• Members of UC's academic community are encouraged to participate in a short three-minute poll to gauge the impact of the loss of immediate access to current Elsevier articles via ScienceDirect. (berkeley.edu)
  • Authors publishing in Transplantation Reports will benefit from rapid review and permanent access to their work on http://www.journals.elsevier.com/transplantation-reports and on ScienceDirect. (biospace.com)
  • Elsevier provides web-based, digital solutions - among them ScienceDirect, Scopus, Elsevier Research Intelligence, and ClinicalKey - and publishes over 2,500 journals, including The Lancet and Cell, and more than 33,000 book titles, including a number of iconic reference works. (biospace.com)
  • The University of California has been out of contract with Elsevier since January but, so far, the publisher has continued to provide access to new articles via ScienceDirect. (ucsc.edu)
  • In the months since, Elsevier has continued to provide access to new articles via ScienceDirect without a contract in place. (ucsc.edu)
  • ScienceDirect is a platform from Elsevier that contains Books, Book Series, Handbooks, Reference Works and Journals. (lu.se)
  • Lund University has also purchased 188 ebooks within Food Science, Technology and Nutrition, Materials and Engineering, and Textile from Woodhead Publishing that where migrated to ScienceDirect when Woodhead was acquired by Elsevier. (lu.se)
  • Users not affiliated with Lund University may be permitted access to Elsevier ScienceDirect, but only within the physical premises of Lund University Libraries. (lu.se)
  • In 2004 Elsevier launched Scopus- a multidisciplinary metadata database of scholarly publications, only the second of such kind (after the Web of Science, although free Google Scholar was also launched in 2004). (wikipedia.org)
  • The UC did not agree with Elsevier's contract proposal, which would have placed new charges on top of the University's current multimillion-dollar subscription while diminishing the UC's rights to Elsevier content, according to an open statement published by the UC's Office of Scholarly Communication on March 20. (dailybruin.com)
  • Osmosis becomes part of Elsevier's Global Medical Education portfolio, and Elsevier will use its capabilities to help support the learning needs of medical students, nursing students, and healthcare professionals, with patient support planned for the future. (infotoday.com)
  • As the first and only company in the world that employed a database for the production of journals, it introduced computer technology to Elsevier. (wikipedia.org)
  • JournalFinder uses smart search technology and field-of-research specific vocabularies to match your manuscript to Elsevier journals. (elsevier.com)
  • The move is a reminder that even though Elsevier is one of the largest publishers of academic journals, it has shifted its strategy in recent years to play a more prominent role in the larger ecosystem of academic communication. (chronicle.com)
  • Many scholars have long seen Elsevier as an enemy to the scholarly enterprise because it makes hefty profits from library subscriptions to journals, even though it doesn't have to pay the authors of the research papers. (chronicle.com)
  • For more information or to submit an article, visit: http://www.journals.elsevier.com/transplantation-reports. (biospace.com)
  • Elsevier is a leading publisher of health science books and journals, helping to advance medicine by delivering superior education, reference information and decision support tools to doctors, nurses, health practitioners and students. (elsevierhealth.com)
  • Elsevier, which provides access to over 2,500 journals, had been negotiating with the UC's California Digital Library since early this year to provide UC students and researchers with access to its content. (dailybruin.com)
  • Elsevier is already one of the world's leading open access publishers and offered to support a five-fold increase in the number of UC open access articles published in its journals. (dailybruin.com)
  • Last year, the University of California entered negotiations for a new agreement with Elsevier that would not only continue UC's access to its online journals, but also achieve the faculty-supported goals of containing journal subscription costs and providing for open access publication of UC research. (ucsc.edu)
  • Twenty journals published by Elsevier, many on behalf of renowned societies, were also selected as the SLA's Top 100 Journals in Biology and Medicine. (science20.com)
  • They are the ones who make the discoveries that advance science and bring journals to life as authors, editors, and reviewers, remarked Youngsuk Y.S. Chi, Vice Chairman at Elsevier, who accepted the honor at the June 16th award ceremony, Elsevier will use this honor to reaffirm our passion for excellence as we continue to serve the needs of the research community. (science20.com)
  • A group of professors have resigned from editorial positions at Elsevier journals amid the continuing stand-off between German research organisations and the academic publisher. (timeshighereducation.com)
