OA, AI, and DEI—Triple Advantage or Triple Threat? | Periodicals Price Survey 2024

Many librarians lauded the development of Open Access (OA) publishing models, which offered, at least initially, to help solve the problem of an unsustainable and inequitable scholarly communications ecosystem while simultaneously addressing a growing interest in diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI). In the past year, the idea that, with appropriate guardrails, Artificial Intelligence (AI) can also play a role in changing scholarly communications has risen to the fore. But can OA, DEI, and AI ever live up to their promise of an affordable, equitable and sustainable publishing ecosystem?

Where will the OA, AI, and DEI trifecta take us next?

Since the Great Recession, librarians have learned as best they can to manage an annual serials subscription model that inevitably outpaced flat or declining collection budgets. Many librarians lauded the development of Open Access (OA) publishing models, which offered, at least initially, to help solve the problem of an unsustainable and inequitable scholarly communications ecosystem while simultaneously addressing a growing interest in diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI). In the past year, the idea that, with appropriate guardrails, Artificial Intelligence (AI) can also play a role in changing scholarly communications has risen to the fore.

But can OA, DEI, and AI ever live up to their promise of an affordable, equitable and sustainable publishing ecosystem? While the serials market is quickly shifting to Open Access, the long-term sustainability of all current OA models remains questionable, at least in the United States. And the largest journal publishers now hold a greater share of the market than ever before, as the Read & Publish and Article Processing Charge (APC) sales models for OA have swept to dominance.

Meanwhile, in the face of sociopolitical challenges, the surge of DEI initiatives that began in 2020 is beginning to wane at many institutions. The Supreme Court’s decision in 2023 to strike down affirmative action in college admissions, coupled with legislation in Florida to ban higher education institutions from using state or federal funds on DEI programs, policies, or activities, means that many institutions may have to rethink how they purchase or provide access to DEI-related resources. And while AI tools will surely improve how we retrieve and analyze information, there are no certain answers yet as to how these new tools will deal with concerns surrounding accuracy, bias, and copyright.

 

TABLE 1: AVERAGE 2024 PRICE FOR SCIENTIFIC DISCIPLINES

SUBJECT AVERAGE COST
PER TITLE
Chemistry $7,754
Physics 6,138
Engineering 5,258
Food Science 4,550
Biology 4,542
Geology 4,082
Technology 3,920
Botany  3,422
Geography 3,036
Health Sciences 2,918
General Science 2,912
Agriculture 2,700
Astronomy 2,693
Zoology 2,651
Math & Computer Science 2,644

SOURCE: LJ PERIODICALS PRICE SURVEY 2024

 

ECONOMIC CONTEXT

Despite high interest rates and persistent inflation, U.S. economic performance remained strong and unemployment low, with the stock market, in the words of some experts, “defying gravity.” According to the Bureau of Economic Analysis, the real gross domestic product increased 2.5 percent in 2023, while the Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers increased 3.4 percent. The National Association of State Budget Officers noted that while 46 states reported fiscal 2023 general fund revenue collections exceeding original estimates, most states are expecting slowing revenue and expenditure growth overall in fiscal 2024. However, the war in Ukraine, turmoil in the Middle East, slow growth in China, and key elections in 2024 covering nearly 40 percent of the world’s population all linger as dark clouds that could dampen American economic stability. And while the State Higher Education Executive Officers Association (SHEEO) reports that state higher education funding rose nearly 5 percent in FY22, total enrollment at public institutions dropped for the 11th consecutive year in a row. Consequently, those libraries seeing funding levels finally make up for ground lost since the Great Recession and the COVID-19 pandemic may remain hesitant to release new funds for ongoing purchase commitments like serials subscriptions.

