Repositories, Learned Societies and Research Funders

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Repositories, Learned Societies and Research Funders. Stephen Pinfield University of Nottingham. Outline. Repositories: What they are What they do What they don’t do What they should do What they might do. What repositories are. Screen shot arxiv. Screen shot DSpace@MIT. Repositories. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Repositories, Learned Societies and Research Funders

Stephen Pinfield

University of Nottingham

Outline

Repositories: What they are What they do What they don’t do What they should do What they might do

What repositories are

Screen shot arxiv

Screen shot DSpace@MIT

Repositories

Subject / institutional

Open access / restricted access

E-prints / other digital content

‘Open archives’

Open access– free, unrestricted, immediate availability of

full content (and unrestricted re-use)

Interoperable– Open Archives Initiative Protocol for

Metadata Harvesting (OAI PMH)

OAI Protocol: key concepts

End User

Data Providers

Service Provider

Harvester

Publication & self-archiving

Author writes paper

Author submits paper to journal

Editor and referees review paper

Author revises paper

Author submits final version

Publisher copy edits and formats paper

Author self-archives paper in e-print repository

Paper published in journal

post-print

pre-print

What repositories do

What repositories do Provide (open) access to content

– to research community

– to other stakeholders: health professionals, industry, media etc.

Accelerate dissemination Store and manage content Preserve content Complement journals

– provide copies of papers

– provide services

Act as shop window for institution/organisation Expose content/metadata for harvesting

OAI Service Providers

What repositories plus Service Providers do

Search – retrieve Value-added services

What repositories don’t do right now

Repositories DON’T…

Provide peer reviewProvide journal ‘brand’Provide the article of recordReplace journalsCost a lot!

What repositories should do

RCUK

The June 2006 updated statement: Reaffirms the principle that publicly-

funded research should be publicly available

Devolves responsibility to individual research councils

Initiates further consultation and research

Research Councils

OA mandate: BBSRC, ESRC, MRC OA encouraged: CCLRC Policy to be released soon: AHRC, NERC No OA policy: EPSRC, PPARC

Wellcome

Open access mandate Deposit in (UK)PMC Fund OA charges Publisher agreements ‘Open’ licence agreements Deposit of article of record

What repositories might do

What repositories might do (1)

More value-added services– search– citation analysis/metrics– plagiarism detection– text/data mining

Create publishing efficiencies

What repositories might do (2)

Deconstructing the journal– content distribution– quality control

‘Overlay journals’ Quality

– pre-publication screening– pre-publication peer review– post-publication metrics– post-publication dialogue

Role of Learned Societies?

Journal publishers – new business models

Data providers Service providers Quality control/measurement services Overlay journal providers

http://www.sherpa.ac.uk

Stephen.Pinfield@Nottingham.ac.uk