UNIVERSITY OF SOUTHAMPTON AND NATURAL ENVIRONMENT RESEARCH COUNCIL Southampton Oceanography Centre How to make your research more visible: Open Access

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UNIVERSITY OF SOUTHAMPTON AND NATURAL ENVIRONMENT RESEARCH COUNCIL Southampton Oceanography Centre How to make your research more visible: Open Access and Repositories Pauline Simpson Southampton Oceanography Centre, UK Postgraduate Research in Marine and Earth Sciences 22 Mar 2005 Slide 2 PRMES 22 Mar 2005 Routemap to research visibility Guide us through : Guide us through : Scholarly Communication Open Access Open Archives Initiative Repositories institutional, subject, national What IRs can do for you Slide 3 PRMES 22 Mar 2005 Postgraduate Progress Outcomes of research Outcomes of research Publications Appointment, promotion, tenure Appointment, promotion, tenure PUBLISH, PUBLISH, PUBLISH Peer Reviewed publications Peer Reviewed publications Slide 4 PRMES 22 Mar 2005 Scholarly Communication crisis! journals are the primary research publication channel journals are the primary research publication channel journal publishing is dominated by commercial ventures journal publishing is dominated by commercial ventures A vicious circle : Researchers write papers for journals (free or page charges!) Researchers write papers for journals (free or page charges!) Researchers transfer copyright to publishers (free) Researchers transfer copyright to publishers (free) Researchers on Editorial Board (free) Researchers on Editorial Board (free) Researchers review papers (free) Researchers review papers (free)BUT Libraries pay huge subscriptions to publishers to access the paper and universities pay more than once: subscription, photocopying license and for study packs Libraries pay huge subscriptions to publishers to access the paper and universities pay more than once: subscription, photocopying license and for study packs Or worse they cannot afford the subscription Or worse they cannot afford the subscription Slide 5 PRMES 22 Mar 2005 PROJECTED PERIODICAL PRICE INCREASES TO 2020 (Blixrud 2002) 1774 % 1986-2000 Journal price inflation+291% Retail price index + 70% 1986-2000 Journal price inflation+291% Retail price index + 70% Slide 6 PRMES 22 Mar 2005 The Situation Today Dissatisfaction at All Levels Authors Authors Their work is not seen by all their peers they do not get the recognition they desire Despite the fact they often have to pay page charges, colour figure charges, reprint charges, etc. Often the rights they have given up in exchange for publication mean there are things that they cannot do with their own work Slide 7 PRMES 22 Mar 2005 The Situation Today Dissatisfaction at All Levels Authors Authors Their work is not seen by all their peers they do not get the recognition they desire Despite the fact they often have to pay page charges, colour figure charges, reprint charges, etc. Often the rights they have given up in exchange for publication mean there are things that they cannot do with their own work Readers Readers They cannot view all the research literature they need they are less effective Slide 8 PRMES 22 Mar 2005 The Situation Today Dissatisfaction at All Levels Authors Authors Their work is not seen by all their peers they do not get the recognition they desire Despite the fact they often have to pay page charges, colour figure charges, reprint charges, etc. Often the rights they have given up in exchange for publication mean there are things that they cannot do with their own work Readers Readers They cannot view all the research literature they need they are less effective Libraries Cannot satisfy the information needs of their users Slide 9 PRMES 22 Mar 2005 The Situation Today Dissatisfaction at All Levels Authors Authors Their work is not seen by all their peers they do not get the recognition they desire Despite the fact they often have to pay page charges, colour figure charges, reprint charges, etc. Often the rights they have given up in exchange for publication mean there are things that they cannot do with their own work Readers Readers They cannot view all the research literature they need they are less effective Libraries Cannot satisfy the information needs of their users Society Society We all lose out if the communication channels are not optimal. Slide 10 PRMES 22 Mar 2005 Solution - Alter the research landscape 2 complementary routes to Open Access to Research freely accessible, more visible, freely accessible, more visible, immediately available, free at the point of use immediately available, free at