Jeff Montgomery edited Intro.tex  about 9 years ago

Commit id: 2dfcc89eff78b81f8f474bb8424364208ffdd5e7

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\end{quote}  What's more, such "creative" business models force library administrators to try to quantify abstractions like the value of information. Information, however, is context dependent. The difference of opinion on a paper's importance could range from "meaningless" to a critical insight for unraveling a disease pathway.   At the end of the day, an all-inclusive "Big Deal" bundle may be easiest – if funds are available. When cost limits access, however, researchers may rely on e-mailed PDFs from helpful colleagues at better-equipped campuses. Another option, solution,  when access is out of reach or publicationis  slow (e.g. a year from submission initial acceptance  to e-publication publication  is common for some Statistics journals), is pre-print repositories like \href{arxiv.org}{arXiv}. Unfortunately, the articles aren't peer-reviewed.\\  This is the peer-reviewed, a  reason big publishers can charge so much.\\ This is also a reason we think researchers (and journals!) might want to try their own \href{https://www.authorea.com/20627-open-review}{pilot study} of Authorea-as-interactive-repository or \href{https://www.authorea.com/10024-authorea-as-submission-platform}{submission platform}.  Have thoughts about this? Let us know in the Comments or \href{https://www.facebook.com/Authorea}{follow us} to get \href{https://www.twitter.com/Authorea}{updates}!