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28th Annual Meeting June 7-9, 2006 Marriott Crystal Gateway, Arlington, VA Beyond Borders & Bindings SSP Society for Scholarly Publishing ONSITE PROGRAM

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28th Annual Meeting June 7-9, 2006

Marriott Crystal Gateway, Arlington, VA

Beyond Borders &Bindings

SSPSociety for Scholarly Publishing

ON

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AGAIN AND AGAIN AND AGAIN AND AGAIN AND AGAIN ANDAGAIN AND AGAIN AND AGAIN AND AGAIN AND AGAIN ANDAGAIN AND AGAIN AND AGAIN AND AGAIN AND AGAIN ANDAGAIN AND AGAIN AND AGAIN AND AGAIN AND AGAIN ANDAGAIN AND AGAIN AND AGAIN AND AGAIN AND AGAIN ANDAGAIN AND AGAIN AND AGAIN AND AGAIN AND AGAIN ANDAGAIN AND AGAIN AND AGAIN AND AGAIN AND AGAIN ANDAGAIN AND AGAIN AND AGAIN AND AGAIN AND AGAIN ANDAGAIN AND AGAIN AND AGAIN AND AGAIN AND AGAIN ANDAGAIN AND AGAIN AND AGAIN AND AGAIN AND AGAIN ANDAGAIN AND AGAIN AND AGAIN AND AGAIN AND AGAIN ANDAGAIN AND AGAIN AND AGAIN AND AGAIN AND AGAIN ANDAGAIN AND AGAIN AND AGAIN AND AGAIN AND AGAIN ANDAGAIN AND AGAIN AND AGAIN AND AGAIN AND AGAIN ANDAGAIN AND AGAIN AND AGAIN AND AGAIN AND AGAIN AND

More impact.

978-646-2800 www.copyright.com

AGAIN AND AGAIN ANDAGAIN AND AGAIN ANDAGAIN AND AGAIN ANDAGAIN AND AGAIN ANDAGAIN AND AGAIN ANDAGAIN AND AGAIN ANDAGAIN AND AGAIN ANDAGAIN AND AGAIN ANDAGAIN AND AGAIN ANDAGAIN AND AGAIN ANDAGAIN AND AGAIN ANDAGAIN AND AGAIN ANDAGAIN AND AGAIN AND

For nearly 30 years Copyright Clearance Center has

helped publishers and other content creators get more

out of their work. More readers. More reach. More

revenue. This year we’ll return more than $100 million

in royalties to copyright holders. It’s what we do. Year

in and year out. Again and again. Let us do it for you.

CCC proudly supports the Society for Scholarly Publishing.Visit us at the 28th Annual Conference in booth 23/24.

3

Table of Contents • B

oard of Directors • N

etworking

We would like to thankour OrganizationalMembers for their support of SSP:

SustainingAIP Publishing Services

American Medical AssociationAmerican Society of Civil Engineers

ElsevierJohn Wiley & Sons, Inc.

Rockefeller University PressUniversity of Chicago Press

SupportingAIAA

Allen Press, Inc.American Chemical Society

American Mathematical Society American Meteorological Society

American Physical SocietyAmerican Psychiatric Publishing, Inc.

American Society of MechanicalEngineers

Apex CoVantage, ePublishingServices

Aries Systems CorporationAtypon Systems, Inc.

Beacon Publishing ServicesBlackwell Publishing, Inc.

Cadmus Professional CommunicationsCambridge University Press

Copyright Clearance Center, Inc.CrossRef

CSADartmouth Printing CompanyEBSCO Information Services

Google, Inc.Innodata Isogen, Inc.

Inera, Inc.International Mail Express

John Hopkins University PressMacMillan India

Massachusetts Medical SocietyMira Digital Publishing

MIT Press MPS Technologies

Nature Publishing GroupNewgen Imaging Systems, Ltd.

NRC Research PressOvid Technologies

Oxford University PressPortico e-Archiving Service

Publishers Communication GroupReally Strategies, Inc.

SAGE Publications, Inc.ScholarOne, Inc.

The Sheridan Group SPI Publisher Services SR Nova Private, Ltd.

TechBooksThomas Technology Solutions

Thomson-GaleThomson Scientific

University of California Press

Schedule at a Glance ............................................................................................4-52006 Program Committee ........................................................................................5Pre-Meeting Seminars ..........................................................................................6-7Education Committee - Pre-Meeting Seminars Development ..................................7Arlington, VA..............................................................................................................7Program and Schedule ........................................................................................8-13Breakfast Round-Table Discussion Topics ..............................................................11Upcoming SSP Events............................................................................................13Speaker Biographies..........................................................................................14-22Annual Meeting Sponsors..................................................................................23-24Exhibitors ..........................................................................................................25-29Special Prize Drawing ............................................................................................24Exhibitor Demonstrations ........................................................................................28Exhibit Hall Map ......................................................................................................28General Information ................................................................................................28Marriott Crystal Gateway Map ................................................................................30

Table of Contents

Networking OpportunitiesWednesday,

June 7

Full Day SeminarAttendee Lunch

12:00 pm – 1:00 pm

East Coast Reception5:00 pm – 7:00 pm

Thursday, June 8

New Member,First-Time Attendee

Breakfast8:00 am – 8:45 am

Luncheon12:15 pm – 2:00 pm

Join us for lunch followed by the

Business Meeting

West Coast Reception5:30 pm – 7:30 pm

Friday,June 9

RoundtableDiscussions

7:30 am – 8:45 am

Literary LunchPromoting Science

Literary 12:15 pm – 1:30 pm

PresidentNorman Frankel

American Medical Association

President-electJudy Luther

Informed Strategies

Past PresidentHeather Joseph

The Scholarly Publishing & Academic Resource Coalition

Secretary/TreasurerRaymond T. Fastiggi

Rockefeller University Press

Board MembersLinda Beebe

American Psychological Association

Edward ColleranCopyright Clearance Center, Inc.

Philip DiVietroAmerican Society of Mechanical Engineers

October IvinsDigital Content & Access Solutions

Diane Scott-LichterBlackwell Publishing, Ltd.

Keith SeitterAmerican Meteorological Society

Lois SmithHuman Factors & Ergonomics Society

Julie SteffenUniversity of Chicago Press

Craig Van DyckJohn Wiley & Sons, Inc.

Society for Scholarly PublishingBoard of Directors

4

Schedule at a Glance

New/First-TimeAttendeeBreakfastSalon K

ContinentalBreakfast Salon H & J

Keynote Chaotic Transitions: How Today’sTrends Will Affect Tomorrow’sInformation EnvironmentSalon 1 & 2

ExhibitorsMarketplaceSalons A-E

�� Concurrent 1A - Salon 2China Opening Up

�� Concurrent 1C - MadisonHanging Together in an IncreasinglyComplex Multi-Format Landscape

�� Concurrent 1B - Salon 1New New Things—Trends to Watch inProfessional Publishing

�� Concurrent 1D - ManassassOutsourcing—Where’s the Future?

Lunch & Business Meeting Salon H-KExhibitors Marketplace Salons A-E

Registration - Grand FoyerContinental Breakfast/Breakfast Roundtables Salons H-K

� Concurrent 3A - AlexandriaPublishing in the Developing World

� Concurrent 3C - Salon 3Challenges in Managing IntellectualProperty and Copyright in a GlobalEconomy

� Concurrent 3B - Salon 1Federated Searching

� Concurrent 3D - Salon 4Strategic Application of Usage Data

� Concurrent 3E - Salon 5The Institution Registry: An Idea WhoseTime Has Come

� Concurrent 3F - Salon 6Institutional Repositories: Benefits andChallenges of Working Together

ExhibitorsMarketplaceSalons A-E

� Concurrent 4B - Salon 3Transforming Revenue Models inScholarly Advertising

� Concurrent 4A - AlexandriaOpen Access: Where Does the MoneyCome From, and Where Does it Go?

� Concurrent 4C - Salon 4Key Ingredient of a SuccessfulPublishing Program? An OpenRelationship with the Media

� Concurrent 4D - Salon 5The Impact of Government onPublishing

� Concurrent 4E - Salons 6E-Book Models That Work

Literacy Lunch - Salons H-KPromoting Science Litercy

Welcome

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Conference Tracks Legend� = Business � = Markets� = Product Development � = Search� = Technology

Registration - Grand Foyer

8:00

am

7:00

am

Wednesday, June 7, 2006

Registration - Grand Foyer

ContinentalBreakfast Grand Foyer

Morning Seminars - Access and Authorization, Part I - Salon 2The Art of Selling to Library Consortia - Mt. VernonBenchmarking for the Small Publisher - Lee

Seminar Attendee Lunch - Skyview

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Thursday, June 8, 2006

Friday, June 9, 2006

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Schedule at a Glance • P

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Plenary Marketing Your Content in a Micro-Segmented Online World - Salon 1 & 2

ExhibitorsMarket-place

Salons A-E

� Concurrent 2A - ManassassMarketing in the New Economy

� Concurrent 2C - Salon 1Digital Preservation: Greatly Desired,Greatly Unknown

� Concurrent 2B - Salon 2Post-Publication Evaluation: Is There LifeAfter the Impact Factor?

� Concurrent 2D - MadisonYou Might Also Like…RecommendationServices for Digital Libraries

� Concurrent 2E - JacksonInnovative Electronic Projects in theHumanities

West Coast Reception - Salons A-E

Exhibitors Marketplace - Salons A-E

Plenary Town Hall - Impact of Search Technologies on Scholarly PublishingSalons 1-2

Closing

Prize Drawing

Mark AndersonCadmus Professional

Services

Virginia BourgeoisASBMB/Journal of Lipid

Research

Todd CarpenterBioOne

Michael ClarkeAmerican Academy of

Pediatrics

Eamon FennessyThe Copyright Group, Inc.

Janet FisherPublishers Communication

Group

Gerry GrenierIEEE

Valentina KalkWorld Bank

Heidi McGregorJSTOR

Audrey MelkinAtypon Systems, Inc.

Thomas O’BrienApex CoVantage,

ePublishing Services

Rosamunda Neuharth-Ozgo

Allen Press, Inc.

Andrea PowellCABI Publishing

Rebecca SimonUniversity of California Press

Susan SkomalBioOne

Adrian StanleyThe Charlesworth Group

Alix Buffon VanceEbook Library

Alma WillsKaufman-Wills Group, LLC

Deborah WileyNext Wave Consulting

Co-ChairSusan Kesner

Copyright Clearance Center

Co-ChairCarol Meyer

Maxwell Publishing Consultants

Co-ChairTerry Van Schaik

Lippincott Williams & Wilkins

2006 Program Committee

Map of Hotel is located on Page 30

Afternoon Seminars - Access and Authorization, Part II - Salon 2Authoring Tools - Lee

Exhibitors Marketplace - Salons A-E

East Coast Reception - Salons A-E

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Pre

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e 7 Wednesday, June 7

7:00 am – 5:00 pm Registration - Grand Foyer

7:00 am – 8:00 am Continental Breakfast

8:00 am – 12:00 pm Morning Seminars

Seminar 01 8:00 am – 12:00 pm - Salon 2Access and Authorization, Part I. Access Models andthe Future of Open Access Publishing—Do or Die, orDo and Die?Many publishers have partially or fully embraced open accessmodels for journal publishing, either on principle or because thepressure of institutional policies, such as those of the NationalInstitutes of Health and Wellcome Trust. Open access is nolonger new, and business data is now available that drives sen-sible decision-making for shifting access models.

Our panel of industry experts will share their experience:

• Advantages and disadvantages of adopting an openaccess model

• Does the reader know? Does the reader care?• Constituents and customers — have they embraced it?• Business impact of open access on participating

publications• Forecasts for the development of open access in the next

five years• Role of copyright in the business model

This morning session complements the afternoon seminar“Authorization Methods for Online Access — What, Why andWho?” However, each session stands on its own, and registration for the afternoon session is optional.

