Proceedings ELPUB 2008 Conference on Electronic Publishing - Toronto, Canada - June 2008 187 Characteristics Shared by the Scientific Electronic Journals of Latin America and the Caribbean Saray Córdoba-González 1 ; Rolando Coto-Solano 2 1 Vicerrectoría de Investigación, Universidad de Costa Rica Ciudad Universitaria Rodrigo Facio, San José, Costa Rica e-mail: saraycg@gmail.com; 2 Vicerrectoría de Investigación ,Universidad de Costa Rica Ciudad Universitaria Rodrigo Facio, San José, Costa Rica e-mail: rolandocoto@gmail.com Abstract Our objective is to analyze the use that Latin American peer-reviewed journals make of the tools and opportunities provided by electronic publishing, particularly of those that would make them evolve to be more than “mere photocopies” of their printed counterparts. While doing these, we also set out to discover if there were any Latin American journals that use these technologies in an effective way, comparable to the most innovative journals in existence. We extracted a sample of 125 journals from the LATINDEX – Regional System of Scientific Journals of Latin America, the Caribbean, Spain and Portugal – electronic resources index, and compared along five dimensions: (1) Non-linearity, (2) use of multimedia, (3) linking to external resources (“multiple use”), (4) interactivity, and (5) use of metadata, search engines, and other added resources. We have found that very few articles in these journals (14%) used non-linear links to navigate between different sections of the article. Almost no journals (3%) featured multimedia contents. About one in every four articles (26%) published in the journals analyzed had their references or bibliographic items enriched by links that connected to the original documents quoted by the author. The most common form of interaction was user!journal, in the form of question forms (17% of journals) and new issue warnings (17% of journals). Some, however (5%) had user!user interaction, offering forums and response to published articles by the readership. About 35% of the journals have metadata within their pages, and 50% offer search engines to their users. One of the most pressing problems for these journals it the wrong use of rather simple technologies such as linking: 49% of the external resource links were mismarked in some way, with a full 24% being mismarked by spelling or layout mistakes. Latin American journals still present a number of serious limitations when using electronic resources and techniques, with text being overwhelmingly linear and underlinked, e-mail to the editors being the main means of contact, and multimedia as a scarce commodity. We selected a small sample of journals from other regions of the world, and found that they offer significantly more non-linearity (p = 0.005 < 0.1), interactive features (p = 0.005 < 0.1), use of multimedia (p = 0.04 < 0.1) and linking to external documents (p = 0.007 < 0.1). While these are the current characteristics of Latin American journals, a number of very notable exceptions speak volumes of the potential of these technologies to improve the quality of Latin American scholarly publishing. Keywords: Electronic journals; scholarly journals; Latin America; serials quality criteria; LATINDEX 1. Introduction Electronic journals in Latin America have been under-analyzed in terms of their architecture, particularly in how well they exploit the tools made available by Internet technologies, which provide new ways to produce interaction with the readers, non-linearity in the text, and multimedia content to illustrate and complement the articles. If online journals take advantage of these novel tools, they can become more