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| title    = The Rise of Open Access
 
| title    = The Rise of Open Access
 
| image    = the_rise_of_open_access.jpg
 
| image    = the_rise_of_open_access.jpg
| imagesize = 1200px
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| before    = The accelerating pace of scientific publishing and the rise of open access, as depicted by xkcd.com cartoonist Randall Munroe.
 
| ldomain  = sciencemag.org/content/342/6154/58.full#
 
| ldomain  = sciencemag.org/content/342/6154/58.full#
| lappend  =
 
 
| extra    = yes
 
| extra    = yes
| noexpand  = true
 
 
}}
 
}}
  
* The comic above is from the article "[https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/science.342.6154.58 The Rise of Open Access]" published by ''Science''. The article page doesn't display the image anymore, but [https://www.science.org/doi/epdf/10.1126/science.342.6154.58 PDF version] is still available on the site. A larger version of this image can be found [https://www.explainxkcd.com/wiki/images/4/48/the_rise_of_open_access.jpg here].
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* The comic above is from the article "[http://www.sciencemag.org/content/342/6154/58.full. The Rise of Open Access]" in Science.  
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* A much larger version of this image, where the two parts (upper and lower) has been moved so the bottom part instead continued the upper part can be found by clicking the image in the article, or click [http://www.sciencemag.org/site/special/scicomm/infographic.jpg here].
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** This version has also been [http://www.explainxkcd.com/wiki/images/archive/4/48/20150825153049%21the_rise_of_open_access.jpg uploaded to xkcd].
  
 
==Explanation==
 
==Explanation==
This comic is a one-off exclusive created for the journal {{w|Science (journal)|Science}} by [[Randall Munroe]]. It shows how much "Science" there is and how much of it will be Open access. It is not part of the main comic series.
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This comic is a one-off exclusive created for the journal {{w|Science (journal)|Science}} by [[Randall Munroe]].It shows how much "Science" there is and how much of it will be Open access. It is not part of the main comic series.
  
 
It shows how much Science is there by showing how many papers have been published. It states that there can be 140 citations per page. On a Word document with a narrow margin and regular font you could fit about 140 citations on one page with a word size of 6. It then states that we can fit 1000 pages per book. 1000 pages is a lot for children's books{{Citation needed}} and even larger fiction books such the Harry Potter series have about 600 pages. However, many reference books and dictionaries have over 1000 pages. For a size reference, picture Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix 1.3 times larger. We then start stacking books, each one having 140,000 citations in them.
 
It shows how much Science is there by showing how many papers have been published. It states that there can be 140 citations per page. On a Word document with a narrow margin and regular font you could fit about 140 citations on one page with a word size of 6. It then states that we can fit 1000 pages per book. 1000 pages is a lot for children's books{{Citation needed}} and even larger fiction books such the Harry Potter series have about 600 pages. However, many reference books and dictionaries have over 1000 pages. For a size reference, picture Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix 1.3 times larger. We then start stacking books, each one having 140,000 citations in them.
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==Transcript==
 
==Transcript==
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{{incomplete transcript|needs more}}
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:'''How much science is there?'''
 
:'''How much science is there?'''
  
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  | 1999 || NIH director proposes an archive of free biomed papers
 
  | 1999 || NIH director proposes an archive of free biomed papers
 
  |-  
 
  |-  
  | 2000 || Pubmed Central debuts <br> PLoS founded (now PLOS)
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  | 2000 || Pubmed Central debuts <br> Plos founded
 
  |-  
 
  |-  
 
  | 2001 || 30,000 scientists call for a boycott of journals that don't allow free access on Pubmed within 6 months
 
  | 2001 || 30,000 scientists call for a boycott of journals that don't allow free access on Pubmed within 6 months
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:Black Hat: 25% of open-access papers are freely available on publication. The rest becomes free within 12 months on journal websites or other repositories.   
 
:Black Hat: 25% of open-access papers are freely available on publication. The rest becomes free within 12 months on journal websites or other repositories.   
  
:[Next to Cueball, Danish fishes a book out of a pile of volumes with a fishing rod.]
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:[Next to Cueball, a woman fishes a book out of a pile of volumes with a fishing rod.]
  
  
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[[Category:Comics featuring Black Hat]]
 
[[Category:Comics featuring Black Hat]]
 
[[Category:Comics featuring Danish]]
 
[[Category:Comics featuring Danish]]
[[Category:Scientific research]]
 
[[Category:No title text]]
 
[[Category:Comics with color]]
 

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