Managers: Rebekah Darksmith, University of California PressPriscilla Markwood, FASEB Office of Publications

Speakers Include:David Charles, Institutional Sales and Licensing (Europe)John Cox, John Cox Associates, Ltd.Sean O’Doherty, Berkeley Electronic PressMargaret Reich, American Physiological SocietyF. Hill Slowinski, American Society of Clinical OncologyM. J. Tooey, University of Maryland (Baltimore) HealthSciences Libraries

Seminar 02 8:00 am – 12:00 pm - Mt. VernonThe Art of Selling to Library ConsortiaLibrary consortia represent libraries at state or regional levels,or by type of library. Consortia have become an important buying channel for selling e-content into the academic andresearch library marketplace. These consortia, which numbermore than 300 around the world, have the collected buyingpower of thousands of libraries, spending in excess of $2 billion each year on content. Speakers will include consortiadirectors, a subscription agent, and scholarly publishers thathave been successful in selling into this increasingly importantand vital channel.

Topics covered in this session include:• How the small publisher can compete effectively in this

market• How to extend your reach to ensure that consortia

consider your publication• Sales approaches that work• Best practices

Managers: Carol Richman, SAGE PublicationsDan Tonkery, EBSCO Information Services

Speakers Include:Adrian Alexander, Greater Western Library Alliance

Rick Burke, Statewide California Electronic Library ConsortiumTina Feick, Swets Information ServicesMelanie Schaffner, Project Muse

Seminar 03 8:00 am – 12:00 pm - LeeBenchmarking for the Small PublisherThe small publisher may be short on resources, money, andtime—or may be well staffed, well funded, and have exclusiveaccess to a rich sales channel. But all small publishers need toknow where they stand in relation to their business universeand their competitors, and sometimes that information is hardto get. Best practices, appropriate salary ranges, first copycosts, per-page costs, ratio of staff to number of manuscriptssubmitted and published—all these and many more are veryuseful statistics to track internally and to compare, when possible, with those of other publishers.

Topics covered in this session include:

• Which benchmarks are indispensable?• Which statistics are useful internally, and what do

you need for external comparisons?• What do small publishers, in particular, need to track?• Above all, how can you get the information?

Managers: Lori Barber, ScholarOneMady Tissenbaum, The Journal of Bone and JointSurgery, Inc.Charles Watkinson, American School of Classical Studies at Athens

Speakers Include:Alma Wills, Kaufman-Wills Group, ModeratorPatricia Bowers Hudson, Oxford University PressJim Donahue, American Institute of PhysicsJane Rea, EEI CommunicationsJayne Sutton, EEI Communications

10:00 am – 10:30 am Break

12:00 pm – 1:00 pm Full Day Seminar Attendee LunchSkyview

1:00 pm – 5:00 pm Afternoon Seminars

Seminar 04 1:00 pm – 5:00 pm - Salon 2Access and Authorization, Part II. AuthorizationMethods for Online Access—What, Why and Who? Join us as we explore developments in access control: the newShibboleth technology, international access through programslike Athens, and legal or administrative controls imposed onsome institutions by various national governments.

Questions answered by the panel include:

• What are Athens and Shibboleth, and why should you care?• How are they implemented and why? • What are the costs to you in dollars and staff time? • Will institutional information repositories improve access

for your customers? • How can you use these new initiatives to improve your

customer service? • How volatile is this environment? Will you need to re-tool

your systems every year?

This afternoon session complements the morning seminar onaccess models. However, each session stands on its own, andregistration for the morning session is optional.

Managers: Todd Carpenter, BioOnePriscilla Markwood, FASEB Office of Publications

Speakers Include:Lyn Norris, Eduserv AthensHelen Henderson, RinggoldChad La Joie, Georgetown UniversityJohn Law, ProQuest Information and Learning

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Wednesday, June 7 • P

re-Meeting Sem

inars • Ed. C

omm

itteeSeminar 05 1:00 pm – 5:00 pm - LeeAuthoring ToolsAuthors often need a little help. Helping them find and use theright tools improves their experience with you as a publisherand can also accelerate your peer review, production, editorial,and publication processes.

Our speakers discuss the functionality of the tools and howthey help to increase efficiency and reduce costs by:

• Helping your authors polish the language and structure of manuscripts and making life easier for your reviewers,editors, and copy editors

• Improving the quality of digital art submitted anddecreasing your prepress costs

• Decreasing typographical errors and proofreading time • Ensuring the accuracy of reference citations

Managers: Eileen Kiley, Materials Research Society Elizabeth Nolan, SPI Publisher Services Nancy Winchester, American Society of Plant Biologists

Speakers Include:Kerry Kroffe, University of Chicago PressJohn Long, American Society of Plant BiologistsDavid Murphy, Lippincott Williams & WikinsElizabeth Nolan, SPI Publisher Services Bruce Rosenblum, Inera

3:00 pm – 3:30 pm Break

5:00 pm – 7:00 pm Exhibitors MarketplaceSalons A-E

5:00 pm – 7:00 pm Opening Reception - Salons A-E

Lori BarberScholarOne, Inc.

Gurvinder BatraTechbooks

Barry BealerReally Strategies, Inc.

Todd CarpenterBioOne

Rebekah DarksmithUniversity of California Press

Isabella HindsPower Links Network

October IvinsDigital Content & Access

Solutions

Eileen KileyMaterials Research Society

Priscilla MarkwoodFASEB Office of Publications

Jim MouwThe University of Chicago

Library

Elizabeth NolanSPI Publisher Services

Carol RichmanSAGE Publications, Ltd.

Ann SchaffnerFranklin W. Olin College of

Engineering

Julie SteffenUniversity of Chicago Press

Dan TonkeryEBSCO Information Services

Victor Van BeurenAmerican Diabetes Association

Charles WatkinsonAmerican School of Classical

Studies at Athens

Nancy WinchesterAmerican Society of Plant

Biologists

Co-Chair Mady Tissenbaum

Journal of Bone & JointSurgery, Inc.

Co-ChairAnne Orens

Tizra, Inc.

Education Committee Pre-MeetingSeminars Development

What to do in Arlington

Arlington National Cemeteryis home to the Eternal Flame of theKennedy Grave, the Tomb of theUnknowns and many war memorialscommemorating US soldiers. Phone:703-607-8000

Arlington House was the homeof Robert E. Lee and his family forthirty years and is uniquely associatedwith the Washington and Custis families. Lee made his historic decision to resign from the US Army at Arlington House andwrote his resignation letter in his second floor bedchamber.Arlington House is now preserved as a memorial to RobertE. Lee, who gained the respect of Americans in both theNorth and the South and used his influence after the CivilWar to help heal the nation. Phone: 703-235-1530

Arlington is also convenient to many attractionsWashington DC.

The SmithsonianInstitution is the world'slargest museum complex andresearch organization.Composed of 17 museums and the National Zoo in theWashington, D.C., metro-politan area, and 2 museums

in New York City, the Smithsonian's exhibitions offer visitorsa glimpse into its vast collection numbering over 142 millionobjects. Admission is free for all Smithsonian museums.Phone: 202-633-1000

The National Mall &Memorial Parks,established in 1965, contains some of the oldestprotected park lands in theNational Park Service. Thesprawling lands of theNational Mall & MemorialParks include the Mall, the public promenade extending from3rd Street near the Capitol to 14th Street. The National Mallis the continuation of that space where congressionallyauthorized park icons, such as the Washington Monument,WWII and Lincoln Memorials stand. Phone: 202-426-6841

For more information on the Washington DC area, The Arlington Visitors Center is available by phone:(703) 416-0784; (800) 677-6267 or conveniently located one Metro station from the hotel (on the blue or yellow line)at Pentagon Row shopping center, adjacent to the FashionCentre at Pentagon City.

Photos courtesy of Arlington CVB.

Thursday, June 87:30 am – 5:00 pm Registration - Grand Foyer

8:00 am – 8:45 am New Member/First-TimeAttendee Breakfast - Salon K

8:00 am – 8:45 am Continental Breakfast Salons H & J

8:45 am – 9:00 am Welcome

9:00 am – 10:15 am Keynote - Salon 1-2

Keynote: Chaotic Transitions: How Today’s TrendsWill Affect Tomorrow’s Information EnvironmentMarshall Keys, MDA Consulting

Significant changes in demographics, technology, and theworld economic system will have profound effects on the information environment. The current generation of studentsand recent graduates think about and use technology in waysthat are radically different from their predecessors. This inspiring keynote session will present a copiously illustratedtour of some of these trends and offer suggestions about whatinformation providers will need to do to respond.

10:15 am – 10:45 am Break - Salons A-E

10:15 am – 10:45 am Exhibitors Marketplace Salons A-E

Exhibitor DemonstrationGrand Foyer

10:30 am – 10:40 am SPI Publisher Services

10:45 am – 12:15 pm Concurrent Sessions

� Concurrent 1A - Salon 2China Opening UpAdrian Stanley, The Charlesworth Group (USA), Moderator

Sally Morris, The Association of Learned and Professional SocietyPublishers Mark Robertson, Blackwell PublishingShuai Yan, Beijing Forestry University

China is an important publishing market for subscription salesand readership, and, increasingly, Chinese authors are submitting papers to Western journals. Can you afford not toknow what is happening in the fast-paced economic growthand development of the Chinese professional publishing sector? This session includes a market overview, a case studyfrom a major Western publisher working in China, and the perspective of an academician from China.

� Concurrent 1B - Salon 1New New Things—Trends to Watch in ProfessionalPublishingBill Silberg, The Commonwealth Fund, Moderator

Kent Anderson, New England Journal of MedicineGlenn McGee, The American Journal of BioethicsJoy Moore, U.S. Academic JournalsRichard Newman, American Medical Association

In this fast-moving, digitally dominant world, sometimes it’stough to step back and think proactively and strategically aboutnew products or opportunities. But not doing so has

significant risks. We’ll explore some of the “new new things”to consider as a way to appeal more effectively to your current markets, support your stakeholders, and capture new markets—domestic and international.

� Concurrent 1C - MadisonHanging Together in an Increasingly Complex Multi-Format LandscapeAlix Buffon Vance, Ebook Library, Moderator

Geoffrey Bilder, Scholarly Information ServicesCindy Hill, Sun Microsystems, Inc.Roy Tennant, California Digital Library, University of California

Benjamin Franklin once said, “We must all hang together, or assuredly we shall all hang separately.” Increasingly, publishers and librarians wrangle with diverse digital contentformats and rights-management and revenue models. Theyshare common, critical concerns about how users on the Weband in libraries locate and use relevant content and interpretdistinctions. In this session, speakers will discuss some of thebest new technologies for facilitating resource discovery—andwho is creating them. They will examine the promise and pitfalls of investing in ever-changing navigation software andpropose ways that publishers and librarians can “hang together” most successfully while maximizing their uniqueadded value.

� Concurrent 1D - ManassassOutsourcing—Where’s the Future?Andrea Powell, CABI Publishing, Moderator

Colin Davis, BMJ Publishing GroupRandy Kiefer, Institute for Operations Research and the ManagementSciencesJoel Poznansky, ApexCoVantage

Few publishers have not considered outsourcing as a potentialroute to operational cost savings. Case studies on outsourcingexercises—both successful and unsuccessful—are plentiful,and the number of companies offering their services is legion.But for any size publisher, outsourcing can be much more thana simple route to greater operational efficiency. It can addressa local skills shortage, a need for a technological upgrade, oroffset the risk in expanding into a new area. Outsourcing isincreasingly a business strategy in its own right, and this session will explore this strategic approach.

12:15 pm – 2:00 pm Lunch and Business MeetingSalons H-K

12:15 pm – 2:00 pm Exhibitors Marketplace Salons A-E

2:00 pm – 3:30 pm Plenary - Salons 1-2

Marketing Your Content in a Micro-SegmentedOnline WorldDavid Meerman Scott, Freshspot Marketing

New spheres of influence available to publishers on the Webinclude citizen-publishing, blogs, online news, e-communities,social networks, reputation aggregators, and niche searchengines. Smart scholarly publishers who participate in thismicro-segmented online world don’t reach more people online.Instead, they reach the right people and as a result sell morecontent both online and off. In this stimulating presentation,learn how publishers leverage content and taxonomy assets to optimize search; create communities of people engaged withcontent; and deconstruct content into ever smaller slices whilesimultaneously combining it into increasingly larger packages—all with measurable revenue results.

