The Scholarly Kitchen

What’s Hot and Cooking In Scholarly Publishing

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Archives: Metrics and Analytics

Guest Post — Fiesole 2025: A Step Back to Move Forward in the Era of ‘Postnormal Publishing’

A report from this year’s Fiesole Retreat: Learning from the Past, Informing the Future.

  • By Eleonora Colangelo
  • Jul 1, 2025
  • 0 Comments

We Need AI Standards for Scholarly Publishing: A NISO Workshop Report

NISO issues a report on workshops looking to improve the efficiency of working with AI systems in scholarly publishing

  • By Todd A Carpenter
  • Jun 12, 2025
  • 5 Comments

Guest Post — Reading the Leaves of Publishing Speed: The Cases of Hindawi, Frontiers, and PLOS

The analysis of operational data is complex, dull, and unrewarding. It is also necessary. Three case studies of major journals and portfolios explain why.

  • By Christos Petrou
  • May 29, 2025
  • 25 Comments

Strategies to Improve Open Science Monitoring: Lessons from France’s OSM initiative

The French Open Science Monitor Initiative shows a path toward improving recognition of data sharing and open science assessment.

  • By Todd A Carpenter
  • May 27, 2025
  • 0 Comments

Innovation, Governance, and Public Trust: The US Office of Management and Budget (OMB) Issues Guidance on AI

We are expecting the US Government’s AI Action Plan to be issued over the summer. In the meantime, we may glean some of the administration’s views by looking at recently issued information from the Office of Management and Budget (OMB).

  • By Roy Kaufman
  • Apr 28, 2025
  • 0 Comments

New Ways to Illuminate Stories in Your Usage Data

Usage data experiences are dominated by tabular reports from complex systems; we need new tools to illuminate the stories within the data.

  • By Lettie Y. Conrad
  • Apr 21, 2025
  • 7 Comments

Guest Post — The Open Access – AI Conundrum: Does Free to Read Mean Free to Train?

It is time for OA proponents to engage in public debate with academic associations, universities and national funding agencies, because the widespread use of academic content in AI models poses significant risks for the research ecosystem.

  • By Stephanie Decker
  • Apr 15, 2025
  • 15 Comments

No One Size Fits All: The Case for Taking a National Approach to PID Adoption 

Today, Alice Meadows shares some learnings from MoreBrains Cooperative’s recent cost-benefit analysis of persistent identifiers, conducted on behalf of the Czech National Library of Technology (NTK).

  • By Alice Meadows
  • Apr 10, 2025
  • 2 Comments

Guest Post — Classification as Colonization: The Hidden Politics of Library Catalogs

The renaming of “Mount Denali” and “Gulf of Mexico” to the politically loaded “Mount McKinley” and “Gulf of America” reveal the naked truth of what cataloging has always been: a battlefield where meaning is contested and conquered.

  • By Mike Olson
  • Mar 25, 2025
  • 12 Comments

It Takes a Village: Empowering the Community to Improve Scholarly Metadata through COMET

What if the community could collaborate to fix scholarly metadata? The COMET initiative is about to find out…

  • By Tim Vines
  • Mar 10, 2025
  • 2 Comments

Guest Post — Challenges in Academic Publishing Amid War: ISSN Issues in Ukraine Threaten Research Integrity

Recently, a group of Ukrainian researchers uncovered serious violations in the use of ISSN identifiers by journals operating in temporarily occupied territories, revealing systematic misuse of academic infrastructure and promoting narratives hostile to Ukraine.

  • By Frances Pinter
  • Feb 25, 2025
  • 0 Comments

Telling the Story of How Open Access Benefits Society: A Vision for the Future

Traditional metrics do not allow us to fully express how OA publishing benefits society; here’s a vision for the future of storytelling with usage data in scholarly communications.

  • By Lettie Y. Conrad
  • Feb 6, 2025
  • 9 Comments

Revisiting: Measuring Societal Impact or, Meet the New Metric, Same as the Old Metric

Bringing back a post from 2018, as funders increasingly demand measurements of “real world” impact from researchers. Does this steer us toward the same traps we’re already in from the ways we already do research assessment and is this short-term thinking problematic for the future of science?

  • By David Crotty
  • Feb 4, 2025
  • 7 Comments

Guest Post: Reflections from The Munin Conference Part Three – Measuring Impact

This is the third and final article in a guest series reflecting on the main themes and ideas gathered and discussed at The Munin Conference at the end of 2024. Today’s focus is measuring impact.

  • By Mark Huskisson
  • Jan 23, 2025
  • 2 Comments

Mary Ann Liebert, Inc., and Sage Forge a New Relationship

Mary Ann Liebert, Inc., an independent publisher focused on cutting edge biotechnology research, has been acquired by Sage. In this interview, the company’s namesake shares her future vision of the company under Sage ownership as well as her reflections on over 40 years of STM publishing.

  • By Angela Cochran
  • Jan 16, 2025
  • 3 Comments

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  • Guest Post — Fiesole 2025: A Step Back to Move Forward in the Era of ‘Postnormal Publishing’
  • Ask The Chefs — New Court Decisions Issued in Cases Addressing AI Training and Copyright

SSP News

Celebrating the Generations Fund, Raising $500,000 to Support the Future of Scholarly Communications

Jun 30, 2025

Open Access Workshop Returns—With New Features and Bulk Discounts for Staff Development

Jun 27, 2025

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Jun 17, 2025
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Society for Scholarly Publishing (SSP)

The mission of the Society for Scholarly Publishing (SSP) is to advance scholarly publishing and communication, and the professional development of its members through education, collaboration, and networking. SSP established The Scholarly Kitchen blog in February 2008 to keep SSP members and interested parties aware of new developments in publishing.

The Scholarly Kitchen is a moderated and independent blog. Opinions on The Scholarly Kitchen are those of the authors. They are not necessarily those held by the Society for Scholarly Publishing nor by their respective employers.

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