Difference between revisions of "PLOS Public Library Of Science"

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PLOS es un proyecto dedicado a la creación de una biblioteca de publicaciones médicas y científicas con acceso abierto y sin fines de lucro. Tiene el objetivo de acelerar el progreso de la ciencia y la medicina a través de una transformación en la comunicación de las investigaciones y la práctica del “peer review” que es una mutua y rigurosa evaluación de los trabajos por los colaboradores mismos de la plataforma.
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[[file:Screenshot-www plos org 2016-08-19 17-08-15.png| thumbnail |right]]
  
El proyecto surge en Octubre del 2000 en San Francisco, California, creado por Patrick O. Brown, profesor en el Departamento de Bioquímica de la Universidad de Stanford, Harold E. Varmus, científico ganador del Premio Nobel y director del Instituto Nacional del Cáncer (EEUU) y Michael Eisen, profesor de genética y medicina genómica de la Universidad de California, Berkeley.
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== <small>'''Self-portrait'''</small> ==
  
La suite PLOS se divide en varias especialidades: biología, medicina, biología computacional, genética, enfermedades tropicales, patógenos y PLOS ONE que funciona como diario multidisciplinario. Además de estas especialidades contribuye a la realización de 20 blogs y dos canales comunitarios, involucrando en total más de 6500 editores académicos y 90,000 personas entre autores, lectores y analistas de 200 países.
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''Openness Inspires Innovation''
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''It's the way we think science and publishing should be.''
  
PLOS aplica la licencia Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) la cual fue creada para facilitar el acceso y reuso libre de material de cualquier tipo. Bajo esta licencia los autores acuerdan hacer artículos legalmente disponibles para su reuso sin permiso o tarifas, siempre y cuando el autor y la fuente original sean correctamente citados. Ha innovado en el desarrollo de aplicaciones como ALM (Article Level Metrics) mediante la cual se puede medir el impacto o influencia que tienen los trabajos de investigación publicados. Adicionalmente y en colaboración con SPARC (Scholarly Publishing and Academic Resources) y OASPA (Open Access Scholarly Publishers Association PLOS creo How Open is it?  Open Access Spectrum (OAS) con el fin de crear un lugar para la evaluación y comparación de las políticas de acceso abierto que los editores plantean, ayudando a los autores a hacer decisiones informadas sobre donde publicar.
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''PLOS was founded in 2001 as a nonprofit Open Access publisher, innovator and advocacy organization with a mission to accelerate progress in science and medicine by leading a transformation in research communication.
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Our efforts and successes have inspired others – from individual researchers to the larger publishing industry – to move toward a more open ethos.''
  
URL: https://www.plos.org
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''Open is no longer just about free and unrestricted access to research, it's also about open data, transparency in peer review and an open approach to science assessment.''
  
Wayback Machine: https://web.archive.org/web/*/https://www.plos.org
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''Open is a mindset that represents the best scientific values. One that focuses on bringing scientists together, to share work as rapidly and as widely as possible, to advance science faster and to benefit society as a whole.''
  
Wikipedia: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PLOS
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''Making Breakthroughs Is Habit Forming''
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''Since launching its first journal in 2003, PLOS has been a force for transformation in scholarly publishing, breaking with archaic traditions from previous generations. Our key innovations accelerate science and medicine, from research discovery to influence tracking.''
  
