Press Release

Physics-Related Professional Societies Support Open Access

By SpaceRef Editor
December 15, 2020
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The American Astronomical Society (AAS) and 15 other major physics-related professional societies, which together support researchers with the publication of more than 75,000 peer-reviewed journal articles each year, have joined forces to show their commitment to open access (OA) for physics research. 

The group comprises 16 societies: Acoustical Society of America; American Association of Physicists in Medicine; American Association of Physics Teachers; American Astronomical Society; American Crystallographic Association; American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics; American Institute of Physics; American Physical Society; AVS Science & Technology of Materials, Interfaces, and Processes; Chinese Physical Society; European Physical Society; Institute of Physics; Institute of Physics and Engineering in Medicine; Laser Institute of America; Optical Society (OSA); and Society of Rheology. 

In a joint statement, “Achieving Greater Open Access in Physics,” the societies detail how they have long embraced open science and open access to research results. Their proactive engagement, such as the launch of high-quality OA journals (including the Planetary Science Journal, launched earlier this year by the AAS and its Division for Planetary Sciences), switching hybrid journals to full OA, and establishing transformative agreements with stakeholders, has contributed to an average annual growth in OA physics articles of more than 25%, compared with an overall average annual growth in physics articles of around 2%. 

Having supported open publishing in physics and related disciplines for decades, the group’s common ambition is that all OA models provide financially sustainable support for author choice and the quality of peer-review and publication upon which excellent research relies. 

The statement highlights how policies, such as the proposed cOAlition S Rights Retention Strategy (https://www.coalition-s.org/rights-retention-strategy), could undermine the viability of high-quality hybrid journals and the important role they play in balancing OA expansion with the researcher’s freedom to publish where they choose. It stresses the need for broader international financial support for OA to be in place before hybrid journals can fully transition, pointing out that adjustments to the global flow of funding will take time.

The group also acknowledges the strong culture of sharing results before peer review via preprint platforms and calls for funders to increase their recognition and encouragement for this practice in physics as a complement to peer-reviewed journal publication. 

The joint statement is a call for a pragmatic, inclusive, and sustainable approach to OA. It is also a commitment, as major physics societies representing the interests of their communities, to work together to make it happen.

Contacts:
Rick Fienberg
American Astronomical Society
+1 202-328-2010 x116
rick.fienberg@aas.org

Rachael Harper
IOP Publishing 
+44 (0) 7902 708 981
rachael.harper@ioppublishing.org

“Achieving Greater Open Access in Physics” Position Statement (PDF):
https://aas.org/sites/default/files/2020-12/OA_Position_Statement_2020Dec.pdf

SpaceRef staff editor.