![]() | This article reads like
a press release or
a news article and may be largely based on
routine coverage. (April 2019) |
DeepDyve is a commercial website that sells [1] access to scientific and scholarly articles. A user can buy PDFs of individual papers or get a subscription that offers unlimited reading access [2] to papers from publishers in their network, which includes publishers like Wiley, Springer Nature, JAMA, and Wolters Kluwer.
According to DeepDyve's website [3] and other related materials, [4] there are about 150 publishers in the DeepDyve network; notably, this doesn't include Elsevier/Science Direct, [5] which ended its partnership with DeepDyve in April 2020. Some of the notable publishers are:
According to the same sources there are over 25 million articles from more than 15,000 peer-reviewed journals available.
The current viewing interface (January 2023) for article reading is implemented by rendering the article pages as images on the screen.[ original research] In addition to viewing the full-text article through a browser, subscribers are prevented from printing more than 20 article pages per month.
![]() | This article reads like
a press release or
a news article and may be largely based on
routine coverage. (April 2019) |
DeepDyve is a commercial website that sells [1] access to scientific and scholarly articles. A user can buy PDFs of individual papers or get a subscription that offers unlimited reading access [2] to papers from publishers in their network, which includes publishers like Wiley, Springer Nature, JAMA, and Wolters Kluwer.
According to DeepDyve's website [3] and other related materials, [4] there are about 150 publishers in the DeepDyve network; notably, this doesn't include Elsevier/Science Direct, [5] which ended its partnership with DeepDyve in April 2020. Some of the notable publishers are:
According to the same sources there are over 25 million articles from more than 15,000 peer-reviewed journals available.
The current viewing interface (January 2023) for article reading is implemented by rendering the article pages as images on the screen.[ original research] In addition to viewing the full-text article through a browser, subscribers are prevented from printing more than 20 article pages per month.