 

TABLE 2: COST HISTORY FOR TITLES IN SCOPUS BY LIBRARY OF CONGRESS SUBJECT

SUBJECT AVERAGE NO. OF TITLES 2022-24 CHANGE IN NUMBER OF TITLES AVERAGE COST PER TITLE 2022 AVERAGE COST PER TITLE 2023 % OF CHANGE 2023 AVERAGE COST PER TITLE 2024 % OF CHANGE 2024
Business & Economics 1,128 -49 $1,721 $1,806 5 $1,895 5
Fine Arts 245 -5 574 606 6 640 6
Health Sciences 3,174 -189 1,702 1,797 6 1,899 6
Humanities 1,712 -37 534 564 6 597 6
Law 255 -7 747 781 5 823 5
Life Sciences 1,706 -103 2,500 2,611 4 2,724 4
Social Sciences 2,080 -54 1,188 1,265 7 1,349 7
STEM 3,865 -148 2,731 2,889 6 3,072 6
TOTAL/AVERAGE 14,165 -592 $1,827 $1,928 6% $2,039 6%

SOURCE: LJ PERIODICALS PRICE SURVEY 2024

 

THE BIG GET BIGGER

One unintended consequence of OA initiatives is that five large academic publishers continue to dominate the world of publishing. Funder and author-pay models reward volume, allowing these big players to continue to grow. Not surprisingly, these publishers are also now aggressively beginning to both position themselves as leaders in AI offerings and address equity concerns regarding publishing support for authors in the global south and for non–English speaking researchers.

 

 

TABLE 3: COST HISTORY FOR ONLINE TITLES IN CLARIVATE ANALYTICS INDEXES BY LIBRARY OF CONGRESS SUBJECT

SUBJECT AVERAGE NO. OF TITLES 2022-24 AVERAGE COST PER TITLE 2022 AVERAGE COST PER TITLE 2023 % OF CHANGE 2022-23 AVERAGE COST PER TITLE 2024 % OF CHANGE 2023-24
Agriculture 75 $1,356 $1,377 2 $1,440 5
Anthropology 41 626 647 3 681 5
Arts & Architecture 90 500 529 6 554 5
Astronomy 12 1,375 1,407 2 1,464 4
Biology 184 3,308 3,393 3 3,547 5
Botany 23 2,499 2,552 2 2,659 4
Business & Economics 376 1,977 2,057 4 2,158 5
Chemistry 73 6,013 6,269 4 6,615 6
Education 134 1,289 1,356 5 1,450 7
Engineering 190 2,776 2,889 4 3,032 5
Food Science 15 2,895 3,040 5 3,303 9
General Science 41 1,592 1,654 4 1,750 6
General Works 56 261 270 3 284 5
Geography 59 1,797 1,873 4 1,961 5
Geology 33 1,553 1,578 2 1,633 4
Health Sciences 531 2,142 2,213 3 2,327 5
History 285 552 569 3 598 5
Language & Literature 406 450 471 5 490 4
Law 85 549 564 3 588 4
Library Science 31 720 741 3 779 5
Math & Computer Science 99 1,883 1,956 4 2,057 5
Military & Naval Science 10 1,263 1,324 5 1,436 8
Music 51 374 383 2 404 5
Philosophy & Religion 188 473 489 3 507 4
Physics 96 4,764 4,960 4 5,169 4
Political Science 87 1,015 1,059 4 1,105 4
Psychology 111 1,189 1,240 4 1,312 6
Recreation 38 991 1,049 6 1,107 6
Social Sciences 44 1,105 1,146 4 1,209 5
Sociology 252 1,147 1,205 5 1,266 5
Technology 44 2,630 2,768 5 2,900 5
Zoology 62 2,847 2,884 1 3,003 4
TOTALS 3,822 $1,626 $1,687 4% $1,771 5%

SOURCE: LJ PERIODICALS PRICE SURVEY 2024

OA market leader Springer Nature has rolled out multiple AI initiatives. The publishing giant acquired software startup Slimmer AI’s Science division, with an aim of expediting the overall publishing process through better identification of appropriate editors and reviewers, as well as detecting potential problems with papers, such as plagiarism. The company introduced Snapp (Springer Nature’s Article Processing Platform), a new manuscript submission platform with built-in AI integrity checks, as well as Curie, an AI-powered writing support assistant. Springer Nature’s expanding Research Solutions business acquired protocols.io, a platform for developing and sharing reproducible methods, in order to bolster its suite of tools and services available to researchers, and signed its first transformative agreement in the China region.

