Two New PLoS Journals Launched
Shipud writes "The Public Library of Science journal series is expanding. After
PLoS biology and PLoS Medicine we are now getting a geek's favorite:
PLoS Computational Biology. Another addition is
PLoS Genetics. Both are published open-access under the creative commons license. A history of open access licence publications in science can be found
here."
For what it's worth, all of the PLoS journals will waive the $1500 publication fee for authors who cannot afford it. It also sounds like a good chunk of money, but for just about any biological or medical lab, it's pretty small potatoes. Cost may be more of an issue if and when PLoS launches journals in other fields.
Meanwhile, it should be noted that some closed-access journals do charge for publication, in the form of page or colour charges.
Ideally, I'd like to see a formal multi-level pricing structure: some nominal fee for grad students, with progressively higher fees for faculty at various levels, and corporate authors.
Once again, this may be more of a concern later, but it's very rare for someone not affiliated with either a university or a corporation to publish in the existing PLoS journals. Relatively few graduate students will publish works without at least a faculty supervisor's name on the paper, too. Besides, the $1500 probably is reasonable for defraying PLoS' costs; it's not meant to be a progressive taxation system. As long as they are willing to waive or reduce fees according to the author's financial circumstances, then a formal schedule of fees probably isn't necessary.
~Idarubicin