Journal & journalogy
A journal is a
form of publication. It is a
periodical (usually
with a frequency of more than one issue per year).
Usually is Journal des Sçavants,
founded in Paris in 1665, regarded the first journal. It published
extracts from new books and bibliography of new publications. The same year was
the first scientific journal, Philosophical Transactions, published by Henry Oldenburg, secretary
at the
Royal Society of London.
"In the eighteenth century a wide spectrum of publication forms existed; they were not, however, specialized in any way. There were instructional handbooks at the university level, journals of a general scientific nature for a regional public interested in utility, and academy journals aiming at an international public, each covering a wide subject area but with rather limited communicative effects. It was only after 1780 that in France, in Germany, and finally, in England, nationwide journals with a specific orientation on such subjects as chemistry, physics, mineralogy, and philology appeared. In contrast to isolated precursors in previous decades, these journals were able to exist for longer periods exactly because they brought together a community of authors. These authors accepted the specialization chosen by the journal; but at the same time they continually modified this specialization by the cumulative effect of their published articles. Thus the status of the scientific publication changed. It now represented the only communicative form by which, at the macro level of the system of science―defined originally by national but later by supranational networks―communication complexes specialized along disciplinary lines could be bound together and persist in the long run (Stichweh 1984, Chap. 6, Bazerman 1988)" (Stichweh, 2001, p. 13728).
Before the establishing of journals was the current
communication between the scientific societies and academies based on personal
correspondence. Books were seen as the final form of
communication, but were too slow to produce (cf., Kronick, 1962). The
limitations of letters in scientific communication was not primarily there
limited distribution. The problem was primarily that during their circulation
appeared chances for plagiarism, "philosophical theft", distortions and delay in
the elimination of wrong results.
Heine
Andersen writes:
"The scientific specialized and collectively watched journals may be seen as the institutional innovation, which rectify these malfunctions. The journal do this thanks to their recognized positions, honesty, universalism and quality of evaluation and judgment by which they can provide research results a kind of autorizsation and ensure the author the intellectual rights.
Gradually was the institutional settings extended and standardized to the system, as we know it today, in particular in the sciences, with fixed procedures for editiorial boards, advisory editorial boards, referees, subject specialization. standardization of article composition etc." (Andersen, 1988, p. 187-188).
Structure and Elements in a Typical Scientific Article
|
Norms of scientific method and philosophy of science external to the article |
Elements contained in the article |
Value-added information (Subject access points, access and evaluation information) |
|
|
|
|
(From Hjørland, 1997, p. 23).
From a Library and Information Science (LIS) point of view journals
represent primary literature. LIS is
interested in journals as a part of the overall scientific and scholarly
communication system (see UNISIST
model of information dissemination). The name "journalogy" has been
suggested for the study of journals (see also editors).
Literature:
Andersen, H. (1988). Publiceringspraksis og organisationsformer i danske samfundsvidenskaber. Politica, 20(2), 185-201.
Bazerman, C. (1988). Shaping Written Knowledge: The Genre and Activiity of the Experimental Article in Science. University of Wisconsin Press, Madison, WI
Bruhns, S. (1993). Journalologi. Pp. 230-240 IN: Ud over grænserne. Ålborg: Biblioteksarbejde.
Cole, S. (2000). The role of journals in the growth of scientific knowledge. In B. Cronin & H. B. Atkins (Eds.), The web of knowledge: A festschrift in honor of Eugene Garfield (pp. 109-142). Medford, NJ: Information Today, Inc., ASIS Monograph Series.
Donovan, S. K. (2006) Research journals: Toward uniformity or retaining diversity? Journal of Scholarly Publishing, 37,(3), 230-235.
Gleditsch, N. P.; Enckell,
P. H. & Burchardt, J.
(eds.) (1994). Det vitenskapelige tidsskrift. København: Nordisk Ministerråd.
(TemaNord 1994:574).
Greco, A. N.; Wharton, R. M.; Estelami, H. & Jones, R .F. (2006). The state of scholarly journal publishing: 1981-2000. Journal of Scholarly Publishing, 37(3), 155-214.
Hjørland, B. (1997). Information Seeking and Subject Representation. An
Activity-theoretical approach to Information Science. Westport & London:
Greenwood Press.
Kronick, D. A. (1962). A History of Scientific and Technical Periodicals:
The Origins and Development of the Scientific and Technological Press,
1665-1790. New York: Scarecrow Press.
Lindsey, D. (1978). The scientific publication system in social science. A study of the operation of leading professional journals in psychology, sociology and social work. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass Publishers.
Lock, S. P. (1989). "Journalogy": are the quotes needed? CBE Views 12(4):57-9. Reprinted in Current Contents, 1990, #3, 21-24. (With an introduction by Eugene Garfield, pp.19-21). http://www.garfield.library.upenn.edu/essays/v13p019y1990.pdf
Malmquist, J.-E.
(1992). Tidsskriftiana. En skrift om tidskrifter. Stockholm:
Statens kulturråd.
Malmquist, J.-E. (1992). Gediget arbete. Handbok i tidsskrifthantering på bibliotek. Stockholm: Statens kulturråd. (Rapport 1992:1).