In January 2024, Elsevier announced a full release of Scopus AI, a generative AI product that allows users to quickly generate research summaries with references pulled from Scopus metadata and abstracts. Less than a month later, it announced the release of ClinicalKey AI, an add-on module that integrates conversational search into its ClinicalKey product. In an effort to reduce publishing barriers for researchers in lower- and middle-income countries, Elsevier also initiated a pilot whereby APC pricing structures would be adjusted to the country’s Gross National Income per capita.

Sage began a partnership with Spanish-language publisher FIA (Fundación Infancia y Aprendizaje) Journals, with the goal of making research more accessible by maintaining scientific discourse in multiple languages. Sage also increased its scientific offerings by acquiring previously independent IOS Press.

Informa subsidiary Taylor & Francis expanded its portfolio of medical/pharma journals with the purchase of Future Science Group. The publisher also sought to address researcher concerns about the peer review process by joining the Directory of Open Access Books’ peer review transparency initiative PRISM (Peer Review Information Service for Monographs), and piloted a transparent peer review model with its European Journal of Higher Education.

While Wiley landed both a landmark deal with SCELC (Statewide California Electronic Library Consortium) and a new five-year transformative agreement with Germany’s DEAL consortium, that news was overshadowed by concerns about article integrity and paper mills at Wiley’s OA publishing subsidiary, Hindawi. After closing four Hindawi journals and retracting more than 8,000 articles from other journals due to concerns about citation fraud and plagiarism, Wiley announced it would eliminate the Hindawi name and merge the operations into its main portfolio. By the end of the year, the company had lost millions in publishing revenue.

 

 

TABLE 4: COST HISTORY FOR TITLES IN ACADEMIC SEARCH ULTIMATE BY LIBRARY OF CONGRESS SUBJECT

SUBJECT AVERAGE NO. OF TITLES 2022-24 CHANGE FROM 2022-24 AVERAGE COST PER TITLE 2022 AVERAGE COST PER TITLE 2023 % OF CHANGE 2022-23 AVERAGE COST PER TITLE 2024 % OF CHANGE 2024
Agriculture 147 -11 $1,828 $1,907 4 $1,984 4
Anthropology 48 2 826 856 4 908 6
Arts & Architecture 54 -2 644 701 9 753 7
Astronomy 25 0 1,113 1,158 4 1,172 1
Biology 388 -13 3,734 3,811 2 3,897 2
Botany 53 -2 1,961 1,958 0 2,084 6
Business & Economics 204 -20 1,374 1,459 6 1,555 7
Chemistry 148 -4 6,576 6,867 4 7,241 5
Education 242 -5 1,190 1,262 6 1,381 9
Engineering 565 -9 3,552 3,778 6 4,083 8
Food Science 34 0 2,199 2,355 7 2,577 9
General Science 73 1 1,980 2,114 7 2,312 9
General Works 85 -6 364 361 -1 379 5
Geography 82 -6 2,020 2,067 2 2,182 6
Geology 67 -2 3,245 3,384 4 3,529 4
Health Sciences 1,074 -43 2,068 2,168 5 2,279 5
History 363 -14 579 609 5 653 7
Language & Literature 307 -12 589 627 6 660 5
Law 218 -20 421 441 5 471 7
Library Science 76 0 828 876 6 937 7
Math & Computer Science 240 -15 2,536 2,665 5 2,826 6
Military & Naval Science 39 -1 716 764 7 825 8
Music 82 -5 269 278 3 298 7
Philosophy & Religion 299 -17 406 427 5 452 6
Physics 153 -19 4,815 5,000 4 5,231 5
Political Science 107 -2 930 990 6 1,041 5
Psychology 160 -3 1,181 1,264 7 1,350 7
Recreation 38 1 1,083 1,156 7 1,253 8
Social Sciences 43 -3 1,134 1,205 6 1,274 6
Sociology 327 -6 1,202 1,294 8 1,388 7
Technology 58 -4 2,464 2,606 6 2,741 5
Zoology 104 -7 1,446 1,470 2 1,512 3
TOTALS 5,903 -247 $1,940 $2,034 5% $2,150 6%

