digital Library (CDL) is actively seeking feedback on JOLT to increase its usefulness to authors. Email openaccessinquiries@ucop.edu with your suggestions.

JOLT in white text on navy blue background with gold bolt of lightening at upper left

Taylor & Francis Open Access Agreement

Sat, March 1, 2025 1:50 PM
Fri, September 20, 2024

Effective January 1, 2024, the University of California (UC) and Taylor & Francis entered into an agreement that provides financial support to UC corresponding authors who publish open access in Taylor & Francis journals. Authors at all ten UC campuses and the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (LBNL) are eligible for this support.

The UC libraries will cover open access publishing fees, also known as article processing charges (APCs), in full for UC corresponding authors who publish open access in Taylor & Francis journals. This agreement has two goals: (1) to support UC’s mission as a public university by making more UC-authored publications open to the world, and (2) to make it easier and more affordable for UC authors to publish open access.

Agreement Basics

What are the basic terms of the agreement?

The agreement runs from January 1, 2024, to December 31, 2027, and enables UC corresponding authors to publish in nearly 2,500 Taylor & Francis journals at no cost. The agreement also includes reading access to nearly 1,300 Taylor & Francis journals.

How does the agreement work?

Under the agreement, UC corresponding authors who publish open access in Taylor & Francis journals can do so at no cost to them. Open access fees, also called “article processing charges” (APCs), will be fully and automatically covered by the UC libraries for any author who chooses open access.

UC is shifting its investment from paying to read Taylor & Francis journals to paying based on UC authors publishing in Taylor & Francis journals. Based on careful modeling of UC publication rates, baseline fees have been established, with the amounts paid in bulk by UC. The exact amounts paid will be determined by UC corresponding author choices to publish open access. Cost controls have been put in place so that the total owed by UC in any year of the agreement is bounded.

Impact for Authors

Am I affected by this agreement?

Yes, if you are (1) a UC affiliate (faculty, lecturer, staff, graduate student, etc.) at any of UC’s ten campuses or LBNL, (2) you are the article’s corresponding author, and (3) you choose to publish your article as open access in a Taylor & Francis or Routledge Open Select journal.

Who is considered a corresponding author?

Taylor & Francis considers the corresponding author to be the person listed as the contact during the submission/production/publication process, and who is identified as “Author for correspondence” on the final published article.

In general, the corresponding author is the person who oversees the manuscript and correspondence during the publication process — from manuscript corrections and proofreading, to handling the revisions and re-submission of revised manuscripts up to the acceptance of the manuscripts. The corresponding author has the authority to act on behalf of all co-authors in all matters pertaining to publication of the manuscript including supplementary material. The corresponding author acts as the point of contact for any inquiries after the paper is published.

Which articles and types of publications are covered by this agreement?

This agreement covers all articles containing original research that are accepted for publication from January 1, 2024 through December 31, 2027. Other types of articles, such as editorials, announcements, and book reviews are not eligible under the agreement.

I published an article in 2024, but before the agreement was announced. Can I retroactively change my publishing decision?

Yes, you can. The agreement is retroactive to January 1, 2024. Authors who published open access between January 1, 2024, and the launch of the agreement workflow in September 2024 will be contacted by Taylor & Francis and offered a refund for any APCs already paid. Authors who published subscription access articles between January 1, 2024 and the launch of the agreement in September 2024 will be contacted by Taylor & Francis and given the option to change their articles to open access, with the APC fully covered by the new agreement.

Which Taylor & Francis journals are included in this agreement?

All Taylor & Francis hybrid and fully open access journals and Routledge Open Select journals are included in the agreement, with the exception of articles published in F1000, Peer J, and Dove Medical Press.

Article Payment Process

If I choose to publish open access, how do payments work?

Under the agreement, your APC will be fully and automatically covered by the UC libraries. After your article has been accepted in a Taylor & Francis journal, you will be notified by Taylor & Francis of the option to publish open access at no cost to you under the agreement.

To ensure that your article is properly flagged as eligible for open access coverage, it is recommended that you indicate your UC affiliation and/or use your UC email address during the submission process in the Taylor & Francis author portal.

