Mailing List CNI-ANNOUNCE@cni.org Message #113260
From: Clifford Lynch <cliff@cni.org>
Sender: <cgplmgr@cni.org>
Subject: Journel of Elect. Publishing Speciall Cyberinfrastructure Issue
Date: Fri, 08 Feb 2008 22:30:00 -0500
To: <CNI-ANNOUNCE>
I wanted to share this announcement of a really splendid looking issue of the Journal of Electronic Publishing that has just come out; the themes are connections among cyberinfrastructure, scholarship and scholarly communication.



Clifford Lynch
Director, CNI

--------------------------------------

We are pleased to announce the publication of the Winter 2008 issue of the
Journal of Electronic Publishing
(http://journalofelectronicpublishing.org).  Below the signature I've
included our Editor's Note, which highlights some of what you'll find in
our latest issue. As always, thank you for your interest and support;
spread the word!

Best regards,
Shana

++++++++++++
Shana Kimball
Managing Editor, Journal of Electronic Publishing
Scholarly Publishing Office
University of Michigan
kimballs@umich.edu


Shortly after Amy Friedlander was named director of programs of the
Council on Library and Information Resources (CLIR) last April, we asked
her to be a JEP guest editor, reprising her roles as editor of the online
magazine, iMP: The Magazine on Information Impacts, and as editor of D-Lib
Magazine. This time, we proposed, her job would be easier: she could put
together an issue without having to first establish the editorial policies
(as she had done with iMP and D-Lib).

Gracious and hardworking as always, Amy selected ten scholars and thinkers
and invited them to contribute to a Special Issue on Communications,
Scholarly Communications and the Advanced Research Infrastructure. She
supported them through the writing and editing, and produced this stunning
collection of articles from a stellar set of authors for your edification
and reading pleasure.

In Cyberscholarship: High Performance Computing Meets Digital Libraries,
William Y. Arms takes us into the world of high-performance computing and
shows us how the scholarly enterprise can change as computer scientists
work with researchers in other fields to apply new tools to data in
digital format. (Full disclosure here: Bill was founding publisher of
D-Lib, and Amy was founding editor.)
http://hdl.handle.net/2027/spo.3336451.0011.103

Jeremy Birnholtz looks at another face of cyberscholarship, the effect of
having a number of researchers, often from different fields, contributing
to one finding. In When Authorship Isnít Enough: Lessons from CERN on the
Implications of Formal and Informal Credit Attribution Mechanisms in
Collaborative Research, Birnholtz reports on the results of months of
interviews at CERN.
http://hdl.handle.net/2027/spo.3336451.0011.105

New cyberinfrastructures require not only collaboration across
disciplines, but collaboration across organizations. In The Virtual
Observatory Meets the Library, G. Sayeed Choudhury tells of the lessons
learnedóacademic, technological, and sociologicalówhen Johns Hopkins
University created an astronomical database.
http://hdl.handle.net/2027/spo.3336451.0011.111

Karla L. Hahn points out that the revolution in communication has comeówe
are in the midst of it, she writesóand the train may be leaving the
station without the scholars and librarians on board. In Talk About
Talking About New Models of Scholarly Communication, she suggests ways
that these groups can get back into the discussion.
http://hdl.handle.net/2027/spo.3336451.0011.108

In Can Universities Dream of Electric Sheepskin? Systemic Transformations
in Higher Education Organizational Models, Charles Henry raises
fundamental questions about the nature of the university now that
communication and scholarship are so ingrained in academe.
http://hdl.handle.net/2027/spo.3336451.0011.101

Ronald L. Larsen reports on a workshop he co-chaired with William Arms on
the implications of large-scale digital content on network infrastructure
in On the Threshold of Cyberscholarship. His conclusion is that digital
information needs to be collected, stored, and made available in new ways
today.
http://hdl.handle.net/2027/spo.3336451.0011.102

Digitization has made it possible not only to give more scholars access to
the surviving manuscripts of the Romance of the Rose that are locked in
libraries and archives around the world, it has given scholars more access
than even the original owners had in the Middle Ages. Stephen G. Nichols
tells that story in "Born Medieval": MSS. in the Digital Scriptorium.
http://hdl.handle.net/2027/spo.3336451.0011.104

Kathlin Smith asks the important questions of where digital objects are
kept and who is responsible for them, and begins to answer them, in
Institutional Repositories and E-Journal Archiving: What Are We Learning?
http://hdl.handle.net/2027/spo.3336451.0011.107

Peter Suber takes us on a whirlwind tour of the past year in Open Access
happenings in Open Access in 2007. The sheer volume of activity is its own
argument that open access is a growing trend.
http://hdl.handle.net/2027/spo.3336451.0011.110

Another look at open access raises the question of sustainability, both of
the approach and of the data itself. In Open Access Publishing and the
Emerging Infrastructure for 21st-Century Scholarship, Donald Waters asks,
ìopen access for what and for whom and how can we ensure that there is
sufficient capital for continued innovation in scholarly publishing?î
http://hdl.handle.net/2027/spo.3336451.0011.106

Finally, Amy Friedlander, our guest editor, wraps it all up for us in The
Triple Helix: Cyberinfrastructure, Scholarly Communication, and Trust. Her
thesis is that the cyberinfrastructure supports communication, which in
its turn both creates and increases the trust that is necessary to the
success of the infrastructure.
http://hdl.handle.net/2027/spo.3336451.0011.109

Enjoy!
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