SOURCE: LJ PERIODICALS PRICE SURVEY 2024

Of note: Nipping at the heels of the Big Five are purely OA publishers Frontiers and MDPI, the latter now consistently publishing more OA articles annually than any other publisher. While both have so far escaped the scandal that hit Hindawi, the speed at which they publish large numbers of articles and special issues has heightened concerns about overall quality control in a marketplace which increasingly rewards larger volumes with larger profits. Also not to be overlooked is China’s growing influence and rise in scholarly research output; the country is now the biggest contributor to natural and hard sciences journals, with the United States retaining the lead only in the life sciences.

 

 

TABLE 5: 2025 COST PROJECTIONS FOR TITLES INDEXED IN MASTERFILE COMPLETE

Overall price increases for titles in EBSCO Publishing’s MasterFILE Complete are expected to be in the 6.5% to 7.2% range for 2025.

MASTERFILE COMPLETE NO. OF TITLES 2022-24 AVERAGE COST PER TITLE 2022 AVERAGE COST PER TITLE 2023 % OF CHANGE 2022-23 AVERAGE COST PER TITLE 2024 % OF CHANGE 2023-24
U.S. 792 $379 $402 6.2 $433 7.8
Non-U.S. 208 491 524 6.9 557 6.3

SOURCE: LJ PERIODICALS PRICE SURVEY 2024

 

 

TABLE 6: 2025 COST PROJECTIONS FOR TITLES INDEXED IN ACADEMIC SEARCH ULTIMATE

Overall price increases for titles in EBSCO’s Academic Search Ultimate are expected to be in the 5.5% to 6.0% range for 2025.

ACADEMIC SEARCH ULTIMATE NO. OF TITLES % OF LIST 2024 AVERAGE COST PER TITLE 2023 % OF COST PROJECTED % OF INCREASE PROJECTED 2025 AVERAGE COST PER TITLE % OF COST PROJECTED OVERALL % INCREASE*
U.S. 2,290 39 $1,699 31 5.6 $1,792 31 5.7
Non-U.S. 3,613 61 2,437 69 5.8 2,556 69

*Column overall increase is inclusive of foreign and U.S.   SOURCE: LJ PERIODICALS PRICE SURVEY 2024

 

SIGNS OF CHANGE?

Although it seems unlikely that a single European or North American not-for-profit open access platform will ever come into being, there are signs that policymakers are beginning to recognize that the existing OA publishing trajectory needs to be nudged in a more sustainable direction. In May, the European Union released a position paper backing immediate open access to publicly funded research with no author or reader fees, preferably in a bloc-wide open-source platform. The paper also encouraged member states to include secondary publication rights in national copyright legislation. In the United States, Invest in Open Infrastructure announced it would be using a grant from the National Science Foundation to study what could be considered reasonable costs associated with the creation, publication, and dissemination of public access to U.S. federally funded research and scientific data. Both announcements can be interpreted as putting commercial publishers on notice that pricing for their publication services needs to be more transparent, and that more needs to be done to address concerns that “open at any cost” presents a serious threat to the integrity of the scholarly record. The growing number of paper mills and article retractions is, in fact, a reflection of a scholarly communications system that both encourages researchers to publish for the sake of publishing and pays publishers by the piece.

 

 

TABLE 7: COST HISTORY FOR TITLES IN CLARIVATE ANALYTICS INDEXES BY LIBRARY OF CONGRESS SUBJECT

SUBJECT AVERAGE NO. OF TITLES 2022-24 CHANGE FROM 2022-24 AVERAGE COST PER TITLE 2022 AVERAGE COST PER TITLE 2023 % OF CHANGE 2022-23 AVERAGE COST PER TITLE 2024 % OF CHANGE 2024
Agriculture 98 -12 $2,504 $2,605 4 $2,700 4
Anthropology 41 -4 774 787 2 829 5
Arts & Architecture 89 -5 611 653 7 688 5
Astronomy 12 -2 2,532 2,627 4 2,693 2
Biology 342 -35 4,372 4,446 2 4,542 2
Botany 27 -3 3,264 3,224 -1 3,422 6
Business & Economics 483 -42 2,249 2,357 5 2,473 5
Chemistry 138 -3 7,058 7,357 4 7,754 5
Education 157 -4 1,426 1,523 7 1,677 10
Engineering 310 -10 4,637 4,911 6 5,258 7
Food Science 19 -1 3,901 4,178 7 4,550 9
General Science 48 -5 2,495 2,653 6 2,912 10
General Works 63 -5 314 338 8 358 6
Geography 76 -7 2,777 2,876 4 3,036 6
Geology 53 -5 3,787 3,943 4 4,082 4
Health Sciences 925 -55 2,650 2,779 5 2,918 5
History 309 -21 607 637 5 684 7
Language & Literature 416 -26 544 577 6 607 5
Law 95 -6 566 587 4 617 5
Library Science 39 -2 1,117 1,182 6 1,264 7
Math & Computer Science 121 -21 2,411 2,503 4 2,644 6
Military & Naval Science 13 0 1,359 1,438 6 1,575 9
Music 50 -6 433 452 4 487 8
Philosophy & Religion 191 -9 503 528 5 558 6
Physics 126 -24 5,674 5,886 4 6,138 4
Political Science 85 -9 1,248 1,336 7 1,414 6
Psychology 144 -6 1,402 1,502 7 1,606 7
Recreation 40 -1 1,162 1,253 8 1,356 8
Social Sciences 55 -4 1,243 1,311 5 1,366 4
Sociology 275 -17 1,374 1,481 8 1,585 7
Technology 53 -5 3,505 3,720 6 3,920 5
Zoology 63 -7 2,552 2,577 1 2,651 3
TOTALS 4956 -362 $2,329 $2,436 5% $2,562 5%

SOURCE: LJ PERIODICALS PRICE SURVEY 2024

There are fears that AI will, through the creation of AI-generated texts and images, further damage trust in a publishing ecosystem where, in some disciplines, up to 25 percent of published papers may be plagiarized or fake. However, it’s equally possible that AI will assist players in rooting out submissions that included previously copyrighted material or manipulated images. Clarivate, for example, is developing an AI tool to assist with identifying journals that may no longer meet their quality criteria for inclusion in Web of Science. Similarly, the publisher association STM is taking steps to address concerns around integrity with the integration of Manuscript Manager, PubPeer, and a paper mill detection tool into its STM Solutions Integrity Hub. And while AI tools will continue to face scrutiny for evidence of bias, many ethics guidelines for AI are emerging, including guidelines for DEI principles and practices.

 

THE 2025 FORECAST

The 5 percent price increase seen in 2024 is expected to tick up slightly, with a 5.5 to 6 percent increase predicted for 2025, well above the overall inflation rate but in line with what the market has historically tolerated in non-recession years.

 

 

TABLE 8: 2024 COST PROJECTIONS BY CLARIVATE DISCIPLINES

  NO. OF TITLES % OF LIST 2024 COST % OF COST AVERAGE COST PER TITLE PROJECTED % OF INCREASE PROJECTED 2025 COST % OF COST PROJECTED OVERALL % INCREASE

ARTS AND HUMANITIES CITATION INDEX

U.S. 379 33 $120,868 18 $319 5.3 $127,323 18 5.9
Non-U.S. 772 67 543,240 82 704 6.1 576,229 82

SOCIAL SCIENCES CITATION INDEX

U.S. 748 41 $941,065 29 $1,258 6.5 $1,002,210 29 6.3
Non-U.S. 1062 59 2,310,479 71 2,176 6.2 2,454,235 71

SCIENCE CITATION INDEX

U.S. 871 44 $3,231,643 37 $3,710 4.9 $3,390,132 37 5.6
Non-U.S. 1124 56 5,551,066 63 4,939 6.1 5,888,160 63
PROJECTED OVERALL INCREASE FOR ALL CLARIVATE TITLES: 5.8%

