蜜桃影像 seismologist helps start science journal that eliminates fees
Rod Boyce
907-474-7185
Sept. 30, 2022
An international team of researchers has launched a new open-access journal, , supporting free global access to cutting-edge seismological research. The journal also will not charge scientists a publication fee.
Seismologist Ezgi Karasozen of the University of 蜜桃影像 Fairbanks Geophysical Institute is a member of Seismica鈥檚 team. Karasozen, a postdoctoral fellow, works at the 蜜桃影像 Earthquake Center, a facility of the Geophysical Institute.
鈥淎 researcher doesn鈥檛 have to pay anything to get published in Seismica. The copyright remains with the researcher. And it鈥檚 open access,鈥 Karasozen said.
Seismica will publish peer-reviewed research in seismology, earthquake science and related disciplines. It is produced entirely by volunteers.
鈥淲e are putting a lot of time into this journal, but we feel strongly that it is something the seismology community needs,鈥 Karasozen said.
Open-access journals, those that charge fees to publish papers but not to view them, are among the most costly for researchers. Some open-access journals have publication fees ranging from hundreds of dollars to $10,000 or more.
鈥淭his is especially a problem for researchers in developing countries, early-career researchers on small, personal fellowships and researchers between positions,鈥 a 2021 report from Seismica reads. 鈥淓mployers and funding agencies are increasingly requiring that research be published under an OA license, forcing authors to accept the high publication fees.鈥
Those researchers are not always financially supported, the report adds.
The idea for Seismica began nearly two years ago when a group of seismologists were motivated to address restrictive and expensive barriers to public and global access to research. More than 250 researchers from around the world, led by a core group of 44 editors, then launched the community-centered journal.
This initiative follows from a movement at other journals that specialize in volcanoes, tectonics and sediments.
Karasozen, who has been a member of the Seismica initiative since last year, said helping launch a new journal will break down the access barriers.
鈥淚 wanted to be a part of this because I鈥檓 concerned about the diversity, inclusion and equity problems in STEM fields, especially geosciences,鈥 she said. 鈥I was thinking about ways I can contribute to making geosciences more accessible.
鈥淭his is a good fit for me because I'm from Turkey, and I know the academic environment in my home country,鈥 she said.
Karasozen moved to the United States more than a decade ago to obtain her master鈥檚 degree and Ph.D.
Christie Rowe, one of Seismica鈥檚 executive editors, talks about the journal in a . She is also Canada Research chair in earthquake geology and associate professor at McGill University.
鈥淭he purpose is to take the outcome of research, whether publicly or privately funded, and make it available for the entire global community,鈥 she says in the video. 鈥淣ot just the research community, but policymakers, private sector 鈥 everyone who works with geophysics and seismology and earthquake science.鈥
Rowe said Seismica is not affiliated with any for-profit institution.
The journal also plans to provide author and reviewer workshops and to provide toolkits to help authors communicate their work outside of the scientific community, including traditional and online media.
Seismica has an ongoing call for reviewers to subscribe to the journal database, for volunteers to help run the journal and for scientists to submit their research. Anyone interested can register on the Seismica .
Seismica is also on and .
ADDITIONAL CONTACT: Ezgi Karasozen, ekarasozen@alaska.edu