the point of use Open access publishing Open access publishing model author pays = OA no payment = subscription Open access repositories (open archives) Open access repositories (open archives) Author deposit of full text of articles, conference papers, reports, theses, learning objects, multimedia etc. - Scoped by need Journal articles = post refereed pre-published version deposited in IRs or subject based repositories Slide 11 PRMES 22 Mar 2005 Open Access What is it? free, unrestricted access on the public internet to the literature that scholars give to the world without expectation of payment. Why? Widens dissemination, accelerate research, enrichs education, shares learning among rich & poor nations, enhances the return on taxpayer investment in research. How? Use existing funds to pay for dissemination, not access. Slide 12 PRMES 22 Mar 2005 Open Access Appealing to All the Major Stakeholders To the funders of researcher both as a public service and as an increase return on their investment in research To the authors as it gives wider dissemination and impact To readers as it gives them access to all primary literature, making the most important research tool more powerful To editors and reviewers as they feel their work is more valued To the libraries as it allows them to meet the information needs of their users To the institutions as it increases their presence and prestige To small and society publishers as it gives them a survival strategy and fits with their central remit Slide 13 PRMES 22 Mar 2005 Open Access increasing high level support UK Government - UK Science and Technology Committee Inquiry: Scientific Publications: Free for all? 2004 Require that authors deposit a copy of their articles in their institutions repository within one month of publication. Should provide as part of research grants monies to allow payment of charges for publication in Open Access journals http://www.publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm/cmsctech.htm USA - National Institutes of Health deposit into PubMed (60,000 papers p/a) OECD - Declaration on Access to Research Data from Public Funding Funding Agencies - Howard Hughes in US. Andrew Mellon in US Wellcome Trust in UK, Research Councils UK Slide 14 PRMES 22 Mar 2005 Open access Declarations on Open Access Berlin Declaration in Support of Open Access 2003 Germany: Fraunhofer Society, Wissenschaftsrat, HRK, Max Planck Society, Leibniz Association, Helmholtz Association, German Research Foundation, Deutscher Bibliotheksverband France: CNRS, INSERM Austria: FWF Der Wissenschaftsfonds Belgium: Fonds voor Wetenschappelijk Onderzoek Vlaanderen) Greece: National Hellenic Research Foundation (Buenos Aires ; British Columbia; Scotland etc etc) (Buenos Aires ; British Columbia; Scotland etc etc) Budapest Open Access Initiative 2002 (Soros Open Society) Budapest Open Access Initiative 2002 (Soros Open Society) Slide 15 PRMES 22 Mar 2005 Budapest Open Access Initiative 2002 Budapest Open Access Initiative 2002 Two complementary strategies: Self-Archiving: Scholars should be able to deposit their refereed journal articles in open electronic archives which conform to Open Archives Initiative standards Open-Access Journals: Journals will not charge subscriptions or fees for online access. Instead, they should look to other sources to fund peer-review and publication (e.g., publication charges author or institution pays) Open Society Institute (George Soros) offered funding to achieve this Slide 16 PRMES 22 Mar 2005 Open Access Publishing making the transition A number of traditional publishers are transforming their closed access journals into open access journals: Proceedings of the National Academy of Science Oxford University Press Company of Biologists American Physiological Society Entomological Society of America Journal of Experimental Botany American Society of Limnology and Oceanography Slide 17 PRMES 22 Mar 2005 The power of open access - journals Limnology and Oceanography, published by the American Society of Limnology and Oceanography Uses hybrid model to offer authors the chance to purchase open access of if not then papers are only available to subscribers Open Access papers published in 2003 have been downloaded 2.8 times more often than non-open access papers For papers published in 2002, the difference increases to 3.4 times greater downloads for open access papers http://aslo.org/lo/information/freeaccess.html Slide 18 PRMES 22 Mar 2005 Slide 19 European Geophysical Union open access convert Geophysical Research Abstracts (open access) Geophysical Research