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Office of Scholarly Communication and Publishing

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Presentation on theme: "Office of Scholarly Communication and Publishing"— Presentation transcript:

1 Open Access and the new Copyright Policy: Greater impact for your research
Office of Scholarly Communication and Publishing University Library System University of Pittsburgh

2 Open Access is… A family of copyright licensing policies under which authors and copyright owners make their works publicly available A movement in higher education to increase access to scholarly research and communication, not limiting it solely to subscribers or purchasers of works A response to the current crisis in scholarly communication

3 OA is compatible with . . . Copyright Peer review
Revenue (even profit) Print Preservation Prestige Quality Career advancement Indexing And other features and supportive services associated with scholarly literature

4 Growth in scholarly publishing
Est. 50 million scholarly research articles published @1.4 million articles per year (2006 est.)—one every 22 seconds! Average number of science articles per journal increased by >47% from 1990 to (Times Higher Education, 8 July 2010) Number of scientific articles indexed by ISI was 590,841 in 1990 and 1,015,637 in 2009 – a rise of 72%

5 Concentration of ownership
Nearly 50% of the content of the merged ISI Indexes consists of titles from 5 major publishers— Elsevier Wiley Springer Taylor & Francis Sage Top 3 publishers of science journals (Elsevier, Springer- Kluwer, Wiley-Blackwell) accounted 42% of articles published (2002) There were over 2,000 publishers of academic journals; no other publisher accounted for >3% of market share (2002)

6 Crisis in scholarly journal pricing
Bill Hooker, April Data sources: Library Journal Annual Serials Price Surveys, Association of Research Libraries, US Dept. of Labor

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8 Open Access—Origins Crisis in scholarly communication/publishing
Flat to declining collections budgets More demand for newer, expensive resources Greatly increased pricing for serials, electronic resources Rise of Internet and Worldwide Web Rapid dissemination of new research Better connectivity between scholars

9 OA Today Over 150 universities around the world mandate Open Access deposits of faculty works Directory of Open Access Journals (DOAJ) lists 7,530 OA journals in 117 countries (February 2012) Directory of Open Access Repositories (OpenDOAR) lists 2,173 open archives in 99 countries (February 2012)

10 28 Open Access journals now published with more pending; nearly all are peer-reviewed ULS Publications Advisory Board formed Archive of European Integration contains 16,900 items 5 author self-archiving repositories with more planned D-Scholarship contains more than 7,200 items Over 750 OA book titles through Press Digital Editions Over 4,400 ETDs Proposed Open Access mandate

11 Open Access Task Force Charge:
To review issues related to open access and to make recommendations to the University related to the adoption of an open access policy at Pitt

12 Open Access Task Force Rush Miller, University Library System (Task Force Chair) Michael Madison, School of Law Cynthia Miller, University of Pittsburgh Press Steven Reis, Associate Vice Chancellor for Clinical Research, School of Medicine Adam Shear, Dept. of Religious Studies Karen Shephard, Barco Law Library

13 Proposed OA Policy @Pitt
Is addressed in the Copyright Policy Provides for dissemination of scholarly works (articles only) by university authors based on Open Access principles University authors include faculty, postdoctoral associates, and postdoctoral students Scholarly works to be deposited in the University’s institutional repository, Deposits made by the University Library System’s Office of Scholarly Communication and Publishing

14 Proposed OA Policy @Pitt
Not intended to impose limitations on where university authors can publish, now or in the future Applies only to scholarly works for which the author retains copyright or the publisher allows deposit in local repository Depending on publisher policy, authors may deposit: author’s pre-publication manuscript final edited copy (pre-print) final published version (post-print) Includes provisions to waive deposit requirement if permission is not granted by the publisher

15 OA and “U”: Why Open Access?
Increase the visibility and discovery of the research output of the University of Pittsburgh and its faculty Support the University’s mission of service by disseminating research results to the global academic community Readily demonstrate the high level of research conducted at the University to international ratings agencies and colleagues

16 OA and *You* Greater access More progress
More scholars view and read work Extends the global reach of research Reduces or eliminates price/permission barriers of subscription journals More progress Promotes speed, productivity, and knowledge translation Allows authors to share research for the public good, not only with colleagues at the University of Pittsburgh but around the world Long-term preservation in a trusted repository Greater impact

17 OA and Its Impact Get your work noticed, used, and cited
Make your work available while ideas are fresh and new Share your work with colleagues and students Publish other scholarly works (books, articles) Index in Google Scholar, OAIster, and other Internet search tools

18 D-Scholarship@Pitt The University’s institutional repository
Authorized users: University of Pittsburgh faculty, staff, and students Individuals with a current University of Pittsburgh computer account (either primary or sponsored account)

19 Content is reviewed for appropriateness to repository policies but is not peer- reviewed by the University Peer-reviewed content may be deposited per copyright and publishers’ guidelines

20 D-Scholarship: Research accepted
Research papers, published or unpublished Articles (pre-prints, post-prints) Books, chapters, sections Conference/workshop papers/presentations Monographs, reports Multimedia (audio, video, images) Compositions, performances, exhibitions Research data Electronic theses and dissertations

21 D-Scholarship: Not Accepted
Learning or instructional objects Class notes, syllabi, sample tests, etc. Student portfolios Institutional records

22 D-Scholarship: Discoverability
Indexed by Google Scholar, Google, Internet search engines OpenDOAR: The Directory of Open Access Repositories OCLC WorldCat Open Archives Initiative harvesters (OAIster, Pennsylvania Digital Library, et al.) PittCat+

23 Sherpa RoMEO Searchable database of publisher's policies on self- archiving of journal articles on the Web and in OA repositories Helps clarify whether authors can self-archive and under what circumstances Developed at University of Nottingham, UK

24 What we can do for you We can do the work for you
Deposit your published works in D- Scholarship Automate the process when possible Help with understanding publisher policies Join with other universities to leverage the Policy with publishers

25 Visit our Web sites OA at Pitt D-Scholarship@Pitt

26 ULS Office of Scholarly Communication and Publishing
Contact us ULS Office of Scholarly Communication and Publishing Tim Deliyannides, Director John Barnett, Scholarly Communications Librarian Vanessa Gabler, Electronic Publications Associate


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