As more and more authors in the USA choose to publish their research open access (OA), it’s impossible to overlook the benefits it brings, from increased visibility, faster progress, and wider opportunities for collaboration. Discover how Springer Nature’s drive to advance OA publishing through OA agreements is shaping the future of research accessibility and what opportunities these bring for authors in the USA.
As an author, publishing gold OA increases the discoverability and exposure of your work, delivering wider reach, readership, and impact. Publishing OA also supports the open science movement, speeding up innovation, economic and societal impact, and strengthening public trust in science as more people engage with transparent, credible research. All of the above are driving enthusiastic adoption of OA publishing in the USA.
We have championed the value of OA for over 20 years, broadening the availability of OA across our portfolios and establishing multiple routes to make OA widely available to authors worldwide. A prime example is our OA agreements (OAA), which enable authors at participating institutions to select OA without the burden of finding the funds to pay author fees. When you publish gold OA through a Springer Nature OAA, here’s what you can expect:
“Publishing open access has meant that my article has quickly been used by others in their research and analysis.”
- Dr. Mihri Ozkan, Professor of Electrical Engineering at the University of California, Riverside
It is a key commitment at Springer Nature to make OA available to all. We are increasing our support for researchers through OAAs, working with institutions, funders, and national research organisations to centralise funds to cover the costs of OA publication.
Transformative agreements (TAs) are OAAs that combine journal subscription access along with OA publication costs, providing researchers at participating institutions with broad access to Springer Nature’s journals for their research as well as enabling them to publish OA without individual author charges.
Researchers from over 3,700 institutions around the world are currently benefiting from a Springer Nature TA, including a number across the USA. We established our first US-based TA in the USA with the California Digital Library in 2020 and continue to negotiate further agreements across the USA, including all 68 members of the Statewide California Electronic Library Consortium (SCELC), to drive publishing equity and funding flexibility for researchers.
Springer Nature OAAs are creating more opportunities for authors in participating institutions to achieve their research goals with OA. In the case of the University of California, the number of OA articles rose by 15% from 2021 to 2022, thanks to easier access to OA funding through CDL. Meanwhile, authors of these publications experienced significantly higher reach for their research. OA articles published by UC authors through the Springer TA reached over 3.6 million downloads globally. It’s notable that 69% of these downloads came from anonymous users, many of whom would not have had access to this research otherwise. This shows the importance of OAAs in supporting researchers worldwide with improved access to knowledge.
OAAs are especially impactful for research in humanities and social sciences (HSS), which is traditionally less well-funded. The highest increase in OA growth continues to come from HSS researchers, with 36% uptake in 2023. Over 90% of HSS OA content in our hybrid journals is now published via an OAA or TA, where funding is more equitably distributed across disciplines.
The value of OAAs to researchers is clear: OAAs enable more articles to be published gold OA, delivering efficiency, usage, and reach, as well as equity for OA publishing across disciplines, at scale and speed. We believe TAs are essential to a more accessible research landscape, especially for communities with limited resources, and recognise their vital role in driving the transition to OA at scale. We have published 180,000 articles under TAs since 2015, including 44,500 in 2023.
“Publishing OA with Springer Nature was also incredibly straightforward. The articles were specified OA once I verified my institutional affiliation,” explains one Rutgers university author.
“[The OA agreement] has definitely helped our researchers find expanded opportunities to publish their work OA without paying additional fees and therefore be able to share their work with the world without the typical barriers to access,” explained Jeff Carroll, Director of Collections Strategy at Rutgers University.
Agreements in the USA: