Posted Mon, Jul, 09,2012
Enhanced visibility is one of the prime advantages to authors of publishing in an open access journal like Journal of Experimental Neuroscience.
One of the ways we measure an article's visibility is the number of views and downloads it receives. The resulting number is available on the journal's webpages for each article, and by adding those numbers together we obtain the journal's visibility figure.
Counting views and downloads is complicated by the possibility of fraud and automated views by search engines. To ensure that readers and authors can have confidence in our visibility analytics we have now formally joined Project Counter. Release 3 of Project Counter's code of practice addresses these and other problems.
Journal of Experimental Neuroscience's membership of Project Counter ensures that readers and authors can trust its visibility analytics.
Visit this page to see the latest visibility information for Journal of Experimental Neuroscience
Posted in: Open AccessVisibility and Discoverability
News Categories
Mon 17 Jun, 2013
CIINE Reflects CII Breakdown in CanineFri 14 Jun, 2013
Spontaneous Collapse of Bilateral BullaeIt was my great pleasure to serve as a peer reviewer for the Journal of Cell Death. The review process is fast and efficient. The online access was easy and user-friendly. The editorial staff are friendly and helpful. It was a great experience working with Libertas Academica and I look forward to working with them further.
All authors are surveyed after their articles are published. Authors are asked to rate their experience in a variety of areas, and their responses help us to monitor our performance. Presented here are their responses in some key areas. No 'poor' or 'very poor' responses were received; these are represented in the 'other' category.See Our Results
Copyright © 2013 Libertas Academica Ltd (except open access articles and accompanying metadata and supplementary files.)
Facebook Google+ Twitter
Pinterest Tumblr YouTube