Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where David J. Solomon is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by David J. Solomon.


Journal of the Association for Information Science and Technology | 2012

A study of open access journals using article processing charges

David J. Solomon; Bo-Christer Björk

Article processing charges (APCs) are a central mechanism for funding open access (OA) scholarly publishing. We studied the APCs charged and article volumes of journals that were listed in the Directory of Open Access Journals as charging APCs. These included 1,370 journals that published 100,697 articles in 2010. The average APC was


Journal of Informetrics | 2013

The publishing delay in scholarly peer-reviewed journals

Bo-Christer Björk; David J. Solomon

906 U.S. dollars (USD) calculated over journals and


Journal of Informetrics | 2013

A longitudinal comparison of citation rates and growth among open access journals

David J. Solomon; Mikael Laakso; Bo-Christer Björk

904 USD calculated over articles. The price range varied between


Journal of the American Geriatrics Society | 2003

Best Paper of the 1980s: National Institutes of Health Consensus Development Conference Statement: Geriatric Assessment Methods for Clinical Decision‐Making

David J. Solomon; A. Sue Brown; Kenneth Brummel-Smith; Lavola Burgess; Ralph B. D'Agostino; John W. Goldschmidt; Jeffrey B. Halter; William R. Hazzard; Dennis W. Jahnigen; Charles Phelps; Murray A. Raskind; Robert W. Schrier; Harold C. Sox; Sankey V. Williams; May Wykle

8 and


Teaching and Learning in Medicine | 2000

Grade Inflation in Internal Medicine Clerkships: Results of a National Survey

Alice J. Speer; David J. Solomon; Ruth Marie E Fincher

3,900 USD, with the lowest prices charged by journals published in developing countries and the highest by journals with high-impact factors from major international publishers. Journals in biomedicine represent 59% of the sample and 58% of the total article volume. They also had the highest APCs of any discipline. Professionally published journals, both for profit and nonprofit, had substantially higher APCs than journals published by societies, universities, or scholars/researchers. These price estimates are lower than some previous studies of OA publishing and much lower than is generally charged by subscription publishers making individual articles OA in what are termed hybrid journals.


Academic Medicine | 1996

An innovative evaluation method in an internal medicine clerkship

Alice J. Speer; David J. Solomon; Michael A. Ainsworth

Publishing in scholarly peer reviewed journals usually entails long delays from submission to publication. In part this is due to the length of the peer review process and in part because of the dominating tradition of publication in issues, earlier a necessity of paper-based publishing, which creates backlogs of manuscripts waiting in line. The delays slow the dissemination of scholarship and can provide a significant burden on the academic careers of authors.


PeerJ | 2014

A survey of authors publishing in four megajournals

David J. Solomon

The study documents the growth in the number of journals and articles along with the increase in normalized citation rates of open access (OA) journals listed in the Scopus bibliographic database between 1999 and 2010. Longitudinal statistics on growth in journals/articles and citation rates are broken down by funding model, discipline, and whether the journal was launched or had converted to OA. The data were retrieved from the websites of SCIMago Journal and Country Rank (journal/article counts), JournalM3trics (SNIP2 values), Scopus (journal discipline) and Directory of Open Access Journals (DOAJ) (OA and funding status). OA journals/articles have grown much faster than subscription journals but still make up less that 12% of the journals in Scopus. Two-year citation averages for journals funded by Article Processing Charges (APCs) have reached the same level as subscription journals. Citation averages of OA journals funded by other means continue to lag well behind OA journals funded by APCs and subscription journals. We hypothesize this is less an issue of quality than due to the fact that such journals are commonly published in languages other than English and tend to be located outside the four major publishing countries.


Patient Education and Counseling | 2014

Addressing mental health issues in primary care: an initial curriculum for medical residents.

