주요 콘텐츠로 건너뛰기

귀하의 브라우저가 완벽하게 지원되지 않습니다. 옵션이 있는 경우 최신 버전으로 업그레이드하거나 Mozilla Firefox, Microsoft Edge, Google Chrome 또는 Safari 14 이상을 사용하세요. 가능하지 않거나 지원이 필요한 경우 피드백을 보내주세요.

이 새로운 경험에 대한 귀하의 의견에 감사드립니다.의견을 말씀해 주세요 새 탭/창에서 열기

Elsevier
엘스비어와 함께 출판

US Department of Defense

Agreement

The US Department of Defense (DoD) has issued a Public Access Plan designed “to support increased public access to peer reviewed scholarly publications and digitally formatted scientific data arising from unclassified publicly releasable research and programs funded wholly or in part by the DoD.”

The plan applies to publicly releasable scholarly publications, accepted for publication in a peer reviewed journal arising from any direct funding from a DoD grant, cooperative agreement, contract, intramural programme, or  clinical investigations from operations and maintenance appropriations.

Authors whose research results are subject to the DoD’s plan and who publish with Elsevier can comply with the plan by choosing either a green or gold route to open access publication.

Gold open access (immediate access to the final article)

I wish to publish my article open access which means the final published article will be available for free. I understand that an open access publication fee needs to be paid.

Elsevier also provides open access publishing options which enable authors to comply with the DoD public access plan. This is not required by DoD, but can be appealing to authors as it ensures the final version of their article is immediately available to everyone worldwide.

Both Intramural researchers (such as DoD employees) and extramural researchers will still need to self-archive their Accepted Manuscript in the DoD public access repository (ECMS), which will make the Accepted Manuscript accessible to the public after a 12-month embargo period.

Green open access (self-archive your draft copy after embargo period)

Both Intramural researchers (such as DoD employees) and extramural researchers will need to self-archive their Accepted Manuscript in the DoD public access archive system (DTIC), which will make the Accepted Manuscript accessible to the public after a 12-month embargo period.  

Elsevier will also make Accepted Manuscripts accessible to the public via the CHORUS service.