Ltd., Science & Technology Systems Inc., Bruker Daltonics K. K., for their kind cooperation during this study. “
“Although I am not aged by current criteria, in my formative years as a junior investigator, I remember long hours in the library searching for references. There was no PubMed; instead, a book called IndexMedicus was RG7204 price searched for topics relevant to a field of research, or an information expert in the library was asked to perform a computerized search for a fee. Once articles of interest were identified, they were copied in the library
(often at a cost of $0.05/page). Copy machines were crucial for obtaining the articles. Book binding often precluded laying the book flat and interfered with accurate copying near the seam of the binding. Articles were then read, further references were identified, and this prompted additional trips to the library and p38 MAP Kinase pathway repetitive use of the copying machine. Obtaining and managing references for grants and articles was costly, tiresome, and exasperating. Relevant articles were so difficult to identify and retrieve that senior investigators could often play one-upmanship by quoting pertinent publications of which others were simply unaware. Currently, we can receive an electronic
table of contents, download articles as PDF files, and print or read them on our computer monitor; alternatively, we can run computer searches on PubMed, locate the relevant article, and download the PDF file. Considerable information is now readily available in a real-time, efficient manner. Because of the increasing number of journals and articles, the current
challenge is focusing and managing the search process. However, for access to many recent articles, an individual or institutional subscription to the journal is needed. This fact still poses a barrier to obtaining critical information. Indeed, I am currently writing a grant (still a painful, time-intensive experience), and several articles that I needed to review for emerging and evolving concepts were not available because neither I nor the institution had a subscription. This experience was frustrating and emphasized that barriers between the consumer and scientific information still exist. This problem was meant to be solved by the development of a process for open access to scientific information Carnitine palmitoyltransferase II (the availability of articles online without fees or subscriptions), but obviously universal open access has yet to be obtained. The driving force for open access has been the World Wide Web, which has facilitated a shift from print-only journals to parallel print and electronic formats. Two types of open access now exist: an article can be published in a truly open access journal such as a Public Library of Science (PLoS) journal1, 2 or in a closed access journal with subsequent deposition by the author in an open access forum such as PubMed Central. Often, this second scenario results in delayed open access.