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OPEN ACCESS Presented by: Bebe Chang ([email protected] ), Digital Projects Librarian Kristy Padron ([email protected] ), Assistant University Librarian Joanne Parandjuk ([email protected] ), Digital Initiatives Librarian Florida Atlantic University Libraries October 26, 2011

Open Access

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Explore, discover and learn about Open Access resources and initiatives which provide free and immediate use of information and materials.

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Page 1: Open Access

OPEN ACCESS

Presented by:Bebe Chang ([email protected]), Digital Projects Librarian

Kristy Padron ([email protected]), Assistant University LibrarianJoanne Parandjuk ([email protected]), Digital Initiatives Librarian

Florida Atlantic University LibrariesOctober 26, 2011

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Image source:Open Access Declarations – Berlin, Budapest, Bethesda. By P. Vierkant. Accessed at http://www.wordle.net/gallery?username=P.Vierkant

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What is Open Access (OA)?Scholarly Publishing and Academic Resources Coalition (SPARC):

•Free, immediate, availability of scholarly works without expectation of payment •Permits any user to read, download, copy, distribute, print, search or link to the full text of these articles, crawl them for indexing, pass them as data to software or use them for any other lawful purpose

Source: http://www.arl.org/sparc/openaccess/

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Growth of OA Movement: Highlights

• 1960s • 1970s

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Growth of OA Movement: Highlights

• 1970s • 1980s

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Growth of OA Movement: Highlights

• 1990s • 2000s-2010s

WWW Software - Tim Berners-Lee: use, duplicate, modify, distribute

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Growth of OA Movement: Highlights• 2000s- 2010s

Berlin Declaration on Open Access to Knowledge in the Sciences and Humanities

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Growth of OA Movement: Highlights• 2000s- 2010s

Scholarly Publishing & Academic Resources Coalition

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OA Current Trends• Princeton and FSU faculty adopted open access policies

• White House releases Open Government Partnership action plan

• Open Access Coalition formed by 22 Academic Institutions

• UK government announces working group on research transparency

• Innovation, Transforming Discovery, and Citizen Science to be Highlighted at Berlin 9 Open Access Conference (November)

• Right to Research Coalition Looks to Rally Student Support for Open-Access Publishing (http://www.openstudents.org)

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How is OA Relevant to Us?“Open access truly expands shared knowledge across scientific fields — it is the

best path for accelerating multi-disciplinary breakthroughs in research.” --

Open Letter to the US Congress signed by Nobel Prize winners

• Researchers – accelerates pace of research, discovery & innovation global accessibility

• Educational Institutions - democratizes access across all institutions – regardless of size or budget

• Businesses - stimulates new ideas, new services, new products• Public - provides access to previously unavailable materials relating to

health, energy, environment, and other areas of broad interest• Research Funders - encourages greater interaction with results of funded

research• Go Green!

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Open Access Publisher & ResourcesOA Publishers:BioMed CentralPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PubMed Central (PMC)SciELOOpen Humanities PressVarious University Presses

(University of Michigan’s open access to archived publications)

OA Resources:DOAJ – Directory of Open Access JournalsArXivRePEc

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How to Promote Open AccessLibrarians:•Launch an open-access institutional archive.•Undertake digitization, access and preservation projects for their institutions and other organizations.•Consider publishing an open-access journal.•Weigh-in on cancelling journals that cannot justify their high expenses.•Support the organizations that advocate Open Access.

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Faculty:•Submit research articles to OA journals.•Negotiate the Copyright Transfer Agreement when publishing in a subscription-based publication.•Deposit pre-prints in an open access archive or respository.•Serve on the editorial board for an OA journal.•See how other professional and learned societies support OA.•Educate your professional organization on OA and propose, endorse, or support OA within the field.

How to Promote Open Access

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Universities and Administrators:•Provide open access to conferences and proceedings hosted at their university.•Give due weight to all peer-reviewed publications, especially in promotion and hiring decisions.•Institute policies that encourage retention of copyright.•Encourage faculty to submit preprints, research articles, and theses to an institutional archive.

How to Promote Open Access

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FAU Libraries Open Access Initiative

The Florida Geographer, Democratic Communique, Journal of Coastal Research •Sustainable•Green•Offers Immediacy & Interactive Multimedia

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A digital collection of FAU scholarly created works

•Facilitates the dissemination of research.•Brands FAU scholarship to attract new students, researchers, and grants to the institution.•Increases citation impact because research is discovered more easily.•Encourages authors to retain their copyright to their scholarly research.•Creates a collective body of work for both faculty accomplishments and promoting FAU colleges and departments.

FAU Libraries Institutional Repository

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• Use of descriptive metadata, keywords, and abstracts• Creation of permanent links to works and usage statistics• Guarantees long-term item preservation through the Florida Digital

Archive• Open access to diverse materials: conference papers, poster

presentations, research articles, theses and dissertations, textbooks, FAU performances, concerts, and recitals

• Displays multiple file formats: word docs, pdfs, power points, serials, audio & video files

• Repository collection example Harbor Branch Oceanographic Institute

Repository value added services:

Want to contribute? Contact FAU Digital Library at [email protected] or (561) 297-0139