Morris, S. (2006). When is a journal not a journal? A closer look at the DOAJ [Directory of open Access Journals]. Learned Publishing, 19(1), 73-76.
Oster, S. (1980). The Optimal Order for Submitting Manuscripts. American Economic Review, 70(3), 444-448.
Page, G., Campbell, R. & Meadows, A. J. (1997). Journal Publishing. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Quinton, A. (1995). Journals of Philosophy IN: Honderich, T. (ed.): The Oxford Companion to Philosophy. Oxford & New York: Oxford University Press. (Pp. 431-432).
Regier, W. G.; English, J. F.; Hanson, D. C. & Regier, W. G. (2005). Journals as
Innovators and the Innovation of Journals: The Council of Editors of
Learned Journals Keynote Addresses MLA Convention 2004. Journal of Scholarly
Publishing, 37(1), 1-18.
Smith, A. P. (2000). The journal as an overlay on preprint databases. Learned Publishing, 13(1), 43-48.
Stichweh, R. (1984). Zur Entstehung des
Modernen Systems Wissenschaftlicher Disziplinen―Physik in Deutschland 1740-1890. Suhrkamp, Frankfurt am Main, Germany.
Stichweh, R. (2001). Scientific
Disciplines, History of. IN: Smelser, N. J. & Baltes, P. B. (eds.).
International Encyclopedia of the Social and Behavioral Sciences. Oxford:
Elsevier Science (pp. 13727-13731).
Stieg, M. F. (1986). The origin and development of scholarly historical periodicals. University, Ala.: University of Alabama Press.
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Bibliography of journals:
Ulrich's International Periodicals Directory. New York: Bowker, Ed. 1- ,1932- .
http://library.dialog.com/bluesheets/html/bl0480.html
Journal on journals:
Serials. The Journal of the United Kingdom Serials Group. Bradford,
UK: United Kingdom Serials Group, Vol. 1-, 1988-.
http://www.uark.edu/depts/histinfo/history/CHJ/
See also: Electronic journal;
Birger Hjørland
Last edited: 01-06-2006
to be edited:
Donovan (2006)
Abstract: The libraries of universities and other research institutions are
home to an abundance of academic journals, published in
multifarious
sizes, thicknesses, languages, and formats, with covers
varying from
black to psychedelic and covering every subject imaginable.
More
uniformity of format would favour the author, who would no
longer have
to tailor style to wherever the latest contribution is being
submitted,
but the current diversity of formats is aimed at the reader.
Long may
it so remain.
Greco et al. (2006) Abstract: Scholarly journals play a substantive, role in the
dissemination
of knowledge among academics, and. university presses have
been
exceptionally active as journal publishers. But since 1981 a
series of
events has affected, and in some instance adversely affected,
journal
publishing.
This article analyses data from
the Institute for Scientific
Information (ISI) regarding 1317 scholarly journals in 25
marker fields
and addresses the following question: It has been alleged
that it
became difficult for academics in certain fields to get
published in
scholarly journals. Was there any decrease in the number of
articles
published in the 1317 journals analysed in this study?
Other questions addressed in
this paper include the following: What
impact did the serials crisis have on university presses? Did
the
economics of journal publishing change between 1981 and 2000?
What is
the potential impact Of the 'open access' movement on
scholarly
communication?
Tidsskrifter findes i flere mediekategorier (f.eks. trykte tidsskrifter,
tidsskrifter i mikroformer, fuldtekstbaser online eller på cd-rom).
Alle litterære funktionskategorier er repræsenteret i tidsskriftsform
(f.eks. afhandlingslitteratur, oversigtslitteratur og bibliografi).
Typer af tidsskrifter er f.eks.
- Videnskabelige fagtidsskrifter (typisk afhandlingslitteratur)
- Kulturtidsskrifter
- Nyhedsorienterede fagtidsskrifter
- Populære fagtidsskrifter og "Magasiner"
- Anmeldelsestidsskrifter
- Forskningsoversigter ("Review journals")
- Løbende bibliografier
- Statistiske publikationer
- "News Letters"
- "Letter Journals"
The concept of "core journals" is related to Bradford's law of
scattering.
Quinton (1995) omtaler de filosofiske tidsskrifters historie og udvikling. Han
beskriver dem som lærdomshistoriens senest etablerede institutioner (de første
var akademiet eller forskningsinstitutionen og biblioteket). Han konkluderer om
tidsskrifterne:
"The great age of philosophical journals ran from around 1890 to 1960. Since
then they have increasingly come to serve as platforms for budding philosophers,
in an expanding and competitive profession, from which to call attention to
themselves, rather than as a vehicles for the ideas of established leading
figures".
Tidsskriftsartikler er betegnelse for de afhandlinger o.a. publiceret i
form af artikler i tidsskrifter. Forskellige fag har forskellige
informationsstrukturer, dvs. en forskellig fordeling af afhandlinger m.v. på
forskellige publikationstyper. Tidsskriftsartiklernes opbygning kan være ret
formaliseret, især indenfor naturvidenskab. Regler for udformning af artikler
publiceres ofte af f.eks. faglige sammenslutninger (eller i kort form på
tidsskriftets omslag) (Jfr. "Publikationer, normative retningslinier").
produce value-added information to representations of documents.