Statements A, B, C and E accurately represent key aspects of open access and repositories. Open access removes paywall barriers for readers, some models shift costs to authors or institutions, repositories can host versions of articles and openness can broaden readership and potential citations. Statement D is false because many open access journals are peer reviewed just like subscription journals. Thus, the combination including A, B, C and E while excluding D is correct.
Option A:
Option A is incomplete because it omits E, overlooking the impact of open access on reach and citation, which is often a major justification for choosing this route. Without E, benefits appear limited to access alone.
Option B:
Option B is wrong as it leaves out A and includes only B, C and E. While those are true, excluding A fails to state the central feature that articles are freely accessible to readers.
Option C:
Option C is correct because it gathers the full set of accurate statements about open access models, repositories and potential impact, while rejecting the idea in D that open access means no peer review.
Option D:
Option D is incorrect since it incorporates D and omits B, implying that open access is inherently non-peer-reviewed and ignoring article processing charges as a common funding mechanism.
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