Conference Tracks Legend� = Business � = Markets � = Search� = Product Development � = Technology

8

Con

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Jun

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9

Thursday, June 8 • C

onference Program

3:30 pm – 4:00 pm Break - Salons A-E

3:30 pm – 4:00 pm Exhibitors MarketplaceSalons A-E

Exhibitor Demonstration Grand Foyer

3:40 pm – 3:50 pm Coremetrics

4:00 pm – 5:30 pm Concurrent Sessions

� Concurrent 2A - ManassassMarketing in the New EconomyAlma Wills, Kaufman-Wills Group, Moderator

Nancy Collins, Medical Practice ManagementColleen McCarthy, Wall Street Journal OnlineGreg Urquhart, Nature

Publishers from three markets explain how they have fearlessly“gone with the flow,” using new technologies to market andtransform their publications from ink on paper to virtual information communities. A small publishing house shifts frombeing the publisher of a bi-monthly niche journal to a virtualconsultant. One of the world’s most prestigious science journals brings readers (and now listeners) back to the publication week after week with its innovative marketingapproach. A leading daily newspaper keeps computer-boundreaders engaged with online advertising, customized editions,and innovative offerings.

� Concurrent 2B - Salon 2Post-Publication Evaluation: Impact Factors andBeyondSue Silver, Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment, Moderator

Eugene Garfield, ISI and The ScientistMichael J. Kurtz, Harvard-Smithsonian Center for AstrophysicsCharles Phelps, University of Rochester

The Impact Factor was begun in the 1960s and now carriessignificant influence on all parts of the publication processincluding authors, publishers, and librarians. Is the ImpactFactor, as it is currently being used, the best way to evaluatean article's (or an author's or a journal's) value to a discipline?What new methods of valuation are on the horizon to help usall evaluate post-publication quality? This session will providean historical overview while also covering alternative methodsof citation analysis and the perspective from the tenure reviewprocess.

� Concurrent 2C - Salon 1Digital Preservation: Greatly Desired, GreatlyUnknownRebecca Simon, University of California Press, Moderator

Eileen Gifford Fenton, PorticoSarah Michalak, University of North CarolinaPaul F. Uhlir, Office of International S&T Information Programs,The National Academies

Managers from publishers, scholarly societies, and libraries allagree upon the need for long-term preservation and access toboth print and digital scholarship. However, as “digital born”content becomes increasingly common, new questions emergeregarding how best to assure such preservation, who will manage it, and who will finance it. This session will explore thevarious complexities and challenges of preservation in a digitalage, including technical infrastructure, service and businessmodels, and funding sources.

� Concurrent 2D - MadisonYou Might Also Like…Recommendation Services forDigital LibrariesGerry Grenier, IEEE, Inc., Moderator

Marc Krellenstein, ElsevierXiangmin Zhang, Rutgers UniversityJohan Bollen, Los Alamos National Laboratory

Whether looking for a good restaurant, a new car to buy, or abook to read, we all rely on trusted recommendations to siftthrough the myriad choices before us. With Amazon.com as amodel, recommendation services are increasingly common inthe eCommerce world of physical products. While recommenderservices have not taken off in digital libraries, that trend may bechanging. Powerful search engine technology allows publishersto develop recommendation services based on a user’s pastreading (content based filtering) and recommendations from acommunity of like-users (collaborative filtering). This session willexplore recommendation services from the perspective of academicians and practitioners.

� Concurrent 2E - JacksonInnovative Electronic Projects in the HumanitiesBill Kasdorf, Apex Publishing, LLC, Moderator

David Hart, The Liberty FundRobert McNamee, Oxford UniversityMark Saunders, The University of Virginia Press

Discover some of the most exciting electronic projects in thehumanities in this exploration of innovative uses of technologyand techniques to advance scholarly publishing dramatically.The University of Virginia’s Rotunda project provides greatlyimproved insight into the correspondence between the found-ing fathers and others for students and scholars of Americanhistory. The Electronic Enlightenment project is a fully cross-searchable collection of important eighteenth-centurycorrespondence including such important literary figures asRousseau, Voltaire, and Adam Smith. The Online Library ofLiberty focuses on published literature, offering free access tofull-length classic texts from ancient Sumeria to the present.

5:30 pm – 7:30 pm Reception - Salons A-E

5:30 pm – 7:30 pm Exhibitors Marketplace Salons A-E

Exhibitor DemonstrationGrand Foyer

5:00 pm – 5:10 pm Inera, Inc.5:15 pm – 5:25 pm MacMillan Services5:45 pm – 5:55 pm Mira Digital Publishing6:15 pm – 6:25 pm Aries Systems Corp.

6:45 pm Drawing for Prizes - Salons A-E

Special Exhibitor Prize DrawingsBe sure to stop by these exhibit booths and drop

off your business card to enter drawings.

AIPBooth: 5

Allen Press, Inc.Booth: 29

The Charlesworth GroupBooth: 8

International Mail ExpressBooth: 31

LaserwordsBooth: 15

Mark LogicBooth: 13

Mira Digital PublishingBooth: 34

SPI Publisher ServicesBooth: 30

See page 24 for prize details.

11

Friday, June 9 • C

onference Program

Friday, June 97:30 am – 5:00 pm Registration - Grand Foyer

7:30 am – 8:45 am Contintal Breakfast/ - Salons H-KBreakfast Roundtables

Breakfast Roundtables provide an opportunity for discussion ofcurrent hot topics and networking with your peers over a lightbreakfast. Tables are identified by topic and discussions are ledinformally by subject experts.

Discussion Topics:1. Big in Japan? How About Brazil? Are Foreign Editions

Worth the Trouble?

2. International Marketing: How to Convince People in Places You Have Never Been to and Can't Pronounce That They Should Buy Your Stuff

3. Redesigns: Why Do So Many Scholarly Publishing Website Look Like They Were Designed by Trolls (With Apologies to Trolls)?

4. Pod Casting and Professional Blogs: Harnessing the Power of the Verbose and Self-Important for Your Own Purposes

5. Does Anyone Actually Use RSS? (Yes, but Anyone Who Does Not Also Wear a Blackberry on Their Belt)

6. How to Make Your Content Heard (and Seen) in the Electronic Library

7. Instructions Not Included: How Does One Assemble a Library Advisory Group and Why?

8:45 am – 10:15 am Concurrent Sessions

� Concurrent 3A - AlexandriaPublishing in the Developing WorldValentina Kalk, The World Bank, Moderator

Janet Chapin, American College of Obstetricians and GynecologistsRebecca Rinehart, American College of Obstetricians andGynecologistsPippa Smart, International Network for the Availability of ScientificPublications

Representing organizations and publishers operating in theUnited States and developing countries, including the MiddleEast and Latin America, our experienced panel provides anoverview of the publishing industry in the developing world anddiscusses challenges and opportunities, including licensing,translation, and distribution.

� Concurrent 3B - Salon 1Federated SearchingGerry Grenier, IEEE, Inc., Moderator

Abe Lederman, Deep Web TechnologiesRaul Valdes-Perez, VivisimoTed Sullivan, Raritan Technologies

Libraries have begun to offer federated searching services toenhance the search experience. Federated search, the capability to search multiple content repositories in real-time,has pros and cons. While searching multiple repositories offerssome efficiencies, assuring accurate relevancy ranking, precision, and performance can be challenging. Panelists willoffer practical advice on implementing federated search services and share their views on the desirability of federatedsearching in the context of the many search services availableto end-users.

� Concurrent 3C - Salon 3Challenges in Managing Intellectual Property andCopyright in a Global EconomyEd Colleran, Copyright Clearance Center, Moderator

Jack Ochs, American Chemical SocietyMark Seeley, Elsevier

What are the challenges and opportunities of doing businessin a rapidly changing global environment? This timely discussion is aimed at publishers large and small, becauseworldwide adoption of the Internet gives all publishers globalreach. Among myriad new factors for publishers to manage isthe critical role of copyright and intellectual property protectionacross multinational lines. Complex challenges result from thecomplicated, sometimes contradictory web of copyright lawsthat exists from country to country. The session will examinenew thinking and new approaches to managing global rights.

� Concurrent 3D - Salon 4Strategic Application of Usage DataTodd Carpenter, BioOne, Moderator

Phil Davis, Cornell UniversityHeather Goodell, American Heart AssociationMelanie Schaffner, Project Muse

Over the past several years, the accessibility and standardization of usage data has improved. Standards suchas COUNTER have made the analysis and comparison of dataeasier for librarians and publishers alike. Now that we have thisdata, how are people applying it to make business decisions—from which journal subscriptions to cancel at libraries, to whatnew products to launch as publishers? This session willexplore how publishers are using statistics, some of the wayslibrarians incorporate statistics in their purchasing decisions,and future directions for data application.

� Concurrent 3E - Salon 5The Institution Registry: An Idea Whose Time Has ComeAudrey Melkin, Atypon, Moderator

Greg Malar, Rockefeller University PressNathan Robertson, Thurgood Marshall Law LibraryDan Tonkery, Ebsco

To authenticate Web users, libraries, vendors, and publishersdeliver and receive information about institutions, such as contact names, numbers, and IP address ranges. Becauseeach information provider manages data individually, confusion,duplication of effort, and ultimately delays in implementationresult. Can an Institution Registry provide a central space forthe entire scholarly community to hold this information? Thepanelists will discuss this challenge including a proposedunique identifier for institutions based on the DOI and solicitaudience feedback about security, governance, promotion,maintenance, and interaction with other registries or standards.

� Concurrent 3F - Salon 6Institutional Repositories: Benefits and Challengesof Working TogetherEamon Fennessy, The Copyright Group, Inc., Moderator

Leslie K. W. Chan, University of Toronto at Scarborough Ed Pentz, Cross RefBernard Rous, Association for Computing Machinery

As both authors and researchers are increasingly asking forthe services of institutional repositories, libraries, society andcommercial publishers, and researchers have developed models for delivering them. This session explores availableoptions and issues encountered throughout the evolution of therepository function. Topics include how repositories meetscholars’ needs, repository goals, how publishers and librarians perceive them, the range of repository content, copyright issues, who pays to set up, and plans for maintenance and migration.

10:15 am – 10:45 am Break - Salons A-E

10:15 am – 10:45 am Exhibitors Marketplace Salons A-E

Exhibitor DemonstrationGrand Foyer

10:30 am – 10:45 am Techbooks

10:45 am – 12:15 pm Concurrent Sessions

� Concurrent 4A - AlexandriaOpen Access: Where Does the Money Come From,and Where Does it Go?Mary Waltham, Mary Waltham Publishing Consultants, Moderator

Steve Borostyan, Public Library of ScienceAbel L. Packer, Latin American and Caribbean Center on HealthSciences Information Martin Richardson, Oxford University Press

Open access publishing of research articles, where producersrather than consumers of information pay for publication,appears to be here to stay. Yet we still wonder what financialmodel is right for any given journal. Panelists actively implementing open access programs discuss the conceptsunderlying their financial models and present sufficient specific financial detail to demonstrate these models at work in the real publishing world. Attendees will learn about the questions, challenges, and opportunities panelists faced:Who is paying for access? What drove the decision to implement an OA model? What are the expectations for thefinancial future of the journals?

� Concurrent 4B - Salon 3Transforming Revenue Models in ScholarlyAdvertisingBette Brunelle, Outsell, Moderator

Sande Giaccone, Cell Press, Elsevier

Additional speaker to be announced

As journals become electronic, what becomes of print advertising revenue? Panelists will deliver the latest researchin online advertising and showcase innovative ways to addressthe changing market. What metrics are available to demonstrate reach to advertisers? Are usage studies theanswer? Hear creative publisher solutions, such as a controlled circulation model that supplements the traditionalpaid subscriber base.

� Concurrent 4C - Salon 4Key Ingredient of a Successful Publishing Program?An Open Relationship with the MediaNan Broadbent, Consultant, Moderator

Monica Bradford, Science, American Association for theAdvancement of ScienceAlison Richards, National Public RadioCurtis Suplee, National Science Foundation

Scholarly publishers have interesting information to communicate, whether it is the latest research on diet andhealth, diseases and treatments, studies of driving and cellphone use, or the discovery of a new species. Hear from apublisher, a journalist, and the communications lead for a government agency, the value of investing in a press office orcommunications program and how they translate scholarlyrigor into information compelling to the masses.

