Most preprint servers permit researchers to upload draft versions of a work before submitting it to a more conventional peer-reviewed journal.

The preprint server IndiaRxiv is the most recent addition to India's scientific infrastructure. The Society for the Promotion of Horticulture in Bengaluru serves as the repository for IndiaRxiv, administered by Open Access India. 

Early-career Indian scientists' scholarly output is centrally housed in this repository. Preprint servers make it possible to instantly share research findings and quickly gather feedback that we may utilise to edit and improve an article. The Open Access India group is in charge of running the India Archive preprint repository.

Research articles that still need to be published can be found in preprint servers, online archives or repositories. Their primary objective is to hasten the rate at which research results become widely known. Preprint servers are helpful for researchers because they allow them to submit a complete draft of their research articles and receive rapid comments from their peers, eliminating the time and frustration associated with the peer review process and the resulting delay in publication. 

Here are the most often used preprint servers in artificial intelligence research.

TechRxiv

TechRxiv is an accessible, peer-reviewed, and moderated preprint site for unpublished research in engineering, computer science, and related technologies. Authors can immediately share their work with a large audience and get input from the community on a timestamped draft version of their research using TechRxiv. In the fields of electrical engineering, computer science, and technology, TechRxiv welcomes previously unpublished work. Good articles for TechRxiv must be on one of the 16 subjects that describe TechRxiv's areas of interest. 

Preprints.org

Early drafts of research outputs should be made permanently citable and available through Preprints.org. They publish original research papers, in-depth reviews, and pieces that authors can update whenever they want. In addition, Preprints.org publishes articles that are not peer-reviewed and are open to reader comments. Preprints are all published under the Creative Commons CC BY 4.0 license, guaranteeing that writers keep their rights to their work and are given credit for it while allowing anybody to read and reuse it. For transdisciplinary research, use this platform. Authors can register a particular Crossref digital object identifier for each preprint. In addition to providing a permanent link to the article, this makes them immediately citable even if the platform's URL changes. Preprints with new revisions obtain a unique DOI.

arXiv

Electronic preprints and post-prints can be submitted to arXiv, which serves as a free distribution service and an open-access archive for scholarly articles. Pre-publication self-archiving via the arXiv repository is common to practise in mathematics and physics, as well as many other scientific disciplines. In addition, some publishers let authors save the post-review version of their work in an archive. arXiv.org was an early supporter and user of preprints. The success of this initiative in disseminating preprints helped spark the open-access movement in scholarly publication.

OSF Preprints

OSF, or the Open Science Framework, is a free, open-source software initiative promoting scientific inquiry transparency and cooperation. When a researcher submits a preprint through OSF Preprints, they have the option of attaching additional resources such as data, materials, code, or other information to their submission through the OSF project infrastructure. Upload a file to OSF Preprints to start sharing your findings with the world. Share your creations, ask for opinions, and organise them into tags so people can quickly locate, read, and interact with them. OSF storage and associated services like GitHub, Dropbox, Amazon S3, Box, Google Drive, ownCloud, etc., can be used to house the data.

Zenodo

Zenodo is an all-purpose, open-access repository developed as part of Europe's OpenAIRE effort and run by CERN. Academic documents, data sets, software, reports, and other materials are stored on Zenodo. The digital object identifiers (DOIs) assigned to each submission enable citation of the archive's contents. We can find datasets, documents, and other research materials using the Zenodo search engine. Researchers from any field may submit files in any standard format. The EUI Library Research Data Guide's Section 6(c) describes metadata for research datasets. The open-source Invenio digital library is built upon the Zenodo digital library. Everyone is welcome to explore the project's current status, open issues, and future goals in GitHub.

Cogprints

CogPrints is a repository for self-archived articles in several fields, including but not limited to computer science, AI, robotics, vision, learning, voice, and neural networks. Cogprints is an electronic publishing platform developed by the University of Southampton's School of Electronics and Computer Science using the EPrints3 platform. Scientists are encouraged to submit their e-prints to CogPrints. High visibility; permanent, instant, and global access; text-capturability; feedback; comments; quoting in others' work; and no expense to circulate preprints or reprints are only some benefits for contributors.  

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