Other than indicating your UC affiliation in the Taylor & Francis author portal and selecting the open access option, no action is needed by you as the corresponding author. You won’t receive an invoice nor will you need to seek approval from your campus library.

If you already published open access and paid the APC between January 1, 2024, and the launch of the agreement workflow in September 2024, you will be contacted by Taylor & Francis and offered a refund.

If you published under the subscription model between January 1, 2024, and the launch of the agreement workflow in September 2024, you will be contacted by Taylor & Francis and given the option to change your article to open access, with the APC fully covered by the new agreement.

More information can be found at the UC Office of Scholarly Communication Website, or by contacting Jerrold Shiroma, jshiroma@ucmerced.edu.

UC to End Funding Support for Open Access Publishing with IEEE in 2024; Reading Access Will Continue

Thu, October 19, 2023 4:20 PM

The University of California will end open access publishing support through its agreement with IEEE effective January 1, 2024. The UC libraries’ funding support for page charges will also end at that time. Reading access to IEEE publications will continue without interruption — essentially reverting to the type of agreement UC had with IEEE prior to the open access publishing pilot.

Since the pilot agreement began in July 2022, only 20 percent of UC authors publishing with IEEE have chosen to publish open access — far fewer than with UC’s other open access agreements — and of those who chose to publish open access, fewer contributed grant funds toward the open access fee than projected.

With the low number of UC authors choosing open access with IEEE, and the resulting financial costs under the structure of this particular pilot agreement, the data do not support its continuation. Cost containment has always been a top priority, and a metric against which all the University’s open access pilot agreements are evaluated. The decision to end funding support for publishing with IEEE was made by the UC Libraries in consultation with Faculty representatives from the Academic Senate, and supports that commitment to fiscal responsibility.

Even after UC’s funding support for publishing in IEEE journals ends, reading access to IEEE  publications will continue.

UC authors who publish in IEEE journals will also still be able to make their articles open access, but starting January 1, 2024, authors will once again be responsible for covering the open access fee — as they were before the pilot agreement — since funding support will no longer be available through the UC libraries. As always, authors have the option to deposit their pre-publication, peer-reviewed author accepted manuscript in an open access repository like arXiv or UC’s eScholarship for free.

UC’s open access agreements with other publishers are also unaffected. While this specific approach, for these particular disciplines, did not work out as we hoped, author participation rates for UC’s other open access agreements are generally much stronger than they were with IEEE. Open access funding support remains available to UC-affiliated researchers who publish in journals covered under these other agreements, and authors are encouraged to take advantage of it.

UC researchers with questions about this change to the IEEE agreement should contact Jerrold Shiroma, jshiroma@ucmerced.edu.

Focus Group Participants Needed for Paid eBook Study

Thu, September 21, 2023 9:15 AM

Focus Group Participants Needed for Paid eBook Study 

Graphic of books

The University of California Libraries are recruiting participants for a paid focus group study on the future of e-books and digital lending within higher education. Project LEND is a UC-wide library effort to expand the lawful use of digitized texts that is grounded in the needs of our students and faculty. 
   
If you are a University of California faculty member, staff, postdoc, or graduate student, and if you use e-books or e-book corpora for research purposes (such as text analysis), or as a vital component of teaching and taking university courses, we want to hear from you – please help us shape the future of ebooks for higher education. 
  
Whether you are reading books in-depth, consulting indices, checking citations, making computational use of a body of texts, or simply previewing and searching through texts, we are eager to talk to you. We invite you to share your unique perspectives on your experiences with e-books as well as opportunities for improvement.  
  
You may have accessed e-books for research, instruction, or coursework from any of the following channels: (1) through memberships with public or university libraries on platforms such as OverDrive, Libby, Hoopla, HathiTrust, or JSTOR, (2) through purchasing e-books via Amazon, Apple Books, Barnes & Noble, Google Play Books, Kobo, etc., (3) through a subscription service, such as Audible, Scribd, BookLender, or Bookmate, (4) through websites that provide access to ebooks for free, such as Internet Archive, Project Gutenberg, Project Muse, ManyBooks, or others (whether authorized or not).  
  