� Concurrent 4D - Salon 5The Impact of Government on PublishingRichard T. Kaser, Information Today, Inc., Moderator

Mark S. Frankel, Scientific Freedom, Responsibility and Law Program,American Association for the Advancement of Science Sally Morris, The Association of Learned and Professional SocietyPublishers

The impact governments can have on the scholarly publishingworld is unmistakable, whether intentional or not. This sessionprovides an overview of the current issues, including the USPatriot Act, censorship and regulation of scientific research,public-private competition/cooperation, and open access.Experts on the issues will answer audience questions anddebate various aspects of the issues.

� Concurrent 4E - Salon 6E-Book Models That WorkJoel Poznansky, Apex CoVantage, ModeratorJohn Barnes, Thomson GaleDavid Hart, Liberty Fund

After the e-book market failure following “irrational exuberance”a few years ago, many publishers believed that e-books were asolution in search of a problem. And yet, quietly, academic andresearch libraries began to acquire carefully chosen e-bookcollections or subscribe to online e-book libraries. Today, electronic reference works and scholarly monographs alikehave found an active market and user base founded on business models that involve the right content, the right technical approach, and the right pricing model. In this session, attendees will learn about three successful—and very different—approaches to making e-books winners in themarketplace.

12:15 pm – 1:30 pm Lunch - Salons H-K

Promoting Science LiteracyKeith Seitter, American Meteorological Society

How can and should publishers benefit society? Do we justbemoan declining literacy rates, or are we doing all we can topromote literacy? Over lunch, learn how an influential society,well known for its scholarly publications, has channeled itsexpertise into conducting science, mathematics, and technology literacy programs for elementary and secondaryschool children. The programs incorporate a special initiative topromote minority participation in science. To date, over100,000 teachers have received training and instructionalresources, which have directly benefited millions of students.

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1:30 pm – 3:00 pm Plenary - Salons 1-2

Town Hall: The Impact of Search Technologies onScholarly PublishingMary Waltham, Mary Waltham Publishing Consultants, Moderator

Kenneth Fulton, National Academy of SciencesJean-Claude Guédon, University of MontrealRichard Newman, American Medical Association

As search services from such organizations as Google, Yahoo,and MSN continue to develop, information is easier to find, andthe world of information is becoming increasingly flattened. In a“flat” search landscape, will publishers be able to protect and promote their brands? How will relationships with their readerschange? Will changes in how readers locate information alterthe perceived value of that information? Using a town hall format, presenters will speak briefly on their strategic view ofthis market change and then respond to questions from theaudience and the SSP membership at large.

3:00 pm – 3:15 pm Closing

PDR Corporate Library/Scholarly Publisher ForumJune 15, 2006 - Baltimore MD

Top Management Roundtable (TMR)Not Home Alone: Sustainable Publishing

in an Interdependent WorldSeptember 6-8, 2006 - Philadelphia, PA

Fall Seminar SeriesNovember 2006

Librarian Focus GroupFebruary 2007

Plan to attend the 29th Annual Meetingat the Palace Hotel in San Francisco, CA

June 6-8, 2007

Upcoming SSP Events

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Adrian AlexanderAdrian Alexander has nearly thirty years of library industryexperience as a librarian, a sales manager for two major sub-scription agents, head of the Faxon Institute, and serving as aBioOne Board member since 2000. Since 1998 he has servedas the Executive Director and COO of Greater Western LibraryAlliance, a 31 member research library consortium. Adrian is afrequent author and speaker at professional meetings.

Kent AndersonKent Anderson is the Executive Director of InternationalBusiness and Product Development for the New EnglandJournal of Medicine. Kent has worked in healthcare publishingfor more than 18 years including positions as PublishingDirector for the New England Journal of Medicine and Directorof Medical Journals at the American Academy of Pediatrics.

John BarnesJohn Barnes is Executive Vice President, Strategic BusinessDevelopment for Thomson Gale where he has leadershipresponsibility for all business development and corporate strategy activities, including acquisitions, strategic alliances,new market development, and inbound and outbound content,and product licensing. During his 20+ years in publishing, heestablished a new business in aggregating and archiving elec-tronic scholarly journals at Online Computer Library Center.Prior to that at ProQuest John held a series of senior productmanagement, general management, and technical positions.

Geoffrey BilderGeoffrey Bilder has over 15 years experience as a technicalleader in scholarly technology. He co-founded BrownUniversity’s Scholarly Technology Group in 1993 to provideadvanced technology consulting on issues related to academicresearch, teaching, and scholarly communication. He laterserved as head of Research and Development in the IT department of Monitor Group, a management consulting firm.

Johan Bollen Johan Bollen is a staff member at the Los Alamos NationalLaboratory Research Library (Research and Prototyping Team)while on leave from his position as Assistant Professor at theComputer Science department of Old Dominion University,which he joined in 2002. His research focuses on studies ofuser behavior in digital information systems with applicationsto scientometrics and recommended systems for digitallibraries.

Steve BorostynSteve Borostyn has over 23 years in corporate financial andoperational management roles in Fortune 100 companies,spanning the fields of engineering, manufacturing, financialservices, web development, and consulting. He is currently theCFO of the Public Library of Science, a non profit organizationin San Francisco, dedicated to the publishing of Open Accesslife science journals and in making the world’s scientific andmedical literature a public resource.

Patricia Bowers-HudsonPatricia Bowers Hudson is the US Marketing Manager forOxford Journals, a division of Oxford University Press. Shebegan her career in marketing for The Voyager Company andthe UNC School of Government, and then moved to the journals marketing department of Duke University Press. Shestarted at OUP in 1999, initially marketing OUP’s science andmedical journals in North America.

Monica BradfordMonica Bradford is the Executive Editor of the internationaljournal Science overseeing the peer-review and selection ofmanuscripts; the copyediting and proofreading process; andthe design, production and manufacture of the print product.Over the last few years, she has been heavily involved in thedevelopment of Science Online. Prior to joining the journal in1989 she worked for the Publications Division of the AmericanChemical Society for nine years. Monica is currently Presidentof CSE.

Nan BroadbentNan Broadbent has more than 15 years of experience in communications and public affairs. She worked for BurnessCommunications, consulting with health and science foundations, and spent 11 years at the American Associationfor the Advancement of Science directing the News &Information Office. Currently, Nan provides consulting servicesin publishing, communications, crisis management, and business development.

Bette BrunelleBette Brunelle provides analysis and advisory services in theScience, Technology and Medical (STM) information sector.Her expertise includes electronic publishing and best practices, open access, the changing user, and customer and buyer dynamics, and she covers industry financial performance and benchmarks. Ms. Brunelle has worked inSTM since 1982, first for BRS Information Technologies, thenas an executive for Ovid Technologies and Wolters Kluwer.

Rick BurkeRick Burke is the Executive Director of the Statewide CaliforniaElectronic Library Consortium, a resource-sharing arrange-ment with 85+ private academic libraries and nonprofitresearch institutions in California. He has presented at variousconferences on topics such as collaborative collection development in a consortium, negotiation, managing a smalllibrary, and incorporating non-roman scripts into libraryautomation systems. He has been University Librarian at theUniversity of Judaism for more than 18 years.

Todd Carpenter Todd Carpenter is Director of Business Development withBioOne, an online aggregator of scholarly journals in the bio-logical sciences. Todd directs content development, publisherrelations, and sales. Before joining BioOne, Todd had been theJournals Marketing Manager at The Johns Hopkins UniversityPress. He has also held marketing management positions atthe Energy Intelligence Group and The Haworth Press.

Janet ChapinJanet Chapin is the Director of the Division of Women’s HealthIssues for the American College of Obstetricians andGynecologists, Washington DC. She is responsible for international program activities of the organization. The divisionalso addresses issues such as access to women’s health care,adolescent health care and public health issues. Prior to coming to ACOG, she worked in a community health centerand state health department.

Speaker Biographies

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Speaker Biographies

Speaker BiographiesLeslie ChanLeslie Chan is Associate Director of Bioline International, anon-profit international electronic publishing initiative with themain objective of bridging the global knowledge gap byimproving the visibility and impact of bioscience and healthjournals from developing countries. Trained as a physicalanthropologist, Leslie also serves as Program Supervisor forthe International Studies program and is the Supervisor ofStudies for the Joint Program in New Media Studies at theUniversity of Toronto at Scarborough.

David CharlesDavid Charles’ agency, E-Licensing, has been providing onlinesales services for US non-profit society publishers since 2003.Previous to that he occupied sales management positions atLippincott Williams & Wilkins, WB Saunders, and AcademicPress.

Ed Colleran Ed Colleran serves as the Senior Director of RightsholderRelations at Copyright Clearance Center (CCC), the world’spremier provider of copyright licensing and compliance solutions. He oversees strategic initiatives focused on CCC’spublisher constituency and manages the development of content licensing solutions and new revenue-generating initiatives for CCC’s participating publishers. Ed also providesthe vision for the advancement of CCC’s digital rights management services and is a key contributor on other long-term strategic issues facing the information industry.

Nancy CollinsNancy Collins is President and CEO of GreenbranchPublishing, a privately held publisher of medical practice management titles, electronic media and audio conferences for physicians, practice administrators and office practice managers. Prior to the firm’s launch in 1998, Nancy was VPand Publisher at Williams & Wilkins, leading a $19 Million unitincluding paid and controlled circulation journals, newsletters,and CME products.

John CoxJohn Cox has spent over 35 years in publishing, with The OpenUniversity, Butterworths and Scholastic. He joined Blackwell in1990 as head of the subscription agency and then asManaging Director. He was Managing Director of Carfax, a UKjournal publisher, from 1994. He left Carfax in November 1998to set up his own consultancy, John Cox Associates, which specializes in scholarly and research publishing.

Colin Davis Colin Davis started his career in technical documentation,before joining the BMJ Publishing Group 10 years ago. He waspart of the setup team, and now manages, the in-house type-setting team, producing the weekly BMJ and several othertitles. Colin implemented the outsourcing of typesetting for theGroup’s 26 specialist journal titles, which moved to China in2003, and continues to manage the contract. He is alsoresponsible for the Group’s print production activity.

Philip Davis Philip Davis is a Life Sciences Librarian at Cornell Universityresponsible for selecting, negotiating and licensing resources,and has coordinated three serial cancellation projects. Philserves on the executive board of Project COUNTER, the editorial board of two library journals, and two library advisoryboards. In 2004 he was named a Mover and Shaker by LibraryJournal.

Tina FeickTina Feick is currently Vice President for Customer Relationsat Swets Information Services (formerly Blackwell’s), whereshe has worked for 22 years in managerial positions in sales, customer service and marketing. She is a Past-Chair of NorthAmerican Serials Interest Group and Serials Industry SystemsAdvisory Group. In 1994, she was awarded the Bowker/Ulrich’sSerials Librarianship Award, and in 2005 she received the firstNorth American Serials Interest Group (NASIG) ChampionAward .

Mark Frankel Mark S. Frankel, Ph.D., is director of the Scientific Freedom,Responsibility and Law Program at the American Associationfor the Advancement of Science. He has directed projects onintellectual property issues related to electronic publishing andon the impact of national security policies on science. He is theeditor of the AAAS quarterly, Professional Ethics Report, andserves on several journal editorial boards.

Kenneth FultonKenneth Fulton is the Executive Director of the NationalAcademy of Sciences. Ken manages the Academy member-ship and program activities, including the election of membersand their annual and regional meetings, the NationalAcademies Keck Futures Initiative, and a variety of activitiesand events. He is also the publisher of the Proceedings, theAcademy’s journal of original research.

Eugene GarfieldEugene Garfield is a pioneer in information retrieval systemsand inventor of Current Contents, Index Chemicus, ScienceCitation Index, SSCI, and AHCI, and Journal Citation Reports.He is founding publisher/editor of The Scientist and author ofover 1,000 articles and books. His HistCite system of algorithmic historiography now maps the output of the Web of Science database searches of 35,000,000 articles.

Sande GiaconneSande Giaccone is Director of Sales at Elsevier – Cell Press.Sande has worked at a senior level in major science and medical publishing companies for most of his career. Beforejoining Elsevier, Sande was a sales director at NaturePublishing Group.

Eileen Gifford-FentonEileen Fenton is Executive Director of Portico, a new electronic-journal archiving service launched with support from TheAndrew W. Mellon Foundation, JSTOR, and Ithaka. Eileen isresponsible for leading Portico’s efforts to ensure the long-termpreservation of and access to scholarly literature published inelectronic form beginning with electronic scholarly journals.

Heather GoodellHeather is the Director of Operations, Scientific Publishing forthe American Heart Association (AHA) where she has workedfor three years. Her responsibilities include oversight of theAHA science publications. Heather has spoken at various publishing conferences including HighWire and SSP andserves on the CSE Editorial Policy Committee. Prior to AHAshe worked in publishing for Pearson Education.

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Speaker Biographies

Gerry GrenierGerry Grenier has 26 years of experience in publishing and iscurrently Staff Director of Publishing Technologies for theIEEE. He leads the electronic publishing team at the IEEE thatincludes development and operation of IEEE Xplore—a digitallibrary containing 1.4 million journal articles, conferencepapers, and standards in electrical engineering and computerscience.

Jean-Claude GuedonJean-Claude Guédon is professor of Comparative Literature atthe University of Montreal, where he has taught since 1973.He obtained his Ph.D. in history of science at the University ofWisconsin-Madison and is the founder of the first Canadianscholarly electronic journal, Surfaces. He has recently beenchosen as Vice President Research Dissemination for theCanadian Federation for the Humanities and Social Sciences,which supports the publishing efforts 40,000 academicians.

David HartDavid Hart became Director of the OLL in 2001. Previously helectured in modern European history at the University ofAdelaide, South Australia where he won the University teaching prize. He has studied at Macquarie University, theUniversity of Mainz, Stanford University, and King’s College,Cambridge. His research interests include early 19th centuryFrench political and economic thought, and war and film.

Helen HendersonHelen Henderson is the VP for Marketing and Strategy forRinggold Inc., and has worked as a librarian, publisher and subscription agent. For the past four years she has been working with publishers to organize their customer informationand is producing a database of standard metadata and demo-graphics for this customer data. Helen works on several stan-dards committees and is currently the Joint Editor of SERIALS,on the UK Serials Group committee and a Fellow of the ChartedInstitute of Library and Information Professionals (CILIP).

Cindy Hill Cindy Hill manages SunLibrary, Sun Microsystems’ worldwideinformation center. As part of Sun’s Chief Technology Officeand Sun Labs, her group provides information services,resources, and knowledge collaboration support throughoutSun. Formerly, Cindy managed information services at FailureAnalysis Associates, Inc. (now Exponent, Inc.), where her teamprovided in-depth research and information in the scientific,legal and medical disciplines.

Bill KasdorfBill Kasdorf, Vice President of Apex Publishing, LLC, isGeneral Editor of The Columbia Guide to Digital Publishing, amajor print and online reference work published in 2003 byColumbia University Press. Previously owner and president ofImpressions Book and Journal Services and Past President ofSSP, Bill is a frequent speaker and seminar leader for SSP, theInternational Association of Scientific, Technical, and MedicalPublishers (STM), the Council of Science Editors, theAssociation of American Publishers, and the Association ofAmerican University Presses.

Richard KaserRichard T. (Dick) Kaser is the Vice President of Content forInformation Today, Inc. He directs ITI’s content division, whichproduces periodicals, reference products, and conferences—allaimed at the library community and professional informationmarkets. Under his general direction are Information Today,Searcher, Online, Computers in Libraries, as well as additional

publications. Published widely—from scholarly journals to thepopular press—he observes and comments frequently on theindustry.

Marshall KeysMarshall Keys founded MDA Consulting to pursue his interestin the effects of large-scale social, economic, political, andtechnological change on libraries and other information-intensive organizations after a decade as Executive Director of NELINET. He holds a Ph.D. in English from Vanderbilt and a Master’s in Library Science from the University of NorthCarolina at Chapel Hill. He won the England LibraryAssociation’s 1999 Emerson Greenaway Award, for outstanding career contributions to librarianship.

Randy KieferRandy Kiefer is the Director of Information Technology for theInstitute for Operations Research and the ManagementSciences. He has served as a track chair, session chair, andspeaker at several The Council of Engineering and ScientificSociety Executives (CESSE) meetings. In addition, he hasbeen a guest lecturer at Huron University in London since1989 on the subjects of entrepreneurship, American corporateculture, and strategic approaches to thinking/planning/execution and marketing.

Michael KurtzMichael Kurtz is an astronomer and computer scientist at theHarvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics in Cambridge,Massachusetts, which he joined in 1982. He is the author orco-author of 200 technical articles and abstracts. In 1988 heconceived what became the NASA Astrophysics Data System,for which he was awarded the 2001 Van Biesbroeck Prize ofthe American Astronomical Society.

Chad La JoieChad La Joie works as the development manager forGeorgetown’s Advanced Research Computing andMiddleware. His work focuses on integrating Middleware concepts and applications, such as virtual organizations andShibboleth, in to various research, grid, and medical care com-munities and the issues that arise from doing so. He also par-ticipates as one of the core developers of Shibboleth.

Abe LedermanAbe Lederman has 25 years of software engineering experience. He co-founded Verity, a leader in search enginetechnology. He pioneered federated searching in the Federalgovernment in 1999. Realizing the enormous potential for federated searching, Abe started Deep Web Technologies in2002.

John LongJohn Long has worked in scholarly publishing for over 8 years,spending time with a commercial vendor as well as professionalsocieties. He has experience with editing, production, and journal management. He is currently the Managing Editor of twomonthly journals for the American Society of Plant Biologists.

Colleen McCarthy Colleen McCarthy is a product manager at Dow Jones &Company focusing on product development and strategyefforts for The Wall Street Journal Online. Colleen joined DowJones as part of the advertising services team in 2000. Shewent on to work for the Journal’s print advertising sales andmarketing team until 2003 when she moved to her current role.She is a member of the Online Publishers’ Association and theNew York University Publishing Alumni group.

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Speaker Biographies

Glenn McGee Glenn McGee is the Director of the Alden March BioethicsInstitute, a new and comprehensive bioethics research and education organization. He holds the John A. Balint EndowedChair in Medical Ethics, and is a professor at Albany Med,Union University, and University at Albany of SUNY. He createdand authors the first blog by a biomedical journal editor,http://blog.bioethics.net, reviewed in 2005 by Nature, Scienceand Scientific American.

David Meerman ScottDavid Meerman Scott is a writer, consultant, contributing editorat EContent Magazine, contributing writer at Product MarketingMagazine, conference speaker, and seminar leader. David’s latest book Cashing In With Content: How InnovativeMarketers Use Digital Information to Turn Browsers IntoBuyers is a riff on using Web content to drive revenue fromWeb site visitors. Prior to starting his own business, Davidworked as a marketing executive at publishing companiesincluding Knight-Ridder, NewsEdge, and Thomson.

Audrey MelkinAudrey D. Melkin is Director of Business Development atAtypon Systems, Inc. Previously she was Vice President,Publisher Relations at Ingenta and CatchWord and has workedat Holt, Wiley, and Oxford University Press. She is a regularspeaker at industry gatherings, including the CharlestonConference, American Library Association (ALA), AmericanAssociation of Publishers/Professional and ScholarlyPublishing Division (PSP), and the SSP.

Steven Metalitz Steven J. Metalitz is a Partner in the Washington, DC law firmof Smith & Metalitz LLP. He specializes in intellectual property, privacy, e-commerce and information law. He provides legalcounseling and policy advocacy, primarily for clients in the publishing, recording, motion picture, software and databaseindustries, and for e-commerce companies. Steven practicedlaw in Charleston, South Carolina and is a member of the barin the District of Columbia and South Carolina (inactive). Hehas taught copyright law as Professorial Lecturer in Law at theGeorge Washington University Law School in Washington, DC,and has published widely on copyright and Internet law topics.

Sarah C. MichalakSarah C. Michalak is the University Librarian and AssociateProvost for the University of Washington. Previously Sarah wasDirector of the University of Utah’s J. Willard Marriott Library.Prior to that, she served in a number of capacities at theUniversity of Washington, including Assistant Director forLibrary Development and Planning, Head of Collection AccessServices and Library Development, and Head of the ScienceLibraries, and as Head of the Bio-Agricultural Library at theUniversity of California, Riverside.

Joy MooreJoy Moore is Publisher for the U.S. Academic Journals andforthcoming Nature Network product line of Nature PublishingGroup. She started her career in STM publishing as theManaging Editor for The Journal of Investigative Dermatology,and subsequently held a number of journal and web publishingmanagement positions at Blackwell Publishing, before movingto Nature Publishing Group in 2004. With a strong backgroundin the use of web and emerging technologies, she specializesin employing new models in online publications and servingthe needs of society contract publishing clients. Joy has participated as a speaker at SSP, EASE, and CSE conferences since 1997, and served as Chair of the CSE program committee in 2005.

Sally MorrisSally Morris is Chief Executive of the The Association ofLearned and Professional Society Publishers (ALPSP)(ALPSP). Since Sally took office in August 1998, theAssociation’s membership has almost trebled and its activitieshave grown substantially. She is also the current Chair of thecross-industry Publishing Skills Group in the UK, President ofthe International Federation of Scholarly Publishers, and amember of the UK’s Legal Deposit Advisory Panel.

Richard NewmanRichard Newman is Director, Journal Sales and OnlineBusiness, of the American Medical Association. His responsibilities include the AMA’s 10 scholarly journals, onlineContinuing Medical Education, and American Medical News.Prior to joining the AMA staff, Richard was Associate Director of Stanford University’s HighWire Press and held a variety ofpositions at the Thomson Corporation.

Elizabeth Nolan Elizabeth Nolan is Vice President, Sales & Marketing for SPIPublisher Services with more than 13 years of publishing experience in sales and marketing, and business development.She most recently held the position of General Manager withThompson Interactive for Thompson Publishing Group. Prior tothis, Elizabeth held senior management positions at TheWorldwatch Institute and for the Society Periodicals team atLippincott Williams & Wilkins.

Lyn NorrisLyn has extensive experience in the UK academic and publishing communities, with roles at the University of Bath, and Ingenta. She was Athens Product Manager for Eduserv,providing Access & Identity Management Services for the UKEducation community, the UK National Health Service. Lyn isnow engaged in North American Business Development,based in New Zealand.

Jack OchsJack Ochs is currently Vice President, Strategic Planning &Development for the Publications Division of the AmmericanChemical Society. He is a member of the STM ExecutiveCommittee, CrossRef Membership and Fees Committee, andCOUNTER's Executive Committee. Prior to joining the ACS, he serrved in a number of editorial, strategic planning, andmanagement positions with Simon & Schuster, Scholastic, and Prentice-Hall.

Abel PackerAbel Packer has been the Director of BIREME/PAHO/WHOsince 1999. For the previous decade he was in charge of theinformation systems development. He has actively participatedin the design, development and operation of major BIREMEprojects, such as the Latin American and Caribbean Systemon Health Sciences Information, the LILACS database, theLILACS/CD-ROM, the SciELO project.

Ed Pentz Ed Pentz is Executive Director of Publishers InternationalLinking Association, Inc. (PILA) the not-for-profit organization setup by scholarly publishers to develop and run the CrossRefservice. CrossRef enables scholarly publishers and other organization to enable links to full text articles on other publishers’ systems. Prior to joining PILA Mr. Pentz wasManager, e-Business Development, at Academic Press wherehe worked on IDEAL, online reference woprks and Digital ObjectIdentifier (DOI) implementation. He has been Chair of NationalInformation Standards Organization (NISO) DOI SyntaxStandards Committee and is currently stationed in Oxford, U.K.