SOURCE: LJ PERIODICALS PRICE SURVEY 2024

For comparison purposes, the rate of price increase was also analyzed for 8,000 e-journal packages handled by EBSCO Information Services. Packages are a large part of the periodicals marketplace and remain a common subscription model for publishers, so the rate of price increase for these resources is important data. For 2023, the average rate of increase was 5.08 percent, compared to 3.76 percent in 2022. A Read & Publish subset of 400 packages processed by EBSCO Information Services show a slightly lower average price increase of 4.11 percent. The percentage suggests that the industry may be continuing to price these packages more favorably as an incentive to move to a Read & Publish model.

We can expect that all players will continue to recalibrate publishing and purchasing expectations as the marketplace continues to seek out the most efficient, sustainable, and equitable model for scholarly communications. Librarians and funders will increasingly lean into their roles as guarantors of transparency, trust, and reproducibility in the serials ecosystem.


 

THE VALUE OF JOURNALS

Tables 9 and 10 examine the relationship between price and value. While journal price data is important for budget management processes, price alone is rarely the sole factor determining value. Metrics such as impact factor and Eigenfactor are also important in assessing value, and while there are flaws in the impact factor, nothing else has arisen to replace it. Local usage statistics, including COUNTER 5 data, as well relevance to local curricula, are also important in determining values as libraries actively manage their information resources.

For Table 9, titles in the Scopus index were combined with data from the Clarivate and EBSCO indexes for 2024 and then divided into broad price band categories. The selection of price band categories was based on median prices with standard deviations. The average for impact factor and Eigenfactor, for all titles in a price band range, was compared to the averages in the other price bands. Although there were increases in the metrics for impact factor and Eigenfactor, the increases were not comparable to the increase in price. The average price ($10,177) for the most expensive journals was 34 times higher than the average price for the least expensive journals ($287), while the impact factor only increased 56 percent. The chart accompanying Table 9 shows how the rise in average price (represented by the blue line) is not accompanied by a corresponding rise in impact factor (represented by the burgundy line). We are also seeing the impact of Open Access, as the cost for the least expensive titles decreased while the impact factor increased as more journals moved to OA. The price increases for the more moderately priced titles were consistent with price increases for the more expensive titles, which showed close to a 6 percent increase.

 

 

TABLE 9: COMPARISON OF SERIAL PRICES FROM SCOPUS, CLARIVATE AND EBSCO GROUPED BY BAND TO IMPACT FACTOR, ETC.

PRICE BAND NO. OF TITLES AVERAGE PRICE 2024 % PRICE CHANGE 2023-24 AVERAGE OF LATEST IMPACT FACTOR NORMALIZED EIGEN-FACTOR AVERAGE COST PER CITATION
Less than $878 3,578 $287 -13.72% 3.3 1.44 $0.04
Between $878 and $1,816 1,972 1,298 6.21% 2.9 0.83 0.29
Between $1,816 and $3,140 1,423 2,389 6.26% 4.3 1.78 0.28
Between $3,140 and $5,793 1,100 4,256 5.70% 4.3 2.10 0.36
Greater than $5,793 968 10,177 6.24% 5.2 4.12 0.41

SOURCE: LJ PERIODICALS PRICE SURVEY 2024

In Table 10, the ratio of citations to serial costs by subject is reviewed. For STM journals, average prices tend to be high in comparison to other subjects. This scenario changes if the costs are divided by the numbers of citations. Chemistry has the highest average price by category, but the 11th lowest cost per citation. If citations are considered an indicator of value, then chemistry journals, despite high average prices, are relatively high-value journals. Conversely, journals in philosophy, music, and history are relatively inexpensive but less frequently cited, so journals in those areas show the highest cost per citation. But, as with price, cost per citation is rarely the only determining factor when considering whether to subscribe or cancel a journal subscription. Unsurprisingly, commercial publishers have higher per citation costs than other types of publishers. Commercial publishers showed a cost per citation of 29¢ and an average price of $2,551, while university presses showed 11¢ and an average price of $754, and societal publishers showed 7¢ and an average price of $1,417. Content from the five major publishers—Elsevier, Springer Nature, Wiley, Taylor & Francis, and Sage—continue to represent over half the titles (58 percent) of all serials but makes up close to 75 percent of the dollar value.