Abstracts (open access) Geophysical Research Abstracts Geophysical Research Abstracts Advances in Geosciences (open-access) Advances in Geosciences (open-access) Advances in Geosciences Advances in Geosciences Annales Geophysicae (open-access after 1 year) Annales Geophysicae (open-access after 1 year) Annales Geophysicae Annales Geophysicae Atmospheric Chemistry & Physics (open-access) Atmospheric Chemistry & Physics (open-access) Atmospheric Chemistry & Physics Atmospheric Chemistry & Physics Biogeosciences (open-access) Biogeosciences (open-access) Biogeosciences Hydrology and Earth System Sciences (open-access) Hydrology and Earth System Sciences (open-access) Hydrology and Earth System Sciences Hydrology and Earth System Sciences Natural Hazards and Earth System Sciences (open-access) Natural Hazards and Earth System Sciences (open-access) Natural Hazards and Earth System Sciences Natural Hazards and Earth System Sciences Nonlinear Processes in Geophysics (open-access) Nonlinear Processes in Geophysics (open-access) Nonlinear Processes in Geophysics Nonlinear Processes in Geophysics NEW - Ocean Science (open-access) NEW - Ocean Science (open-access) Ocean ScienceOcean Science (open-access = free-of-charge, online access of any article immediately after its publication on www ) (open-access = free-of-charge, online access of any article immediately after its publication on www ) ($20 per page) ($20 per page) Slide 20 PRMES 22 Mar 2005 Open Access Journals how many? Slide 21 PRMES 22 Mar 2005 Slide 22 The alternative : Institutional Repositories (Open archives, e-Print archives) What are the essential elements? Institutional, subject or national : Content generated by community Scholarly content: published articles, books, book sections, conference papers, preprints and working papers, enduring teaching materials, theses, data-sets, etc. Cumulative & perpetual: preserve ongoing access to material Interoperable & open access: free, online, global Slide 23 PRMES 22 Mar 2005 Truly global movement -early Institutional Repositories Australian National University Australian National University Hong Kong University Hong Kong University Humboldt University in Berlin Humboldt University in Berlin Utrecht, Lund, Utrecht, Lund, MIT. CalTech, Library of Congress MIT. CalTech, Library of Congress UK Glasgow, Nottingham, Edinburgh, Southampton, Oxford, Cambridge, Bristol .. ( 51 HEI repositories in UK) UK Glasgow, Nottingham, Edinburgh, Southampton, Oxford, Cambridge, Bristol .. ( 51 HEI repositories in UK) Slide 24 PRMES 22 Mar 2005 Institutional Repositories : what to deposit e-Prints are electronic copies of any research output (journal article, book; book chapter, conference paper, monogrqph, report, theses, multimedia etc.) e-Prints are electronic copies of any research output (journal article, book; book chapter, conference paper, monogrqph, report, theses, multimedia etc.) preprints unpublished papers before they are refereed postprints papers after they have been refereed pre journal version pre journal version NOT journal pdf Slide 25 PRMES 22 Mar 2005 Copyright Traditionally authors sign over copyright, whether they own it or not! Traditionally authors sign over copyright, whether they own it or not! Who owns the copyright on your authored works? Who owns the copyright on your authored works? As a guide traditional copyright agreements have not allowed authors to: As a guide traditional copyright agreements have not allowed authors to: Reuse an article as a chapter in a book Revise or adapt an article Distribute an article to colleagues Reproduce copies of an article for teaching purposes Self archive/make available an article in an repository But now 70% of publishers allow deposit in institutional repositories Slide 26 PRMES 22 Mar 2005 Publishers Copyright Policies sources to check Publishers Copyright policies database Publishers Copyright policies database http://www.sherpa.ac.uk/romeo.php http://www.sherpa.ac.uk/romeo.phphttp://www.sherpa.ac.uk/romeo.php Journals Copyright Policies Journals Copyright Policies http://romeo.eprints.org/stats.php. http://romeo.eprints.org/stats.php.http://romeo.eprints.org/stats.php Slide 27 PRMES 22 Mar 2005 Slide 28 Slide 29 What should authors do? Place articles with open access publishers Negotiate copyright agreement with publisher to retain right to deposit in institutional repository Deposit postprint (post refereed, pre journal version of article), or any other research output in institutional repository Slide 30 PRMES 22 Mar 2005 Intellectual Property Rights Property that derives from the work