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Speaker Biographies

Charles Phelps Charles E. Phelps is Provost of the University of Rochester.He has achieved widespread recognition for his scholarlyresearch, and has been a long-time participant in theAssociation of American University Digital Networks andIntellectual Property Rights Committee. He has had a long-standing interest in scholarly communication issuesincluding intellectual property and has spoken frequently onthese issues across the country.

Andrea PowellAndrea Powell is Director of Publishing for CAB International(CABI), a not-for-profit organization that generates and disseminates scientific information in sustainable agricultureand the environment. Having roles in marketing, production,and product development at CABI since 1991. She is responsible for CABI’s publishing program of secondary databases, books and journals. From 2003 to 2005 she wasthe Chair of the The Association of Learned and ProfessionalSociety Publishers (ALPSP).

Joel PoznanskyJoel Poznansky is President of Apex CoVantage PublishingSolutions. Prior to joining Apex CoVantage in 2001, he servedas President of Mobile Music LP, a music education companythat had been part of MacMillan. Previously, he was withMcKinsey & Company, focused on issues of strategy, organization, technology, and operations.

Jane ReaJane Rea is the Manager of Editorial Services at EEICommunications. This division of EEI’s Publications Servicesprovides editorial, proofreading, and indexing services to a variety of clients, including associations, government agencies,financial institutions, and universities. In addition to supervisingand training EEI’s editorial staff, Jane is also a project manager.

Margaret ReichMargaret Reich is Director of Publications and Executive Editorfor the 14 journals of the American Physiological Society. Sheis a Past-President of SSP, a member since 1993, has servedon the Board of Directors 1998-2001, the EducationCommittee 1997-2000, and the Program Committee 1996 and1998.

Rebecca RhinehartRebecca D. Rinehart is Director of Publications for theAmerican College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, whereshe oversees the publication of scientific, clinical, and consumer health books, journals, and periodicals. Previously,she worked in medical publishing as an acquisitions editor.

Alison RichardsAlison Richards is responsible for assigning and editingNational Public Radio’s (NPR) daily science coverage, whichincludes stories for Newscast, Morning Edition, Day to Day,and All Things Considered. Science Desk reporters do breaking news, sound rich narrative features, and investigative journalism across diverse topics. Alison, born in Britain, cameto the United States nine years ago, working briefly for theSmithsonian before coming to NPR. She worked for the BBCand is coauthor of four books.

Martin RichardsonMartin Richardson has spent most of his working life in academic publishing. He has held a variety of positions atOxford University Press including Director of the OxfordEnglish Dictionary. He is currently Managing Director of theJournals Division, where he is responsible for the publicationof almost 200 journals. In addition to publishing, Martin hasexperience of other aspects of the information supply chain,having edited chess books and also run a bookshop in theCotswolds.

Mark RobertsonMark Robertson’s career began at Academic Press in London30 years ago, before he moved to Thomas Nelson inMelbourne. In 1982 he set up the Blackwell Science Australianoffice and led the company’s expansion into Asia. Mark wasappointed President of Blackwell Publishing Asia shortly afterthe 2001 merger of Blackwell Science and BlackwellPublishers.

Nathan Robertson Nathan D.M. Robertson joined the Thurgood Marshall LawLibrary in 2005 as the Electronic Resources Librarian.Previously he was a Database Analyst/Programmer for theMilton S. Eisenhower Library at Johns Hopkins University. Heis a member of the Digital Library Federation’s (DLF)Electronic Resource Management Initiative (ERMI) SteeringGroup, and a co-author of the 2004 DLF ERMI report. Nathanis also active in the Library & Information TechnologyAssociation.

Bernard RousBernard Rous has worked at the Association for ComputingMachinery from 1980. His responsibilities have included development and management of database publishing systemfor reference publications; development of early CD-ROM andhypertext products; project management for SGML publishingproduction system; development and direction of electronicpublishing program; drafting copyright and permissions policyfor the networked environment; and establishing of DigitalLibrary, Online Bibliographic Database, and Computing Portalwith appropriate business models.

Mark SaundersMark Saunders is Assistant Director of the University ofVirginia Press, with responsibilities including marketing, sales,operations, and electronic publishing. As manager of thePress’s Electronic Imprint, which publishes under the name“Rotunda,” Mark is involved with development of XML databasecollections in 19th century literature and culture and in theAmerican Founding Era. Prior to coming to Virginia, Mark wasa sales representative and sales director at ColumbiaUniversity Press.

Melanie SchaffnerMelanie Schaffner joined Project MUSE® in the position ofMarketing and Sales Manager in November 1996. Her majorresponsibilities include developing a comprehensive marketingstrategy for the online scholarly journals collection, managingsales and outreach activities, negotiating consortia subscription arrangements, contributing to product development plans, addressing customer satisfaction issues,and representing MUSE at a variety of conferences and meetings. Project MUSE is managed by The Johns HopkinsUniversity Press, in collaboration with the participating publishers and the Sheridan Libraries at Johns Hopkins.

Speaker Biographies

Mark SeelyMark Seely is Senior Vice President & General Counsel,Elsevier, based in Boston, Massachusetts. Mark had beenElsevier since 1995 and is responsible for acquisitions (of businesses) and copyright policy and enforcement. In addition,Mark chairs the Copyright Committee of the InternationalAssociation of Scientific, Technical, and Medical Publishers.

Keith SeitterKeith Seitter, Executive Director of the AmericanMeteorological Society (AMS), received his B.S. degree inmeteorology from the Pennsylvania State University and hisPh.D. in geophysical sciences from the University of Chicago.He worked as a research scientist for the United State’s AirForce and was on the faculty at the University ofMassachusetts at Lowell. In 1991, Seitter joined the staff ofAMS to oversee its transition into electronic publishing and hasoverseen a number of programs and initiatives for the Society.

Bill SilbergBill Silberg is Senior Vice President for Communications andPublishing at he Commonwealth Fund, an independent, private foundation that studies and supports research onhealth care policy and social issues. Previously he was SeniorVice President and Executive Editor at Medscape fromWebMD. Bill also worked at the American Medical Association,the University of Chicago Hospitals, and spent seven years atUPI as a reporter, editor, and bureau chief.

Sue SilverSue Silver was appointed Editor of Biologist, published by theUK’s Institute of Biology, in 1992 She left the IOB to launchThe Lancet Oncology, the first of a series of specialty reviewjournals for The Lancet, before moving to the US to launchand edit Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment for theEcological Society of America.

F. Hill SlowinskiF. Hill Slowinski is Senior Director of the American Society ofClinical Oncology, Publications Department. He is active in theAssociation of American Publishers’ Professional/ScholarlyPublishing Division and the International Association ofScientific, Technical, and Medical Publishers’ Copyright andLegal Affairs Committee.

Adrian Stanley Adrian Stanley is Chief Operating Officer for The CharlesworthGroup (USA). Prior to this he worked for four year asProduction Director for Charlesworth China setting up theirBeijing office. Adrian is an active committee member for SSP,The Association of Learned and Professional SocietyPublishers (ALPSP) (North American Chapter) and the Councilof Science Editors; he has 20 years experience in the publishing/printing sector.

Ted SullivanTed Sullivan has over 20 years of experience in a diverse rangeof information technologies. His background includes biomed-ical research, mathematics instruction, developing military planning systems, and numerous eBusiness solutions. As co-founder and CTO, Ted is responsible for keeping RaritanTechnologies at the forefront of computer systems expertise.

Curt SupleeCurt Suplee is the Director of the Office of Legislative andPublic Affairs of the National Science Foundation. Director ofthe OLPA since October, 2000, Curt oversees the agency'scommunication activities with the public, including Congress,the news media, states and governors and various scientific,engineering and education organizations. Suplee was formerlyat the Washington Post, where he served as science writerand editor for national news.

Jayne SuttonCommunications of Alexandria, Virginia. She specializes inmanaging large, multidisciplinary publications projects, and isalso manager of the company’s staff of project managers. Shealso heads EEI’s consulting team, which helps other organiza-tions assess their effectiveness and find paths to improvement.

Roy TennantRoy Tennant is User Services Architect for the CaliforniaDigital Library. Owner of the Web4Lib and XML4Lib electronicdiscussions, he is also editor of Current Cites, a monthly current awareness newsletter. Roy’s books include Managingthe Digital Library and XML in Libraries and he writes a monthly column on digital libraries for Library Journal. In 2003,he received the American Library Association’s Library andInformation Technology Association (LITA)/Library Hi TechAward for Excellence in Communication for ContinuingEducation.

Dan TonkeryDan Tonkery has been working in the library industry for over35 years. He is currently VP and Director of BusinessDevelopment at EBSCO where he assists libraries as theytransition from print collections to e-formats and works withpublishers to streamline the e-journal workflow between theagent, the library, and the publisher. He served as bothPresident and Treasurer of North American Serials InterestGroup (NASIG) and has been Treasurer of the Council onLibrary and Information Resources Group.

M.J. TooeyM.J. Tooey is the Executive Director of the Health Sciencesand Human Services Library at the University of MarylandBaltimore. The immediate past president of the Medical LibraryAssociation, she received her Master’s degree from theUniversity of Pittsburgh and is a distinguished member of theAcademy of Health Information Professionals.

Paul Uhlir Paul F. Uhlir works on international scientific information policyand management programs at The National Academies inWashington, DC, focusing primarily on the law and economics ofdigitally networked information. He is currently developing theGlobal Information Commons for Science Initiative in collabora-tion with several international scientific umbrella organizations.

Greg UrquhartGreg Urquhart has been the Global Marketing Manager forNature for the past three years. Prior to that, he worked as theMarketing Manager for AAAS and the journal Science for twoyears. Before moving to the STM field, he spent five years at a‘dotcom’ marketing company, wearing every hat imaginable.

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Introducing Windows Live™Academic, a powerful new researchtool designed to help researchers, university faculty, librarians,and students quickly and effectively search across a spectrumof trusted academic journals and content.

Windows Live Academic was created with the help of theacademic research community, including publishers. With itsnext generation user interface and advanced sorting tools,Windows Live Academic helps you find information faster andhave more control and focus over your search experience.

If you’re looking for a research tool that helps you do whatyou care about most, your answer is Windows Live Academic.

To experience Windows Live Academic and find out howto add your academic content, visit us at Booth Number 6or online at http://academic.live.com.

m

doing research?

©2006 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved. Microsoft, Windows, and Live are either registered trademarks or trademarks of Microsoft in the United States and/or other countries.

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Raul Valdes-PerezRaul Valdes-Perez has led Vivísimo since co-founding it inJune 2000. Before Vivísimo, Raul was on the Carnegie Melloncomputer science department faculty and a principal investigator on six grants from the National ScienceFoundation, served on its advisory committee for Social,Behavioral, and Economic Sciences, and was an action editor of the journal Machine Learning.

Alix VanceAlix Vance is VP of Business Development in North Americafor Ebook Library. Alix has more than a decade of experiencein business development, marketing, and digital technologyservices for publishers and libraries. Alix currently serves aschair of the SSP Communications Committee and MarketingCouncil and is co-chair of the task force to re-design the SSPWebsite in 2006.

Mary WalthamMary Waltham founded her own consulting company in 1999to help scholarly publishers confront the rapid change that thenetworked economy poses to traditional business models andto develop opportunities to build publications that deliver outstanding scientific and economic value. Mary was mostrecently President and Publisher for Nature and the Naturefamily of journals in the US, and formerly Managing Directorand Publisher of The Lancet.

Alma WillsAlma Wills is a founding partner in the Kaufman-Wills Group,LLC, a consulting firm specializing in services to STM publish-

ers. She was Executive Vice President for Society Journals forLippincott Williams & Wilkins, President of the PeriodicalPublishing Division of Williams & Wilkins, and Director of FullText Licensing for Ovid Technologies. Alma is the US Editor ofLearned Publishing, the official Journal of the The Associationof Learned and Professional Society Publishers (ALPSP) andthe SSP, and a member of the Advisory Board of the JohnsHopkins University Press.

Shuai YanShuai Yan is Director of Journal Publishing Department: BeijingForestry University and President of the Society of ChinaUniversity Journals in Natural Sciences. The Society has nearly900 full organizational members. The University publishes twoEnglish language journals and four Chinese journals. Shuai hasstudied and worked in UK/Europe, and is on the Editorial boardfor Sustainable; Science Practice and Policy, a journal published by the National Biological Information Infrastructure(NBII) and Cambridge Scientific Abstracts (CSA).