To be included in the study, you must meet the following criteria:  
(1) have been using ebooks (including digital journal articles) via one or more channels mentioned above for teaching or taking courses and/or conducting research regularly  
(2) are able to speak English 
(3) are age 18 or older  
  
Focus groups will take place online (via Zoom) and last approximately 1.5 hours. You will receive a $75 Amazon e-gift card for participating. If you are interested in participating, please complete the following Qualtrics questionnaire. If you have any questions, please contact the study coordinator Lin Li at lin.li@uci.edu.  
  
Please feel free to share this announcement with colleagues who may be interested in participating. 
 

Announcing Three New Open Access Publishing Agreements

Mon, August 1, 2022 10:45 AM

The UC Libraries are pleased to announce three new open access publishing agreements. The first supports open access publishing with the technical professional organization IEEE, which is among the largest publishers of UC research. The second is an extension of UC’s 2020 agreement with Springer Nature that adds funding support for open access publishing in the prestigious Nature journals; previously only titles in the Springer portfolio were eligible. The third agreement is with SAGE Publishing, one of the largest publishers of UC research in the social sciences and humanities. For more information about these open access agreements, as well as other agreements scholarly publishers, please visit the UC Office of Scholarly Communications Press Room.

UC Reaches Open Access Agreement with Springer Nature- A Letter to the Academic Community from University Librarian, Haipeng Li

Wed, January 20, 2021 9:35 AM
Dear UC Merced Academic Community:
 
Happy New Year!
 
We are excited to announce that the University of California has entered into a transformative open access agreement with Springer Nature. This agreement will allow UC authors to make their research published in Springer Nature journals freely available for anyone to read. 
The first phase of the agreement will support UC authors whose articles are accepted by journals in the Springer portion of the Springer Nature portfolio, including SpringerAdis, and Palgrave Macmillan titles, as well as academic journals on nature.com.    
 
Here's how the new process will work: 
 
After January 4, upon acceptance of an article, UC-affiliated corresponding authors (faculty, lecturers, staff, and graduate students) will, by default, have their article designated for open access publishing, with funding support from the UC libraries. The support will work in this way: 
 
  • For authors whose articles are accepted in journals from the Springer portion of the Springer Nature portfolio and who choose open access publishing, the UC libraries will automatically pay the first $1,000 toward the open access fee (called an Article Processing Charge or APC). 
  • Authors who do not have research funds available can request that the UC libraries pay the entire open access fee, ensuring that lack of research funds does not present a barrier for UC authors who wish to publish open access in these journals.  
 
As with other similar publishing agreements, authors may opt out of open access publishing if they prefer to publish their article on a subscription (pay-to-read) basis. 
The integration of Nature-branded journals into the agreement is expected in 2022.  
 
More detail about the agreement is available on these pages: 
If you have any questions about any part of this process, please contact Jerrold Shiroma at the UC Merced Library at jshiroma@ucmerced.edu
 
- Haipeng Li, University Librarian
 

eScholarship Resources

Fri, November 4, 2016 12:00 AM

eScholarship is an scholarly publishing service made available by the California Digital Library (CDL). Journals, books, conferences, theses/dissertations, and previously published works are available open-access via this platform. See the top publications, affiliated with UC Merced, from the 3rd quarter of 2016.

Luminos Open Access Model for Book Publishing

Mon, December 14, 2015 12:00 AM

The University of California Press recently announced its first five scholarly monographs published through Luminos -- its Open Access publishing program for books.  This new digital publishing program operates on a model of shared financial support with titles funded through UC Press contributions, funds from Luminos Member Libraries, and a title publication fee provided by authors.  Excess revenues are used to build a waiver fund for use by future authors.  Luminos provides authors the opportunity to increase their readership, especially by global audiences, due to the open access designation.

Additional Information:

Full Announcement, 13 October 2015

Luminos

Luminos Book Titles

Luminos Model Explained (3:36)

 

Pages

Subscribe to Scholarly Communication