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Unanticipated Benefits of OA and the Future of D2O

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Manage episode 473642844 series 2848568
Content provided by Choice. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Choice or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://ppacc.player.fm/legal.

In the final episode of this four-part series, Janaki Srinivasan of the Oxford School of Global and Area Studies and the Oxford Internet Institute and Amy Harris of MIT Press explore the unanticipated benefits of open monographs and the future of MIT Press’s Direct to Open (D2O) program. First, Amy chats about how open access influences translation and licensing decisions. She cites MIT Press’s Deep Learning, a 2016 computer science title that drove interest in large part due to its preprinted chapters and open peer review, spurring more than a dozen translation licenses with publishers. Next, Amy and Janaki highlight the ways students and teaching faculty interact with open materials; the ease of clicking a link creates fewer barriers for tech-savvy researchers. Last, Amy previews D2O’s 2025 impact report and shares the unique ways D2O authors’ research flourishes outside of academia.

Read the latest impact report from MIT Press’s Direct to Open (D2O).

Missed an episode? Subscribe to our monthly newsletter, Choice Podcast Updates, and check out the Authority File Round-Up on our blog, Open Stacks!

  continue reading

457 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 473642844 series 2848568
Content provided by Choice. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Choice or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://ppacc.player.fm/legal.

In the final episode of this four-part series, Janaki Srinivasan of the Oxford School of Global and Area Studies and the Oxford Internet Institute and Amy Harris of MIT Press explore the unanticipated benefits of open monographs and the future of MIT Press’s Direct to Open (D2O) program. First, Amy chats about how open access influences translation and licensing decisions. She cites MIT Press’s Deep Learning, a 2016 computer science title that drove interest in large part due to its preprinted chapters and open peer review, spurring more than a dozen translation licenses with publishers. Next, Amy and Janaki highlight the ways students and teaching faculty interact with open materials; the ease of clicking a link creates fewer barriers for tech-savvy researchers. Last, Amy previews D2O’s 2025 impact report and shares the unique ways D2O authors’ research flourishes outside of academia.

Read the latest impact report from MIT Press’s Direct to Open (D2O).

Missed an episode? Subscribe to our monthly newsletter, Choice Podcast Updates, and check out the Authority File Round-Up on our blog, Open Stacks!

  continue reading

457 episodes

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