Xiangmin ZhangXiangmin Zhang is an Assistant Professor with RutgersUniversity teaching information technology courses. Hisresearch interests include personalization techniques in information retrieval, user modeling, human-computer interaction, and digital libraries. He frequently presents at conferences and has published in academic journals such as IP&M, IR, JASIST, Library & Archival Security.

Thomas TechnologySolutions

I have included, in the collected file what what sent. We are trying to get a better ad.

Diamond Level Sponsorship:Microsoft Corporationhttp://academic.live.comWindows Live™ Academic is Microsoft's new search tool foracademic journals and conferences. Its advanced featuresmake it easy for academic researchers to find your content.Come visit us while at SSP to learn how Windows LiveAcademic can help you increase access and use of your publications.

Gold Level Sponsorship:Atypon Systems, Inc.www.atypon.comSince 1996, Atypon has focused on providing software andtechnology services to the information industry. Atypon has twoelectronic publishing propositions, Atypon Link and AtyponPremium, which together with other custom modules provide online content hosting solutions to over 60 international publishers.

Copyright Clearance Centerwww.copyright.comCopyright Clearance Center is the world's premier provider of copyright licensing and compliance solutions for the information content industry. We are a trusted intermediarybetween copyright holders and content users, facilitating theexchange of reuse rights and royalties through a wide range oflicensing services.

Coremetricswww.coremetrics.comCoremetrics provides on-demand web analytics and precisionmarketing solutions, offering the industry's only web analyticsplatform that captures and stores all customer and visitor click-stream activity to build LIVE (Lifetime Individual VisitorExperience) Profiles. Representing the single most accurate andcomprehensive source of online customer data, LIVE Profilesserve as the foundation for all successful eBusiness initiatives.

EBSCOwww.ebsco.comEBSCO provides integrated periodical acquisition, access, management and delivery solutions to libraries and informationprofessionals. Our services that meet the needs of our librarycustomers also give publishers unique opportunities to reach thisaudience by making content available in various formats.

Silver Level Sponsorship:American Medical Associationwww.ama-assn.orgFrom the vital research and landmark clinical studies that arefound in JAMA, to the in-depth specialty coverage of the nineArchives journals, the peer-reviewed JAMA & Archives journalsreport on new therapies, surgical innovations, improved diagnostic techniques, groundbreaking research and originalinvestigations that shape the future of clinical medicine.

Elsevierwww.elsevier.comElsevier helps to advance science and improve healthcare byproviding high quality information products and tools to the STMcommunity. Our comprehensive portfolio of products includestop-level journals, books and innovative electronic databasessuch as MD Consult, ScienceDirect, xPharm, Scirus andScopus. Elsevier: Building Insights. Breaking Boundaries.™

John Wiley & Sons, Inc.www.wiley.comFounded in 1807, John Wiley & Sons, Inc., is a global publisherof print and electronic products. Core businesses include scientific, technical, and medical journals, encyclopedias, books,and online services; professional and consumer books; and educational materials for students and lifelong learners.

Ovid Technologieswww.ovid.comOvid Technologies provides customizable electronic informationresearch solutions, unique combinations of innovative content,tools, and services, to medical schools, hospitals, and healthcareorganizations; academic institutions; and pharmaceutical, engineering, and biotechnology companies worldwide. Ovid ispart of Wolters Kluwer Health, a division of Wolters Kluwer, aleading global information services company.

PTC (Arbortext)www.ptc.comPTC solutions for dynamic publishing enable companies toautomate the assembly and publishing of information in multiple languages and formats. These solutions are made upof the Arbortext product family, which includes ArbortextAdvance Print Publisher formerly known as 3B2, the leading production software for book and journal publishing.

Thomson – Galewww.gale.comThomson Gale, a part of The Thomson Corporation, is a worldwide leader in e-reference and education publishing for libraries,schools and businesses. Best known for its accurate and authoritative reference content - more than 8,500 full-text titlesare available through our online databases - as well as its intelligent organization of full-text magazine and newspaper arti-cles, Thomson Gale also creates and maintains more than 600databases that are delivered in online, print and microform products.

Tote Bag Sponsorship:Cadmus Communicationswww.cadmus.comCadmus Communications and our products and services arebuilt around a single mission: To support scholarly publishers indelivering critical information as quickly, broadly and accuratelyas possible. Sound familiar? That's because our primary mission supports your publishing goals!

Travel Grant Sponsorship:Blackwell Publishing, Inc. (Two Travel Grants)www.blackwellpublishing.comBlackwell Publishing is the world's leading society publisher,partnering with 665 academic, medical, and professional societies. Blackwell publishes over 800 journals and has over6,000 books in print, across a wide range of academic, medical,and professional subjects. The company remains independentwith over 925 staff members in offices in the US, UK, Australia,China, Denmark, Germany, and Japan.

Inera, Inc.www.inera.comSince 1992, Inera has focused on supplying sophisticated editorial and production solutions to publishers. Inera's eXtylesproduct family provides integrated tools for Microsoft Word andcontent management systems that automate editorial, referencelinking, and XML production processes. eXtyles products areused in the production of over 500 prestigious journals world-wide.

SponsorsAnnual Meeting Sponsors

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The Rockefeller University Presswww.rupress.orgThe Rockefeller University entered journal publishing in 1905 and joined the book publishing business in1958, when Detlev Bronk, who headed the institution at that time,established The Rockefeller Institute Press. The focus of the book pro-gram, biomedical research, has reflected Rockefeller's primary focus.Book topics have ranged from genetics, cell biology, and neuroscience,to history of science, biographies of researchers, and policy issues.

SAGE Publicationswww.sagepub.comSAGE Publications is a leading international publisher of journals,books, and electronic media for academic, educational, and professional markets. Since 1965, SAGE has helped inform and educate a global community of scholars, practitioners, researchers, andstudents spanning a wide range of subject areas including business,humanities, social sciences, and science, technology and medicine.SAGE Publications, has principal offices in Thousand Oaks, California,London, United Kingdom, and New Delhi, India.

Thomson Scientificwww.thomson.comBy combining authoritative content with innovative technologies,Thomson Scientific offers a broad spectrum of information solutions for researchers, librarians and other professionals in the academic, government, corporate, biotechnology, pharmaceutical, and chemicalmarkets. These solutions provide our customers' with access to theinformation they need to make better decisions faster.

Bronze Level Sponsorship:CrossRefwww.crossref.orgCrossRef is a membership association, founded and directed by publishers. Our mandate is to connect users to primary research content. We operate an extensive citation linking system. Our networktoday covers millions of articles from scholarly publishers.

Additional Sponsors:American Institute of Physicswww.aip.orgAIP Publishing Services (www.pub4stm.com): AIP’s suite of publishingservices covers every aspect of journal production, with complete management oversight, from receipt of authors’ manuscripts throughprint and online distribution. AIP's Scitation online publishing platformcurrently hosts nearly 1,000,000 articles from more than 150 scholarlypublications for 21 learned society publishers.

Portico e-Archiving Servicewww.portico.orgPortico is a not-for-profit organization with a mission and singular focusto provide a permanent archive of electronic scholarly journals. Porticois open to all peer-reviewed journals and is a community-based cooperative approach to the digital preservation challenge.

Annual Meeting Sponsors

24

Exhibitor Special Prize

Drawings:Be sure to stop by these exhibit booths and drop off your business card to enter

drawings to win the following prizes:

AIPBooth: 5

iPod nano

Allen Press, Inc.Booth: 29

Portable DVD Player

The Charlesworth GroupBooth: 8

Dinner at the Ritz, London

International Mail ExpressBooth: 31

$100 American Express Gift Cheque

LaserwordsBooth: 15

iPod

Mark LogicBooth: 13

2GB iPod nano

Mira Digital PublishingBooth: 34

Glass bowl, hand-blown by Mira DigitalPublishing’s President, Jim McKelvey.

SPI Publisher ServicesBooth: 30

30 GB Video iPod with Accessories

25

Exhibitors

ACCUCOMS B.V.Booth: 9Gieterij 86/A2211 ZD NoordwijkerhoutThe Netherlands+31 (0) 650 507 [email protected] BV is an independent companythat specializes in sales and marketingand customer services for academic andprofessional publishers worldwide.Accucoms is based in The Netherlandsand USA, providing inbound and out-bound telemarketing services and salessupport.

American Institute of PhysicsBooth: 52 Huntington QuadrangleMelville, NY [email protected] Publishing Services(www.pub4stm.com): AIP’s suite of publishing services covers every aspectof journal production, with complete management oversight, from receipt ofauthors’ manuscripts through print andonline distribution. AIP's Scitation onlinepublishing platform currently hosts nearly1,000,000 articles from more than 150scholarly publications for 21 learned society publishers.

Allen Press, Inc.Booth: 29810 East 10th StreetPO Box 368Lawrence, KS [email protected] journals, magazines and books;online publishing; online peer review;association management services;cooperative publishing.

Aries Systems CorporationBooth: 22200 Sutton StreetNorth Andover, MA 01845978-975-7570www.editorialmanager.commarketing@edmgr.comSince 1986 Aries Systems has success-fully delivered technology that enhancesthe scientific publishing process: EditorialManager for online manuscript submission and peer review. PreprintManager for online production tracking.Knowledge Finder for on-line literaturesearching. And DocuRights digitalrights management for STM publishers.

Atypon Systems, Inc.Booth: 2123A The QuadrantBarton LaneAbingdon, OXONOX14 3YS UK+44 (0)123 555 [email protected] 1996, Atypon has focused on pro-viding software and technology services tothe information industry. Atypon has twoelectronic publishing propositions, AtyponLink and Atypon Premium, which togetherwith other custom modules provide on linecontent hosting solutions to over 60 inter-national publishers. For further information,please visit www.atypon.com.

BookMasters, Inc.Booth: 182541 Ashland RoadMansfield, OH 44905800-537-6727www.bookmasters.comdkeets@bookmasters.comBookMasters is the single source that provides publishers with the most comprehensive menu of integrated services available in the industry today.We can handle every step of the publish-ing process from initial documentation anddevelopment editing to page layout, coverdesign, manufacturing, warehousing, fulfillment, marketing, and distribution.

Cadmus CommunicationsBooths: 35 & 361801 Bayberry Court, Suite 200Richmond, VA [email protected] Communications and our prod-ucts and services are built around a singlemission: To support scholarly publishers indelivering critical information as quickly,broadly and accurately as possible. Soundfamiliar? That's because our primary mission supports your publishing goals!

The Charlesworth GroupBooth: 89 N 9th Street, Suite 602Philadelphia, PA 19107215-922-1611www.charlesworth.coma_Stanley@charlesworth.comCharlesworth is a global supplier toJournal Publishers. Specialist servicesoffered include:

• Editing• Typesetting – auto-proof, XML/

SGML& conventional• Data capture, legacy & document

conversion

• Printing• Marketing in China & Europe

We will be showing a real-time auto-prooftypesetting workflow demo: Word – XML -PDF.

Copyright Clearance CenterBooths: 23 & 24222 Rosewood DriveDanvers, MA 01923978-646-2691www.copyright.comccosgrove@copyright.comCopyright Clearance Center is the world'spremier provider of copyright licensing andcompliance solutions for the informationcontent industry. We are a trusted inter-mediary between copyright holders andcontent users, facilitating the exchange ofreuse rights and royalties through a widerange of licensing services.

Design Science, Inc.Booth: 20140 Pine Avenue, 4th FloorLong Beach, CA [email protected] MathML out of your XML solution is like leaving words out of yourcontent -- a bad idea! Our MathFlowproduct line provides math support forXML document production workflows, andis the XML math solution for Arbortext,XMetaL, XPP, and others.

EBSCO Information ServicesBooth: 175724 Hwy. 280 EastBirmingham, AL [email protected] provides integrated periodicalacquisition, access, management anddelivery solutions to libraries and informa-tion professionals. Our services that meetthe needs of our library customers alsogive publishers unique opportunities toreach this audience by making contentavailable in various formats.

