SciPost is a non-profit foundation dedicated to developing, implementing and maintaining innovative forms of electronic scientific communication and publishing. It is notable for operating the scipost.orgopen-access scientific publishing portal.
The SciPost Foundation
The foundation is headquartered in Amsterdam and registered under Dutch Chamber of Commerce.[1] It was established in 2016.[2] Its chairman is Jean-Sébastien Caux, with Joost van Mameren acting as secretary, and Jasper van Wezel as treasurer.
Open Access publishing activities
SciPost published the 2000th article in 2023, an article in SciPost Physics. The authors included Giorgio Parisi, a Nobel Prize winner.[3]
Authors are encouraged to make use of preprint servers (for physics, the arXiv e-print archive) but can also submit directly. The recommendation of using preprints leads to SciPost often being thought of as an overlay journals system.[9][10] This is incorrect since the platform self-hosts all its publishing workflows and results.
Refereeing at SciPost uses an open procedure known as peer-witnessed refereeing. Submitted manuscripts must be picked up for editorial processing by one of the Fellows of an Editorial College. Besides invited referees, registered contributors can also volunteer reports. The contents of the reports are made publicly visible (the referee can choose to remain anonymous or not). Publication decisions are taken by the Editorial College by majority voting.
Publications carry a Creative Commons license. Metadata is deposited at Crossref and at the DOAJ[11] (all journals carry to DOAJ Seal[11]). As a participant in the Initiative for Open Citations (I4OC), SciPost makes all its citation data open.
Business model
SciPost is funded through a consortial business model whereby universities and research funding agencies worldwide contribute to pooled resources used to run operations. No article processing charges are levied. Sponsors and further benefitting organizations are publicly listed with tallies of linked publications. This data is used to suggest sponsorship levels for sustainability.
In the context of Plan S, Robert-Jan Smits singled out SciPost and suggested classifying it as a "Rhodium" publisher.[32] In a Nature editorial on the evolution of journals into "information platforms", SciPost was qualified as "most impressive".[33]