For some time now the US NIH has had a Public Access Policy, requiring that any publication supported by them be readily available at no cost to the public. However, given that many of the highest visibility journals (that means you Nature and Science and Springer) have resisted open publication, the wish has been too often honored
in abstentia. A recent (November 16, 2012)
change in policy pour encourager les autres may tilt the field
With this Notice, NIH informs grantees that in Spring, 2013, at the
earliest, NIH will delay processing of non-competing continuation grant
awards if publications arising from that award are not in compliance
with the NIH public access policy. The award will not be processed
until recipients have demonstrated compliance. This change will take
effect in tandem with NIH requiring the use of the Research Performance
Progress Report (RPPRs) for all Streamlined Non-competing Award
Process (SNAP) and Fellowship awards in the Spring of 2013 (see NIH NOT-OD-12-142).
There will be a few exceptions
Submitting an RPPR with a non-compliant publication will generate an
automated email notifying the grantee that the progress report includes
citations that are out of compliance with the public access policy and
requesting a response by a specified due date two weeks prior to the
next budget start date. As indicated above, no sooner than Spring,
2013, the non-competing continuation award will be delayed until a reply
to the e-notification is received from the grantee with evidence of compliance
or a satisfactory explanation (e.g., the sole author has passed away
before they were able to process the manuscript for posting to PubMed
Central).
No comments:
Post a Comment
Dear Anonymous,
UPDATE: The spambots got clever so the verification is back. Apologies
Some of the regulars here are having trouble telling the anonymice apart. Please add some distinguishing name to your comment such as Mickey, Minnie, Mighty, or Fred.
You can stretch the comment box for more space
The management.