  • A statement from Projekt Deal lists 14 academics who have resigned their positions as editors and members of editorial and advisory boards at Elsevier journals in support of the ongoing negotiations on access to electronic journals. (timeshighereducation.com)
  • German research organisations have been negotiating with publishers Elsevier, Wiley and Springer Nature on agreements to access their entire portfolio of electronic journals for more than a year now. (timeshighereducation.com)
  • Search Elsevier Education's solutions, resources, and training. (elsevier.com)
  • In 1978 Elsevier merged with Dutch newspaper publisher NDU, and devised a strategy to broadcast textual news to people's television sets through Viewdata and Teletext technology. (wikipedia.org)
  • Naturally, we asked the experts at the Library who do this day in and day out for tips that researchers can use while hunting down Elsevier articles, while UC works on reaching an agreement with the publisher. (berkeley.edu)
  • As Paul Foeckler, a co-founder of Mendeley, said in an interview this week, "Elsevier is becoming more of a tools-and-services company rather than a publisher. (chronicle.com)
  • Elizabeth Perill, Executive Publisher at Elsevier, commented, "We are extremely pleased to offer this open access journal to our transplantation portfolio as we continue to serve the needs of our communities. (biospace.com)
  • Findlaw reports that publisher and data broker Reed Elsevier Group has admitted that up to 10 times as many people as originally thought may have had their profiles stolen from one of its US databases. (blogspot.com)
  • The University of California lost access to Elsevier, the world's largest scientific publisher, on Wednesday. (dailybruin.com)
  • Elsevier, as one of the world's largest academic publishers, was the first major publisher with which we sought to craft an innovative open access agreement," Anderson said. (dailybruin.com)
  • Anderson said Elsevier was unwilling to accept the UC's proposal to transition all of its articles to open access without a large increase in cost, leading the UC to discontinue its agreement with the publisher. (dailybruin.com)
  • Meanwhile, UC is hoping to reenter formal negotiations with Elsevier if the publisher indicates that they are willing to discuss a contract that addresses our goals of cost containment and open access. (ucsc.edu)
  • AMSTERDAM, June 18 /PRNewswire/ -- In the news release, Elsevier Honored as The Most Influential Publisher of the Last 100 Years in BioMedicine and the Life Sciences by the Special Libraries Association issued on 17 Jun 2009 12:21 GMT, by Elsevier over PR Newswire, the original was transmitted without the corresponding journal and society links. (science20.com)
  • Elsevier has been awarded the The Most Influential Publisher of the Last 100 Years in BioMedicine and the Life Sciences at the Special Library Association's (SLA) Centennial conference on Tuesday, June 16th in Washington DC. (science20.com)
  • Elsevier won as the most influential publisher of the last 100 years because time and time again it has been brave, bold, and collaborative, remarked Tony Stankus, Director, BioMedical Life Sciences Division at the Special Libraries Association, Whenever Elsevier saw real value, they went after it boldly. (science20.com)
  • In 1979 Elsevier Science Publishers launched the Article Delivery Over Network Information System (ADONIS) project in conjunction with four business partners. (wikipedia.org)
  • Elsevier is part of the RELX Group, known until 2015 as Reed Elsevier, a publicly-traded company. (wikipedia.org)
  • Elsevier is part of RELX Group plc, a world-leading provider of information solutions for professional customers across industries. (biospace.com)
  • Many publishers, including Elsevier, have temporarily made coronavirus-related articles freely available. (ucdavis.edu)
  • University of California users of Elsevier downloaded around 11 million articles in 2018, which is approximately 30% of all downloads of all publishers, according to an email statement from Elsevier. (dailybruin.com)
  • UC's negotiating team continues to communicate with Elsevier, but progress remains slow. (ucdavis.edu)
  • Meanwhile, the feedback we received through the UC-wide poll conducted earlier this year confirmed that, while researchers are feeling the impact of UC's lack of an Elsevier contract - particularly in the health and life sciences - the majority both systemwide and here at UC Davis remain supportive of UC's position. (ucdavis.edu)
  • Mohammad Kachuee, a doctoral student in computer science, said he thinks the number of high-quality papers Elsevier has in computer science is very low and added he thinks the UC's loss of access to Elsevier papers will have a minimal impact on his own research. (dailybruin.com)
  • In 2013, Elsevier acquired Mendeley, a UK company making software for managing and sharing research papers. (wikipedia.org)
  • A major move in that direction came in 2013, when Elsevier bought Mendeley, a service to help scholars manage their references and online documents. (chronicle.com)
  • Mr. Gordon concedes that when Elsevier bought Mendeley, he had concerns similar to ones people were voicing on social media this week. (chronicle.com)
  • But he is convinced that Elsevier followed through on its promise to keep the Mendeley service open and devote resources to improving it. (chronicle.com)
  • At Elsevier, your work contributes to the world's grand challenges and a more sustainable future. (nature.com)
  • Elsevier and our imprints - Saunders and Mosby - produce the world's finest selection of health care textbooks, reference books, review books, periodicals, electronic titles, and online resources. (elsevier.ca)
  • In 1947, Elsevier began publishing its first English-language journal, Biochimica et Biophysica Acta. (wikipedia.org)
  • With the completion of this new market-based structure, Kumsal Bayazit has now, after three years as Elsevier CEO, truly put her stamp on the company. (sspnet.org)
  • Elsevier (Dutch: [ˈɛlzəviːr]) is a Dutch academic publishing company specializing in scientific, technical, and medical content. (wikipedia.org)
  • Since the shutoff, the UC Berkeley Library's Interlibrary Services has expertly - and quickly - filled hundreds of requests for Elsevier content. (berkeley.edu)
  • Any request for content no longer licensed through Elsevier will automatically be placed into a rush queue. (ucsc.edu)
  • Primary Contact: Amy Blanchette - National Sales Executive Email: [email protected] 1600 John F. Kennedy Blvd. Suite 1800 Philadelphia, PA 19103 Phone: 800.222.9570 Website: elsevieradvantage.com/career Company Description Elsevier Education empowers higher learning institutions and educators with exceptional content, learning technology, and assessment tools that help transform today's students into tomorrow's healthcare professionals. (cappsonline.org)
  • The weekly was a continuation, as is stated in its first issue, of the monthly Elsevier, which was founded in 1891 to promote the name of the publishing house and had to stop publication in December 1940 because of the German occupation of the Netherlands. (wikipedia.org)
  • A consortium of all German research organisations is locked in hostile and so far unsuccessful contract negotiations with Elsevier, demanding full open access for German-authored papers and a model in which they pay per article published, not a flat journal subscription fee. (timeshighereducation.com)
  • They then answered questions from a live online audience of researchers attending virtually via the Elsevier Grand Challenge Q&A webinar. (researchinformation.info)
  • But when it comes submitting your camera ready version, the Editorial Manager (EM), used by both Springer and Elsevier , insists on receiving a source file. (bartneck.de)
  • Elsevier, a world-leading provider of scientific, technical, and medical information products and services, today announces the launch of Transplantation Reports, a new online-only open access journal covering all areas of transplantation. (biospace.com)
  • Elsevier has been providing open access publishing options since 2005. (biospace.com)
  • The University of California has taken a firm stand on both open access to publicly funded research and fiscal responsibility by deciding not to renew its journal subscriptions with Elsevier," the UC-Elsevier negotiating team said in the statement. (dailybruin.com)
  • She added CDL recently signed a transformative open access agreement with Cambridge University Press, which is the same type of agreement the UC was seeking with Elsevier. (dailybruin.com)
  • In recent years, some of Wiley's early leadership on open access seemed to come, perhaps coincidentally, where Elsevier stumbled. (sspnet.org)
  • Reed Elsevier, which is listed in London and Amsterdam, has a worldwide workforce of 37,000, says news agency ANP. (dutchnews.nl)
  • Given the substantial capital investments that Elsevier has made in infrastructure, workflow, and analytics acquisitions for the A&G market over the past decade, leaders understandably hope to see commensurate revenue and profitability growth in its products. (sspnet.org)
  • Elsevier acquired Osmosis , an online healthcare education platform. (infotoday.com)
  • The expansion of Elsevier in the scientific field after 1945 was funded with the profits of the newsweekly Elsevier, which published its first issue on 27 October 1945. (wikipedia.org)
  • Elsevier knows how to develop a working relationship with scientific and clinical societies. (science20.com)
  • T he publishing giant Elsevier announced this week that it had bought the Social Science Research Network, an online community where scholars in the humanities and social sciences freely share preprints of their academic work. (chronicle.com)
  • Gemma Hersh, the senior vice president of global research solutions at Elsevier, said in an email statement that the cancellation will end a decades-long partnership between the company and the UC. (dailybruin.com)
  • Today, Elsevier , a world-leading provider of information solutions, and The Council of State Governments (CSG) , the nation's only organization serving all three branches of state government, released America ' s Knowledge Economy: A State-by-State Review, a report that analyzes the research strengths of the United States , led by academic and private sector institutions known as knowledge economies. (prnewswire.com)
  • Few organizations recognize more deeply the value of higher education and the social and economic impact of academic research than Elsevier," said Brad Fenwick , senior vice president for global strategic alliances at Elsevier. (prnewswire.com)
  • Up until now, Elsevier has organized its research products development under a chief product officer. (sspnet.org)
  • With a diverse group of people creating solutions for customers worldwide, Elsevier is helping to lay the groundwork for more diverse communities in science and health, and helping you create a more equitable future. (elsevier.com)
  • Elsevier is a world-leading provider of information solutions that enhance the performance of science, health, and technology professionals, empowering them to make better decisions, deliver better care, and often make groundbreaking discoveries that advance the boundaries of knowledge and human progress. (biospace.com)
  • See how schools across the country have used Elsevier products and solutions to improve program outcomes, raise pass rates, overcome challenges, and so much more. (elsevier.com)
  • Actions by other institutions - The University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill, Iowa State University and the State University of New York, or SUNY, all recently ended their "big deal" subscription packages with Elsevier. (ucdavis.edu)
  • Before turning to partner libraries for requested materials, the UC Berkeley Library tracks down copies of Elsevier articles online. (berkeley.edu)
  • It is my sincere hope that Elsevier continues to be brave, bold, and collaborative as it works with libraries in these economically challenging, yet scientifically exciting and clinically promising times. (science20.com)
  • Medical Hypotheses is published by the prestigious publishing company Elsevier and, more importantly, indexed on PubMed, the definitive source of medical literature run by the National Library of Medicine (NLM) in the United States. (aidstruth.org)
  • Dutch-British publishing group Reed Elsevier is planning to scrap a thousand jobs in a cost cutting exercise, according to the UK newspaper Sunday Telegraph. (dutchnews.nl)
  • citation needed] In May 1939 Klautz established the Elsevier Publishing Company Ltd. in London to distribute these academic titles in the British Commonwealth (except Canada). (wikipedia.org)
  • Marri Atienza, of the Interlibrary Services, helps fill requests for Elsevier articles. (berkeley.edu)
  • Elsevier suspended the University of California's direct access to new articles in July , but you can still get the materials you need - with the Library's help. (berkeley.edu)
  • With the arrival of Verses for A&G, Elsevier now has three senior executives with the title of president each focused on a separate major market. (sspnet.org)
  • Leaders of SSRN, as the network is known, and Elsevier insist that all the things scholars like about the online community will stay the same but that the hub will be able to update its features and better serve researchers. (chronicle.com)
  • While Elsevier is greatly honored to be recognized by the SLA, we see the publisher's role as that of a long term supporting actor to the researchers. (science20.com)
  • I was impressed not only with the quality of the tools the finalists developed, but with the atmosphere of collaboration,' added Herman van Campenhout, CEO of Elsevier. (researchinformation.info)
  • We're building a great workplace culture at Elsevier where amazing people, like you and others, can do purposeful work, grow every day and work with colleagues who care. (elsevier.com)
  • I strongly believe in the mission and the purpose of Elsevier and the impact we have on societal good. (elsevier.com)
  • Overall, Reed Elsevier says that revenue from print products continues to decrease. (infodocket.com)
  • While the contract between the UC and Elsevier ended Dec. 31, Elsevier continued to provide access to all UC campuses while it worked to form an agreement. (dailybruin.com)
  • As both organizations have been unable to find a solution, and the CDL hasn't renewed its contract , Elsevier implemented CDL's cancellation request, effective Wednesday. (dailybruin.com)
  • When the Nazis occupied the Netherlands for the duration of five years from May 1940, he had just founded a second international office, the Elsevier Publishing Company Inc. in New York. (wikipedia.org)
  • Separately, Elsevier was made aware of the problems. (aidstruth.org)
  • We are developing the new Elsevier website to better serve you. (elsevier.com)
  • Il existe un besoin évident d'élaborer des normes pour la prescription de médicaments, des directives thérapeutiques standard sur l'utilisation des médicaments ainsi que des programmes de formation médicale continue, et de mettre en place de systèmes de suivi pour garantir l'observance thérapeutique. (who.int)