Exhibitors

To find out how Atypon can help you grow readership and increase online revenues contact: [email protected] www.atypon.com

Atypon Link

Atypon Link provides a cost-effective,

simple-to-use content hosting and

delivery service which allows publishers

to launch and manage their content

online. Publishers benefit from a well-

managed outsourced e-publishing

service that requires minimal in-house

resources.

Atypon Premium

Atypon Premium provides a sophisticated

administration tool for publishers who

wish to have a more hands-on

management approach to their online

content. Publishers have direct control of

content production, linking and

depositing, access rights and business

models, and can devise innovative

strategies for marketing and delivering

content to end-users.

PDFplus

Atypon's PDFplus service provides a way

for publishers to make PDFs fully

interactive with dynamically generated

links. It creates PDFs with all the

functionality of HTML at a fraction of the

cost. PDFplus dynamically overlays links

and reduces download size, making PDFs

an inexpensive and highly functional

alternative for delivering full-text content.

PDFplus is also available for publishers

who are not hosted by Atypon.

Custom Solutions

Atypon's Literatum software was

designed to give publishers maximum

flexibility and control of their content,

business models, and users. The software

can be extended to fit the particular

requirements of publishers or others in

the scholarly community - whether

libraries building institutional

repositories or vendors re-engineering

their internal systems.

Clients

Atypon powers the websites of publishers

such as the American Marketing

Association, Annual Reviews, Blackwell

Publishing, Guilford Publications, S. Karger

AG, Thomas Telford, the University of

California Press and Walter de Gruyter as

well as forming the backbone of the

CrossRef link resolution system.

Atypon Innovations in electronic publishing

Atypon is the leading e-publishing

technology partner to the

information industry. We provide

software, hosting and related

services that help publishers and

other content producers develop

their online strategies, grow

readership and increase online

revenues. More than 1,800

journals and other titles, from over

65 publisher clients, are delivered

to the scholarly community using

Atypon technologies.

Atypon is the technical solution

partner of CrossRef, the linking

backbone of scholarly publishing,

which enables 400 publishers to do

cross publisher reference linking.

Between the publishers' content

that Atypon's technology manges

and the CrossRef system that

Atypon built, every researcher in

the world interacts with an Atypon

product or service almost daily.

Atypon offers two primary

services: Atypon Link and Atypon

Premium. In addition Atypon

delivers fully customized solutions

and reference linking solutions for

non-hosted publishers.

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Exhibitors

EBSCO, PP&F and MetaPressBooth: 75724 Hwy. 280 EastBirmingham, AL [email protected] 30+ years, PP&F has offered complete subscription management toSTM and B-to-B journal publishers:processing to renewals, customer relations to marketing, printing to distribution, and more. Sister divisionMetaPress offers controlled access content management web publishing.MetaPress specializes in hosting solutions for all content formats: books,journals, encyclopedias and referenceworks.

eJournal PressBooth: 44641 Montgomery Avenue, Suite #515Bethesda, MD 20814301-961-6033www.ejournalpress.comsales@ejournalpress.comeJournal Press helps journals streamlineall steps of the editorial process frommanuscript submission through acceptance, via easy-to-use web interface. 1500+ configuration settingsallow the eJournal Press Team to fine-tune the software to each customer’sneeds without costly custom programming. To learn more about our products and satisfied clients:www.ejournalpress.com

Inera, Inc.Booth: 28815 Washington Street, Suite 3Newton, MA [email protected] 1992, Inera has focused on supplying sophisticated editorial and production solutions to publishers. Inera'seXtyles product family provides integratedtools for Microsoft Word and content man-agement systems that automate editorial,reference linking, and XML productionprocesses. eXtyles products are used inthe production of over 500 prestigiousjournals worldwide.

Integrated Book Technology, Inc.Booth: 1218 Industrial Park RoadTroy, NY 12180518-271-5117www.integratedbook.combobl@integratedbook.comFor 15 years, IBT has written the book onDigital Book Manufacturing. From page

composition, through high qualityhalftones and casebinding, IBT allowsyou to control costs by controlling inventory. When in doubt...IBT it!

IngentaBooth: 323-38 Hythe Bridge StreetOxford, OX1 2ET, UK+44 (0)1865 [email protected] is the global market leader in themanagement and distribution of published scientific, professional and academic research via the Internet.Providing a suite of publisher servicesincluding data conversion, secure onlinehosting, access control and distributionservices right through to developmentand maintenance of specialist websitesand technology services.

International Mail ExpressBooth: 311400 Old Country Road, Suite 301BWestbury, NY [email protected] is a full-service provider of international mailing services and a worldwide distributor of publications, specializing in web-based mail trackingand reporting tools, consultative solutionsand cost control.

LaserwordsBooth: 15181 2nd Avenue, #222San Muteo, CA [email protected] is an integrated serviceprovider specializing in cost-effective publishing and electronic content solutions by harnessing technology andglobal resources. We accept or capturedata from keystrokes, manuscripts, anddatabases and transform it for delivery as pages for print or for the web. We manage content-related projects for clientsin the printing, publishing, manufacturing,and financial services industries.

Macmillan ServicesBooth: 25The Macmillan Building4 Crinan StreetLondon, N1 9 XW, England+44 (0)207 843 4882www.macmillanservices.comr.gnanasambanthan@macmillan.comMacmillan Services (MIPS, MPSTechnologies and eMacmillan) provide a

range of outsourcing solutions for publishers: content production and printingfor books and journals, SGML/XML work-flows, data conversion, fulfilment services,usage statistics, and online digital bookrepository. Our solutions are designed toimprove efficiency, reduce publishing cost,and enhance distribution capabilities.

Mark LogicBooth: 132000 Alameda De Las Plugas, Suite 100San Mateo, CA [email protected] Logic Corporation provides theindustry’s leading XML content server.Mark Logic works with providers of information products to accelerate newproduct creation, build custom publishing systems, deliver products through multiple channels, integrate content fromdifferent sources, repurpose content intomultiple products, and mine content tofind previously undiscovered information.

Microsoft CorporationBooth: 6One Microsoft WayRedmond, WA 98052425-707-2539http://[email protected] Live™ Academic is Microsoft'snew search tool for academic journalsand conferences. Its advanced featuresmake it easy for academic researchers tofind your content. Come visit us while atSSP to learn how Windows LiveAcademic can help you increase accessand use of your publications.

Mira Digital PublishingBooth: 343800 Park AvenueSt. Louis, MO [email protected] Digital Publishing offers end-to-endsolutions for scholarly conference management and publications, includingonline abstract management, peer review,program scheduling, itinerary planning,and registration with our web-basedmiraSMART(tm) suite. We also offer customized book prepress and printing,CD-/DVD-ROM production, documentconversion, and historical content archiving, hosting, and vending.

Exhibitors

Exhibit HallMap

Salons A-E

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Hotel AddressMarriott Crystal Gateway1700 Jefferson Davis HighwayArlington, VA 22202703-920-3230

SSP Contact InformationAll inquires concerning theAnnual Meeting or membershipshould be directed to:

Society for Scholarly Publishing10200 West 44th Avenue, Suite 304Wheat Ridge, CO 80033Phone: 303-422-3914Fax: 303-422-8894Email: [email protected] site: www.sspnet.org

General InformationExhibitor Demonstrations:Company Date Time

SPI Publisher Services 6/8/2006 10:30 am

Techbooks 6/8/2006 3:40 pm

Inera, Inc. 6/8/2006 5:00 pm

MacMillan Services 6/8/2006 5:15 pm

Mira Digital Publishing 6/8/2006 5:45 pm

Aries Systems Corp. 6/8/2006 6:15 pm

Coremetrics 6/9/2006 10:30 am

29

Exhibitors

Monument InformationResourceBooth: 16630 Central AvenueNew Providence, NJ 07974908-219-0076www.scholaruniverse.comdenise.dimaria@bowker.comScholar Universe places information aboutmore than 1,000,000 professors fromaround the world at your fingertips, fromabstracts to research interests and more.Use Scholar Universe to give your editors,marketers and sales representatives theability to efficiently locate, qualify and identify expert reviewers, potential authors,and qualified buyers with confidence.

Odyssey Press, Inc.Booth: 222 Nadeau DrivePO Box 7307Gonic, NH 03839717-225-9477www.odysseypress.comkevin@odysseypress.comOdyssey Press Inc. is the OriginalUltrashort Run Printer specializing in theproduction of books, journals, and articlereprints in quantities of 10 to 1,000 copies.We offer both offset and digital print pro-duction along with a full suite of binderyand distribution services. We also provideglobal distribute-and-print production atover 150 locations around the world.

PTC (Arbortext)Booth: 101000 Victors WayAnn Arbor, MI [email protected] solutions for dynamic publishingenable companies to automate theassembly and publishing of information inmultiple languages and formats. Thesesolutions are made up of the Arbortextproduct family, which includes ArbortextAdvance Print Publisher formerly knownas 3B2, the leading production softwarefor book and journal publishing.

ScholarOne, Inc.Booth: 1375 Greenbrier DriveCharlottesville, VA 22907434-817-2040www.scholarone.commary.grove@scholarone.comScholarOne is the world's leadingprovider of online peer review and otherWeb-based content acquisition and work-flow management systems for scholarlyjournals, reference works, conferenceabstracts and proceedings, and grants, all

backed by an organization that is focusedon supporting you ever step of the way.Learn why the world's leading journals,societies, publishers, government agen-cies, and nonprofit organizations chooseScholarOne.

The Sheridan GroupBooth: 33450 Fame AvenueHanover, PA [email protected] Sheridan Group Journal Companies,consisting of The Sheridan Press,Dartmouth Journal Services, SheridanDigital Print, and Sheridan Reprints, provide full service production of scientific, technical, medical, and scholarly journals reprints. These services include editorial service,SGML/XML-based composition, contentpreparation, digital prepress, offset anddigital printing, distribution and fulfillment.

SPI Publisher ServicesBooth: 30880 Technology Park Drive, Suite 100Glen Allen, VA 23059804-262-4219www.spipublisherservices.comj.elliott@spitech.comSPI is the leading onshore/offshoreprovider of editorial, content productionand business process outsourcing servic-es for SSTM book and journal publishers.One of the premier BPO providers in theworld, SPI offers a comprehensive suiteof journal, book, and content and infor-mation solutions. For more information,visit us at www.spipublisherservices.com.

TechbooksBooths: 26 & 273110 Fairview Park DriveFalls Church, VA [email protected] more than 20 years Techbooks hasprovided content transformationservices to the scholarly market. Ourservices include: composition,conversion, content acquisition tools,workflow solutions, web sitedevelopment and e-learning programs.Find out more about Techbooks andunleash the value of your content.

Thomas Technology SolutionsBooth: 32One Progress DriveHorsham, PA 19044215-682-4258www.thomastechsolutions.commarketing@thomastechsolutions.comThomasTech, a systems integrator andpublishing services company, has beenproviding solutions to publishers for morethan 43 years. ThomasTech offers exten-sive pre-press services that include pagecomposition, typesetting, production,graphic design, and scanning. Our contentmanagement and XML solutions combineindustry-leading third-party software, custom-developed components, andvalue-added implementation services.

Turpin Inc.Booth: 19143 West Street, The BleacheryNew Milford, CT 06778+44 (0)176 760 4806www.turpin-distribution.comkathy.law@ turpin-distribution.comTurpin Distribution offers global servicesfrom our UK and US offices for book andjournal publishers. We can also offersales and marketing for books in the UK,EU and Middle East. Sales, Marketing,Stock and Financial management information available 24x7. Billing andcollection available in £GB, $USD andEuro.

XyEnterpriseBooth: 14101 Edgewater DriveWakefield, MA 01880-1296781-756-4400www.xyenterprise.cominfo@xyenterprise.comXyEnterprise helps simplify and expeditethe automated creation and delivery ofcontent across the enterprise. We offerconfigurable and scalable XML contentmanagement and publishing solutionsthat maximize content reusability andrepurposing. Our unmatched XML expertise, the result of hundreds of successful deployments, is built upon a20-year heritage of partnership with companies in publishing, financial services, government, manufacturing,high tech, and aerospace/defense.

Exhibitors