of the mind or intellect; An idea, invention, trade secret, process, program, data, formula, patent, copyright, or trademark or application, right, or registration relating thereto Intellectual property, very broadly, means the legal rights which result from intellectual activity in the industrial, scientific, literary and artistic fields. Countries have laws to protect intellectual property for two main reasons. One is to give statutory expression to the moral and economic rights of creators in their creations and the rights of the public in access to those creations. The second is to promote, as a deliberate act of Government policy, creativity and the dissemination and application of its results and to encourage fair trading which would contribute to economic and social development. Generally speaking, intellectual property law aims at safeguarding creators and other producers of intellectual goods and services by granting them certain time-limited rights to control the use made of those productions. Those rights do not apply to the physical object in which the creation may be embodied but instead to the intellectual creation as such. Intellectual property is traditionally divided into two branches, industrial property and copyright. Slide 31 PRMES 22 Mar 2005 Why contribute your work? To make your research more visible and available in electronic form To promote your work and that of other academics within your community To use it as a secure store for your research publications - which can help you to respond to the many requests for full text and publication records data To contribute to national and global initiatives which will ensure an international audience for your latest research (other universities are developing their own archives which, together, are searchable by global search tools) Slide 32 PRMES 22 Mar 2005 Benefits for the researcher Wide dissemination Wide dissemination papers more visible cited more Rapid dissemination Rapid dissemination Ease of access Ease of access Cross-searchable Cross-searchable Value added services Value added services hit counts on papers personalised publications lists citation analyses lowering impact barriers lowering access barriers Slide 33 PRMES 22 Mar 2005 Raising the profile. Articles freely available online are more highly cited. For greater impact and faster scientific progress, authors and publishers should aim to make research easy to access Articles freely available online are more highly cited. For greater impact and faster scientific progress, authors and publishers should aim to make research easy to access Nature, Volume 411, Number 6837, p. 521, 2001 Steve Lawrence Online or Invisible? http://www.neci.nec.com/~lawrence/papers/online-nature01/ Nature, Volume 411, Number 6837, p. 521, 2001 Steve Lawrence Online or Invisible? http://www.neci.nec.com/~lawrence/papers/online-nature01/http://www.neci.nec.com/~lawrence/papers/online-nature01/ Univ Southampton, School of Electronic Sciences Univ Southampton, School of Electronic Sciences Slide 34 PRMES 22 Mar 2005 E-Prints Soton visibility support At the University of Southampton the record and full text in the Institutional Repository is used in various ways .. At the University of Southampton the record and full text in the Institutional Repository is used in various ways .. To make research more visible and to save researchers time Slide 35 PRMES 22 Mar 2005 Real benefit of adding a link to your web page automatic update Slide 36 PRMES 22 Mar 2005 Secure storage and visibility branding for a research group Slide 37 PRMES 22 Mar 2005 Advertising research RSS feed to web site Slide 38 PRMES 22 Mar 2005 Screen at entrance - Is my paper there? Slide 39 PRMES 22 Mar 2005 Hot off the screen! Slide 40 PRMES 22 Mar 2005 Linking to bookseller search inside bonus Slide 41 PRMES 22 Mar 2005 Interdisciplinary research enter once only Slide 42 PRMES 22 Mar 2005 Benefit of high profile - indexed by web engines Google and Google Scholar .. Slide 43 PRMES 22 Mar 2005 Global open archive search OAIster ( Michigan in partnership with Yahoo) Slide 44 PRMES 22 Mar 2005 Statistics most downloaded Slide 45 PRMES 22 Mar 2005 Information space - a national vision: e-Prints + data + e-learning End of the journey? When data and documents will be linked and easily accessible They will be an integral part of the academic work space just as the World Wide Web is today But the Web will acquire meaning and become the Semantic Web Open Archive protocols and metadata standards are a part of this journey Slide 46 PRMES 22 Mar 2005 Make your research global !