[[Categoría:Proyectos]]
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(https://www.plos.org/who-we-are)
[[Categoría:Ciencia]]
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[[Categoría:Inglés]]
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== <small>'''Description'''</small> ==
[[Categoría:Estados Unidos]]
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[[Categoría:2000]]
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PLOS is a project dedicated to the creation of a library of Open Access scientific and medical journals. It aims to accelerate the progress of science and medicine through a transformation in the circulation of research and the practice of  "peer reviewing ", a mutual and rigorous evaluation of the work made by the collaborators of the platform.
[[Categoría:Acceso abierto]]
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[[Categoría:Open access]]
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The project started in October of 2000 in San Francisco, California. It was created by Patrick O. Brown, professor of the Department of Biochemistry at the University of Stanford, Harold E.Varmus, Nobel Prize-winning scientist and director of the National Cancer Institute (USA) and Michael Eisen, professor of genetics and genomic medicine at the University of California, Berkeley.
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The PLOS suite is divided into several general fields: biology, computational biology, genetics, medicine, tropical diseases, pathogens and PLOS ONE, that works as a multidisciplinary journal. In addition to the organization of these general fields, PLOS contributes to the realization of twenty blogs and two community channels,  involving more than 6500 academic publishers and 90,000 people between authors, readers and analysts from 200 countries.
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PLOS is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) which was established to facilitate access and free reuse of material of any kind. Under this license authors agree to deliver papers legally available for reuse without permission or fees, provided that the author and the original source are properly cited. PLOS has innovated in the development of applications such as ALM (Article Level Metrics) which was designed as a tool to measure the impact or influence of published research. Additionally, and in collaboration with SPARC (Scholarly Publishing and Academic Resources) and OASPA (Open Access Scholarly Publishers Association), PLOS developed the project How Open is it? Open Spectrum Access (OAS) with the aim of creating a place for the evaluation and comparison of Open Access policies posed by publishers, helping authors to make informed decisions about where to publish.
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== <small>'''Links'''</small> ==
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'''URL:''' https://www.plos.org
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'''Wayback Machine:''' https://web.archive.org/web/*/https://www.plos.org
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'''Wikipedia:''' https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PLOS
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[[Category:Projects]]
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[[Category:Science]]
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[[Category:English]]
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[[Category:USA]]
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[[Category:2000]]
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[[Category:Open access]]
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[[Category:Open science]]
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[[Category:Nonprofit]]

Latest revision as of 22:49, 10 June 2017

Screenshot-www plos org 2016-08-19 17-08-15.png

Self-portrait

Openness Inspires Innovation It's the way we think science and publishing should be.

PLOS was founded in 2001 as a nonprofit Open Access publisher, innovator and advocacy organization with a mission to accelerate progress in science and medicine by leading a transformation in research communication. Our efforts and successes have inspired others – from individual researchers to the larger publishing industry – to move toward a more open ethos.

Open is no longer just about free and unrestricted access to research, it's also about open data, transparency in peer review and an open approach to science assessment.

Open is a mindset that represents the best scientific values. One that focuses on bringing scientists together, to share work as rapidly and as widely as possible, to advance science faster and to benefit society as a whole.

Making Breakthroughs Is Habit Forming Since launching its first journal in 2003, PLOS has been a force for transformation in scholarly publishing, breaking with archaic traditions from previous generations. Our key innovations accelerate science and medicine, from research discovery to influence tracking.

(https://www.plos.org/who-we-are)

Description

PLOS is a project dedicated to the creation of a library of Open Access scientific and medical journals. It aims to accelerate the progress of science and medicine through a transformation in the circulation of research and the practice of "peer reviewing ", a mutual and rigorous evaluation of the work made by the collaborators of the platform.

The project started in October of 2000 in San Francisco, California. It was created by Patrick O. Brown, professor of the Department of Biochemistry at the University of Stanford, Harold E.Varmus, Nobel Prize-winning scientist and director of the National Cancer Institute (USA) and Michael Eisen, professor of genetics and genomic medicine at the University of California, Berkeley.

The PLOS suite is divided into several general fields: biology, computational biology, genetics, medicine, tropical diseases, pathogens and PLOS ONE, that works as a multidisciplinary journal. In addition to the organization of these general fields, PLOS contributes to the realization of twenty blogs and two community channels, involving more than 6500 academic publishers and 90,000 people between authors, readers and analysts from 200 countries.

PLOS is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) which was established to facilitate access and free reuse of material of any kind. Under this license authors agree to deliver papers legally available for reuse without permission or fees, provided that the author and the original source are properly cited. PLOS has innovated in the development of applications such as ALM (Article Level Metrics) which was designed as a tool to measure the impact or influence of published research. Additionally, and in collaboration with SPARC (Scholarly Publishing and Academic Resources) and OASPA (Open Access Scholarly Publishers Association), PLOS developed the project How Open is it? Open Spectrum Access (OAS) with the aim of creating a place for the evaluation and comparison of Open Access policies posed by publishers, helping authors to make informed decisions about where to publish.


Links

URL: https://www.plos.org

Wayback Machine: https://web.archive.org/web/*/https://www.plos.org

Wikipedia: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PLOS