COMMUNICATION among scientists heavily depended on personal contact and scholarly meetings until the late seventeenth century, when proceeding was born as a record of meetings[1].Thefirstpeer-reviewedjournalswerepublishedin 1665[1],[2].Sincethen,journalshavebeenthemostimportant platforms for scientists to publish their work. The idea of an electronic journal was raised in 1976, and the real emergent time was during the first half of 1990s [3], [4]. Willis called the electronic communication as “the fourth revolution in the means of production of knowledge” after spoken language, written language, and the printing press [5]. Over the past decade, the format of journals was rapidly changing from printing press to digital documents [6]. Today, almost every paper published inthe worldisavailable through digital libraries. The