In fact, some large publishers, such as Elsevier and Wiley-Blackwell, include a clause PSI-7977 in their CTAs in which they licence back to authors some non-commercial rights for scholarly or educational purposes (i.e. teaching use, sharing copies among colleagues, making articles freely-accessible online by placing them in institutional repositories). This model thus increasingly resembles the ELF, which leaves the copyright with the author, but
assigns to the publisher the exclusive right to publish the work. The ELF has the advantage that the author remains free to use or re-use the work, usually not for direct commercial use, without needing to ask permission. A third copyright model, proposed by a small percentage of publishers, is that known as CCA, promoted by the Creative Commons Corporation [10], a US non-profit organisation founded in 2001, inspired by the OA paradigm and the open source software movement. More precisely, CC licences [11] guarantee a balance between protection and access by permitting some
re-use without the need to ask publishers for specific permission. There are six types of CC licence, ranging from the least VX-765 nmr restrictive (attribution, used by pioneer OA publishers PloS and BioMed Central) to the more restrictive (attribution, non-commercial, no BLZ945 supplier derivative works). The least restrictive model recognises the intellectual property rights of the author, while the most restricted licence allows neither commercialisation nor modification of the original work. Results Table S 2 lists the journals
hosting the scientific production of ISS, IRE and INT, in the Q1, Q2, Q3 and Q4 ranges listed in the JCR Oncology category [6]. For each journal, the Table reports the publisher, business model and OA publication fee envisaged. The JRC’s subject category considered includes 182 journals, with an IF ranging from 94.333 (Ca-a Cancer Journal for Clinicians) to 0.101 (UHOD-Uluslararasi Hematoloji-Onkoloji Dergisi). During 2010 the research staff of the three institutions published in 78 journals out of 182 with an IF ranging from 37.184 (Nature reviews cancer) to 0.364 (Breast care). Twenty-seven articles appeared in Tumori, a subscription-based journal and the official journal of INT, of which 24 were authored by INT researchers. The Journal of experimental & SSR128129E clinical cancer research, the official full OA journal of IRE, published 12 articles, 11 of them authored by IRE researchers. Almost half (34) of the 78 journals were included in Q1, while 25 journals were found in Q2, 12 in Q3 and the remaining 7 in Q4. The large percentage of Q1 journals accounts for the high level of publications produced by the institutions concerned, in terms of prestige and impact of the chosen journals. Of the total journals listed in Table S 2, the prevalent business models were the hybrid formula with a score of 51 journals, followed by 22 only subscription-based journals, and just 5 full OA journals.