J Biol Chem, Vol. 275, Issue 16, 11539-11539, April 21, 2000
EDITORIAL
HighWire Press Is 5 years old
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ARTICLE |
It has been 5 years since
Stanford University's HighWire Press launched a revolution in
scientific publishing with the creation of JBC Online in 1995. Now
virtually every life science journal, as well as journals of many other
disciplines, publish online. From that beginning with JBC Online in
1995, HighWire now produces online editions of more than 180 of the
most highly cited journals and has clearly set the standard for
innovative, very high quality Internet publication of the world's most
important scientific journals (see the 500 most highly cited journals
at http://highwire.stanford.edu/top/journals.dtl).
During this remarkable 5-year period,
HighWire has published more than 600,000 articles, and more than
140,000 articles are available free to anyone with Internet access.
This represents, by far, the largest archive of barrier-free,
peer-reviewed life science research reports on earth and serves the
world research community exceedingly well.
The publication of JBC Online has also
skyrocketed during this 5-year revolution. As of March 12, 2000, we
have published 25,874 articles. As a result of our "free back
issues" policy to release all articles free at the end of each
calendar year, more than 24,694 are available to everyone at no cost.
Also during this time, the usage of JBC online has increased
enormously. In 1 week in mid-1995, about 1000 individual readers
contacted the JBC Online. For the 1 week ending March 2, 2000, more
than 41,000 individuals contacted the JBC site.
On March 8, 2000, JBC and HighWire
launched a truly innovative feature called JBC Papers in Press. We now
publish papers the hour they are accepted for publication and release
them free to anyone with internet access (see www.jbc.org).
What's next? The HighWire team
continues to innovate, and we can expect many exciting new developments
in the next 5 years. It is clear that online publication is vastly
superior to print publication with easily searchable archives and very
productive linking to other related research information. Given this
great superiority of online publication, we are rapidly headed toward a
drastic transformation of the print journal. Many journals are already
making the online version of their research reports the version of
record. These changes will redefine our libraries and how scientists
access the exponentially increasing volume of research results.
Congratulations HighWire, for
revolutionizing science publication. We can't wait to see what's next.
Copyright © 2000 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.