OCLC New Jersey is a development center within OCLC with a continuing mission: to help researchers, scholars, libraries, merchants and publishers link their information together. We build software, systems and services that link people to information more efficiently.
Genamics JournalSeek is the largest completely categorized database of freely available journal information available on the internet. The database presently contains 94859 titles. Journal information includes the description (aims and scope), journal abbreviation, journal homepage link, subject category and ISSN. Searching this information allows the rapid identification of potential journals to publish your research in, as well as allow you to find new journals of interest to your field.
The expert guide to the most important advances in biology
Explore the site to see which papers our Faculty of over 2000 world leading scientists have selected.
About Frontiers
The Frontiers Journal Series are open-access journals supported by the Frontiers Research Foundation, an international not-for-profit foundation based in Switzerland in the spirit of neutrality and guided by core principles.
The Frontiers Journal Series is not just another journal. It is a new approach to scientific publishing. As service to scientists, it is driven by researchers for researchers but it also serves the interests of the general public. Frontiers disseminates research in a tiered system that begins with original articles submitted to Specialty Journals. It evaluates research truly democratically and objectively based on the reading activity of the scientific communities and the public. And it drives the most outstanding and relevant research up to the next tier journal, Frontiers in Neuroscience.
Post-publication journals
With the increase in the number of journals and articles being published every year and the possibility of having an even larger set of "gray literature" available online we face the challenge of filtering out those bits of information that are relevant for us.
The adoption and growth of the scientific journal system has created a body of shared knowledge for our civilization, a collective long-term memory which is the basis for much of human progress. This system has changed surprisingly little in the last 300 years. The internet offers us the first major opportunity to improve this collective long-term memory, and to create a collective short-term working memory, a conversational commons for the rapid collaborative development of ideas.
Welcome to the AMS Digital Mathematics Registry. The aim of the AMS-DMR is to provide centralized access to certain collections of digitized publications in the mathematical sciences. The registry is primarily focused on older material from journals and journal-like book series that originally appeared in print but now is available in digital form.
The registry is organized both by the collections and by the individual journals (or series) themselves, providing links to each that will be regularly verified and updated.
All versions of the Digital Mathematics Registry (DMR) are in the public domain; they may be downloaded, modified, and posted on other sites. Each version is dated, and the AMS requests that modifications of any version retain this date.
This registry is maintained as a public service by the AMS through Mathematical Reviews. Submissions of proposed new collections can be made by using the Submission Form
[The registry was inspired by work of the Committee on Electronic Information and Communication of the International Mathematical Union, as well as by Ulf Rehmann's Digital Mathematics Library.]