Revision as of 12:28, 2 October 2012 edit182.73.13.166 (talk)No edit summary← Previous edit |
Revision as of 13:20, 2 October 2012 edit undoGuillaume2303 (talk | contribs)Autopatrolled, Pending changes reviewers86,215 edits some cleanup, removing some self-evident stuff (almost all OA publishers require authors to pay a fee); preparing refs for ReflinksNext edit → |
Line 1: |
Line 1: |
|
{{multiple issues|{{notability|Companies|date=April 2012}}{{pov|date=September 2012}}{{self-published|date=September 2012}}}} |
|
{{multiple issues|{{notability|Companies|date=April 2012}}{{pov|date=September 2012}}{{self-published|date=September 2012}}}} |
|
'''OMICS Publishing Group''' is a publisher of approximately 200 ] journals in a number of academic fields. It has offices in ] (United States), ], and ]. |
|
'''OMICS Publishing Group''' is a publisher of approximately 200 ] journals in a number of academic fields. It has offices in ] (United States), ], and ]. OMICS Publishing Group also organizes conferences.<ref>http://www.omicsonline.org/international-scientific-conferences</ref> |
|
|
|
|
|
⚫ |
The list of journals includes titles such as ''Biochemistry and Analytical Biochemistry'', ''Women's Health'', and ''Organ Biology''.<ref>http://omicsonline.org/Journals.php</ref> |
|
Apart from regular publications OMICS Group is organizing dozens of conferences every year <ref></ref>. So far they organized around 65 conferences including recent third world congress on biotechnology <ref></ref>. |
|
⚫ |
The company's publishing model requires authors to pay publication fees of several hundred (and in some cases thousands of) US dollars. The list of journals includes titles such as ''Biochemistry and Analytical Biochemistry'', ''Women's Health'', and ''Organ Biology''.<ref></ref> |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Some observers have described the publisher as "predatory", insofar as authors who have submitted papers have been sent invoices after their manuscripts were accepted for publication despite the lack of a robust ] process -- leading critics to assert that the main purpose of the publisher is commercial rather than academic.<ref>Michael Stratford, , ''Chronicle of Higher Education'', 4 March 2012 </ref><ref>Jeffrey Beall, , ''The Charleston Advisor'', 12:1, 2010</ref> |
|
Some observers have described the publisher as "predatory", insofar as authors who have submitted papers have been sent invoices after their manuscripts were accepted for publication despite the lack of a robust ] process, leading critics to assert that the main purpose of the publisher is commercial rather than academic.<ref>http://chronicle.com/article/Predatory-Online-Journals/131047/</ref><ref>http://charleston.publisher.ingentaconnect.com/content/charleston/chadv/2010/00000012/00000001/art00020</ref> |
|
|
|
|
|
== References == |
|
== References == |
Some observers have described the publisher as "predatory", insofar as authors who have submitted papers have been sent invoices after their manuscripts were accepted for publication despite the lack of a robust peer-review process, leading critics to assert that the main purpose of the publisher is commercial rather than academic.