open-discussion
open-discussion > RE: NIH Public Access Policy - Springer
Feb 15, 2008 05:02 PM | David Kennedy
RE: NIH Public Access Policy - Springer
This is a transcript of a message to Springer Publishing Alert
Subscribers describing one of their options for NIH sharing policy
compliance.
-----
Dear SpringerAlerts Subscriber,
Do you receive research funding from the National Institutes of Health (NIH)? If so, as from April 2008 you will be required to deposit the final manuscript of your journal articles in PubMed Central and ensure free availability (open access) within 12 months of publication.
You will be pleased to hear that Springer journals are fully geared up for that requirement. All you have to do is opt for open access publication of your article through Springer's Open Choice - you will be given that option as soon as your article has been accepted for publication after peer review - and we will handle the administrative process.
Springer will take care of the immediate deposit in PubMed Central and what's more, not of the manuscript, but of the final, published article. And it will also be available with open access right away, and not just after 12 months.
The cost of Open Choice is - as stated on the NIH web site - a permissible cost in your grant so please take care to budget for it.
Publishing with open access in Springer journals completely takes away any worries you might have about complying with the new NIH rules for grantees when it comes to publishing your research results. We look forward to the submission of your next paper.
Best regards,
Your Springer Open Choice Team
-----
Dear SpringerAlerts Subscriber,
Do you receive research funding from the National Institutes of Health (NIH)? If so, as from April 2008 you will be required to deposit the final manuscript of your journal articles in PubMed Central and ensure free availability (open access) within 12 months of publication.
You will be pleased to hear that Springer journals are fully geared up for that requirement. All you have to do is opt for open access publication of your article through Springer's Open Choice - you will be given that option as soon as your article has been accepted for publication after peer review - and we will handle the administrative process.
Springer will take care of the immediate deposit in PubMed Central and what's more, not of the manuscript, but of the final, published article. And it will also be available with open access right away, and not just after 12 months.
The cost of Open Choice is - as stated on the NIH web site - a permissible cost in your grant so please take care to budget for it.
Publishing with open access in Springer journals completely takes away any worries you might have about complying with the new NIH rules for grantees when it comes to publishing your research results. We look forward to the submission of your next paper.
Best regards,
Your Springer Open Choice Team
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