 

 

TABLE 10: COMPARISON OF SERIALS PRICES FROM SCOPUS, CLARIVATE AND EBSCO WITH RATES OF CITATIONS AND % OF OA GOLD

SUBJECT NO. OF TITLES TOTAL COST TOTAL CITATIONS COST PER CITE AVG. % OA GOLD
General Science 132 $255,718 4,303,674 0.06 26.1
Astronomy 54 115,827 998,877 0.12 27.5
Food Science 40 109,717 561,404 0,20 19.0
Health Sciences 2,325 4,587,573 23,066,687 0.20 28.1
Biology 971 2,882,124 13,725,050 0.21 32.7
Botany 137 302,981 1,367,328 0.22 25.1
Engineering 861 3,251,988 12,908,934 0.25 18.0
Psychology 192 262,069 967,892 0.27 20.7
Technology 141 380,672 1,397,705 0.27 21.3
Agriculture 295 587,773 2,151,290 0.27 28.7
Geography 188 329,136 1,171,705 0.28 27.2
Geology 183 463,846 1,477,466 0.31 22.2
Business & Economics 674 1,245,961 3,882,456 0.32 19.1
Chemistry 304 1,741,450 4,900,966 0.36 16.7
Recreation 49 66,456 185,562 0.36 12.8
Library Science 46 53,007 144,025 0.37 15.5
Sociology 427 565,102 1,419,309 0.40 19.8
Political Science 148 160,357 345,610 0.46 23.5
Physics 303 1,425,466 3,058,404 0.47 23.5
Zoology 212 404,638 847,399 0.48 27.1
Arts & Architecture 25 29,644 61,818 0.48 16.5
Social Sciences 97 115,305 231,757 0.50 24.5
General Works 12 11,912 22,774 0.52 25.2
Law 137 82,694 151,489 0.55 18.9
Math & Computer Science 511 1,258,121 2,266,436 0.56 17.0
Language & Literature 224 189,069 337,897 0.56 19.4
Anthropology 52 49,595 84,191 0.59 19.4
Education 208 307,919 509,411 0.60 15.0
Military & Naval Science 26 38,817 43,267 0.90 25.6
History 197 185,740 205,177 0.91 18.6
Music 11 10,868 11,930 0.91 15.9
Philosophy & Religion 40 43,455 38,383 1.13 22.0
TOTALS 9,222 $21,515,001 82,846,273 0.26% 21.6%

SOURCE: LJ PERIODICALS PRICE SURVEY 2024

Also included in Table 10 is the percentage of gold OA articles in each subject area. When the percentage of OA gold articles was then compared against publisher type, results showed that approximately 24 percent of articles from both commercial publishers and university presses were gold OA, compared to 19 percent for society publishers.


 

Siôn Romaine is Director of Acquisitions & Rapid Cataloging Services, University of Washington Libraries. Barbara Albee is Account Services Manager, EBSCO Information Services. Cynthia M. Elliott is Collection Management Librarian, University of Arizona Libraries. Stephen Bosch, Librarian Emeritus at the University of Arizona Libraries, assisted with the data tables.

Comment Policy:
  • Be respectful, and do not attack the author, people mentioned in the article, or other commenters. Take on the idea, not the messenger.
  • Don't use obscene, profane, or vulgar language.
  • Stay on point. Comments that stray from the topic at hand may be deleted.
  • Comments may be republished in print, online, or other forms of media.
  • If you see something objectionable, please let us know. Once a comment has been flagged, a staff member will investigate.


RELATED 

ALREADY A SUBSCRIBER?

We are currently offering this content for free. Sign up now to activate your personal profile, where you can save articles for future viewing

ALREADY A SUBSCRIBER?