Robert C. Smith; Heather Laird-Fick; Dale D’Mello; Francesca C. Dwamena; Amy Romain; James Olson; Karen Kent; Karen Selin Blackman; David J. Solomon; Mark Spoolstra; Auguste H. Fortin; Jeffery Frey; Gary S. Ferenchick; Laura Freilich; Carmen Meerschaert; Richard M. Frankel

The population of elderly persons in developed nations is growing with extraordinary rapidity. Although the majority enjoy good health, many older people suffer from multiple illnesses and significant disability. Comprehensive assessment methodologies, while not solely applicable to frail elderly persons, are believed to be particularly suited for their situation. These individuals tend to exhibit great medical complexity in vulnerability; have illnesses with atypical and obscure presentations; suffer major cognitive, affective, and functional problems; are especially vulnerable to iatrogenesis; are often socially isolated and economically deprived; and are at high risk for premature or inappropriate institutionalization. To deal with exceedingly difficult health care issues posed by frail elderly persons, health professionals need to collect, organize, and use a vast array of clinically relevant information. The process, comprehensive geriatric assessment, is defined as a multidisciplinary evaluation in which the multiple problems of older persons are uncovered, described, and explained, if possible, and in which the resources and strengths of the person are catalogued, need for services assessed, and a coordinated care plan developed to focus interventions on the person’s problems. Comprehensive geriatric assessment generally includes evaluation of the patient in several domains, most commonly the physical, mental, social, economic, functional, and environmental. The term ‘‘functional’’ is used here in a narrow sense: It means the ability to function in the arena of everyday living. The panel recognizes that the same word has been used in the much broader sense of the whole range of functions we have listed just above. In other words, some use ‘‘functional assessment’’ to mean what we have termed ‘‘comprehensive geriatric assessment’’. When applied to clinical decisionmaking, comprehensive geriatric assessment involves clinicians from the many healthcare professions who are necessarily involved in good geriatric care. Comprehensive geriatric assessment is only one component of general geriatric care. Appropriate geriatric care involves some level of assessment of the multiple domains just cited, but comprehensive geriatric assessment tends to be applied only to a subset of older persons who are frail and considered most likely to benefit (see question 3). It has been suggested that a new form of comprehensive assessment could be developed to evaluate physical fitness for purposes of monitoring health promotion and disease prevention in well older persons and another form to guide the humane care of irreversibly disabled and terminally ill older persons. Between 1973 and 1987, reports have appeared on a significant number of true experiments exploring the elements and effectiveness of various approaches to geriatric assessment. The data from these studies, coupled with the growing numbers of frail elderly individuals, the high cost of their health care, the intensity of their distress and discomfort, and the great uncertainty as to the best route to wise clinical decision-making, led to the current conference. The National Institute on Aging and Office of Medical Applications of Research of the National Institutes of Health, in conjunction with the National Institute of Mental Health, the Veterans Administration, and the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation, convened the Consensus Development Conference on Geriatric Assessment Methods for Clinical Decision-making on October 19–21, 1987.


Learned Publishing | 2014

How research funders can finance APCs in full OA and hybrid journals

Bo-Christer Björk; David J. Solomon

Background: There has been a discussion among medical educators concerning grade inflation; however, little has been written about it in the medical education literature. Purpose: A survey was developed to determine if grade inflation exists by gathering data about grading practices and by gathering the opinions of course directors from Internal Medicine clerkships. Methods: The survey was administered during the 1996-1997 academic year to all 125 LCME accredited medical school Internal Medicine Clerkship Directors. Grading practices for 3 separate academic years were obtained plus responses to questions about causes of and solutions for grade inflation. Results: Eighty-three surveys were returned for a 66% response rate. There was a trend towards higher grades across the 3 study years, with the 1995-1996 year being statistically significant. Forty-eight percent of the clerkship directors felt that grade inflation existed in their courses, and 43% felt that some students passed who should have failed. Conclusion: Statistically significant grade inflation exists in Internal Medicine clerkships. Most disturbingly, 43% feel we are unable appropriately to identify incompetent students.


Learned Publishing | 2012

Pricing principles used by scholarly open access publishers

Bo-Christer Björk; David J. Solomon

No abstract available.

Collaboration


Dive into the David J. Solomon's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Alice J. Speer

University of Texas Medical Branch

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Michael A. Ainsworth

University of Texas Medical Branch

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Asad Mohmand

Michigan State University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Curtis J. Rosebraugh

University of Texas Medical Branch

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Michael R. Callaway

University of Texas Medical Branch

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Robert C. Smith

Michigan State University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Donald J. DiPette

University of South Carolina

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge