PLOS Currents explained

Abbreviation:PLOS Curr.
Publisher:Public Library of Science
Country:United States
License:Creative Commons Attribution 3.0
History:2009–2018
Website:http://www.plos.org/journals/currents.php
Oclc:436157303
Issn:2157-3999

PLOS Currents was a publishing platform run by the Public Library of Science from 2009 to 2018 as an experiment.

Format

The platform was created as an experiment in open access rapid communication and to handle non-standard publication formats (negative results, single experiments, research in progress, protocols, datasets).[1] It also allowed people to leave post-publication comments.[2] These features are similar to those now commonly found in preprint servers. The platform used the open-source Annotum software for drafting articles online.[3]

Submitted articles were reviewed by "moderators" (a select group of researchers in the journal's field) and were peer-reviewed.

Articles are archived in PubMed Central, and indexed in PubMed as well as Scopus.[4]

History

The PLOS Currents platform was launched in 2009. It had a particularly high submission rate during the 2014 Ebola epidemic and the 2015–2016 Zika virus epidemic.

It ceased accepting new submissions in August 2018 due to the software platform becoming outdated, leading to a reduction in user experience and submission rate.[5] PLOS instead pivoted to closer collaboration with services such as BioRxiv.

Journals

The platform had six sections.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 2012-04-19. PLoS Currents Has a New Publishing Platform. 2021-02-28. The Official PLOS Blog. en-US.
  2. Web site: Guidelines for Comments. 2021-02-28. currents.plos.org. PLOS.
  3. Web site: 2012-03-21. PLoS: Currents / Disasters Live on Annotum. 2021-02-28. Annotum. en.
  4. Web site: PLOS Currents . 1 Jun 2013 . PLOS Currents website.
  5. Web site: PLOS Update . PLOS . 21 Aug 2018. The Official PLOS Blog . 8 Apr 2019.