Before submitting their work to a more traditional peer-reviewed journal, researchers can upload draught copies of their work to the majority of preprint sites.
India’s scientific infrastructure most recently gained the preprint service IndiaRxiv. The repository for IndiaRxiv, which is run by Open Access India, is the Society for the Promotion of Horticulture in Bengaluru.
The scholastic output of Indian scientists in their early careers is centralised in this resource. Preprint servers allow for the immediate sharing of research results and the rapid gathering of feedback that may be used to alter and enhance an article. The India Archive preprint repository is managed by the Open Access India organisation.
You can find unpublished research articles on preprint servers, online archives, or repositories. Their main goal is to expedite the rate at which research findings are broadly disseminated. Researchers can upload a complete draught of their research publications to preprint servers and obtain quick feedback from their colleagues, saving time and irritation associated with the peer review process and the publishing delay that results from it.
Here are the preprint servers that are most frequently used in artificial intelligence research.
TechRxiv
TechRxiv is a preprint repository for unpublished work in engineering, computer science, and related fields that is open to the public, peer-reviewed, and moderated. TechRxiv allows authors to share their work with a large audience right away and get community feedback on a time-stamped draught version of their research. TechRxiv accepts unpublished work in the domains of electrical engineering, computer science, and technology. The 16 topics that best define TechRxiv’s areas of interest must be the subject of good articles on the website.
Preprints.org
It is important to make early versions of research outputs permanently citable and accessible via Preprints.org. They disseminate original research papers, thorough reviews, and articles that authors are free to edit at any time. Additionally, Preprints.org publishes non-peer-reviewed works that welcome reader feedback. Preprints are all published under the Creative Commons CC BY 4.0 licence, which ensures that authors retain ownership of their work, are credited for it, and permit anybody to read and reuse it. Use this platform for transdisciplinary research. For each preprint, authors can register a unique Crossref digital object identifier. This not only gives a permanent connection to the article, but it also makes the platform immediately citable even if its URL changes. Newly revised preprints are given a special DOI.
arXiv
ArXiv, which functions as a free distribution service and an open-access archive for academic articles, accepts electronic preprints and post-prints. Pre-publication self-archiving using the arXiv repository is a frequent practise in many other scientific disciplines, including physics and mathematics. Additionally, some publishers permit authors to archive the revisions made to their work following reviews. Preprints were first embraced and used by arXiv.org. The open-access trend in scholarly publishing was sparked by the initiative’s success in sharing preprints.
Preprint OSF
The Open Science Framework (OSF) is a free, open-source software project that encourages collaboration and openness in scientific research. The OSF project architecture allows researchers who submit preprints through OSF Preprints to contribute more resources to their submissions, such as data, materials, code, or other information. Start distributing your research to the public by uploading a file to OSF Preprints. Share your works, solicit feedback, and tag them so that people can find, read, and engage with them right away. The data can be kept in OSF storage and related services like GitHub, Dropbox, Amazon S3, Box, Google Drive, ownCloud, etc.
Zenodo
As a component of Europe’s OpenAIRE initiative, Zenodo is an all-purpose, open-access repository created and managed by CERN. On Zenodo, materials such as reports, software, data sets, and academic articles are saved. Each submission is given a digital object identification (DOI) that enables the archive’s contents to be cited. The Zenodo search engine can be used to locate datasets, documents, and other study materials. Any standard format may be used by researchers from any field to submit files. Section 6(c) of the EUI Library Research Data Guide describes the metadata for research datasets. The Zenodo digital library serves as the foundation for the open-source Invenio digital library. Everyone is free to browse GitHub to learn more about the project’s present standing, open issues, and future objectives.
Cogprints
CogPrints is a collection of publications that have been self-archived in a variety of disciplines, such as computer science, artificial intelligence, robotics, vision, learning, voice, and neural networks. The School of Electronics and Computer Science at the University of Southampton created the electronic publishing platform known as Cogprints using the EPrints3 system. CogPrints welcomes e-print submissions from scientists. Benefits for contributors include high visibility, instantaneous access from anywhere in the world, text capture, feedback, comments, the opportunity to quote from other people’s work, and no costs associated with distributing preprints or reprints.