Sustainable Consumption Institute 188 Waterloo Place, Oxford Road

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Presentation transcript:

Knowledge exchange and impact – working to enhance your digital profile Sustainable Consumption Institute 188 Waterloo Place, Oxford Road The University of Manchester Tuesday, 17 January 2017

Agenda 2.00 Introduction to the day (Sherilyn McGregor) 2.05 7 steps to maximise your research profile (Lynda McIntosh, Research Communications and Marketing Manager, Faculty of Humanities) 2.15 Open Access (Ian Fairweather, Researcher Development Manager, Faculty of Humanities) 2.25 Knowledge exchange and impact (Carly Chadwick, Knowledge Exchange and Impact Officer, Research Support Services, Faculty of Humanities ) Discussion 3.15 Working effectively with Policy@Manchester (Alex Waddington, Head of Communications and Engagement – Policy@Manchester, Faculty of Humanities) 3.55 Close (Sherilyn McGregor)

Manchester 2020 – The University of Manchester’s Strategic Plan Key Performance Indicator 3 Quality To improve the quality of research outputs by 2020, ensuring that 90% of staff are judged as producing world-leading or internationally excellent research by peer review, through the Research Excellence Framework or our own exercises, and to ensure that the share of our publications falling in the top 10% of cited papers in their field is in line with that for the UK’s top five institutions. Key Performance Indicator 13 Reputation: portfolio of measures A weighted portfolio of measures, including surveys, independent polling, measures of output (media coverage, web analytics etc) and league tables.

Open Access Dr Ian Fairweather, Faculty Research Development Manager For further information and training on Open Access, please contact: Scott Taylor, Scholarly Communications Librarian scott.taylor@manchester.ac.uk

https://scholar.google.co.uk/citations?view_op=top_venues&hl=en&vq=hum Rank# Publication Established Publisher Model 1 Journal of Communication 1951 Wiley-Blackwell Subscription-based 2 Journal of Pragmatics 1977 Elsevier 3 Language Learning 1948 4 Journalism 2000 Sage 5 International Journal of Communication 2007 USC Open Access 6 Public Opinion Quarterly 1937 OUP 7 Ethnic and Racial Studies 1978 Routledge 8 Media, Culture & Society 1979 9 Bilingualism: Language and Cognition 1998 CUP 10 Natural Language & Linguistic Theory 1983 Springer 11 System 1973 Pergamon Press 12 Gender & Society 1987 13 Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies 1971 14 English Language Teaching Journal 1946 15 Journalism Practice Taylor & Francis 16 Synthese 1936 17 Applied Linguistics 1980 18 Lingua 1949 19 Journal of Homosexuality 1974 20 Psychology of Music https://scholar.google.co.uk/citations?view_op=top_venues&hl=en&vq=hum

https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1KUMSeq_Pzp4KveZ7pb5rddcssk1XBTiLHniD0d3nDqo/edit#gid=0

Step 1: Think Open Access

Open Access Repositories

REF Open Access Policy From 1st April 2016, authors must ensure that the Author Accepted Manuscript (AAM) of all journal and peer-reviewed conference papers have been deposited to an institutional repository within three months of the acceptance date, and subsequently made Open Access within 12 months of publication for REF Main Panels A & B or 24 months for REF Main Panels C & D.* This is also a requirement of the University’s new Publications Policy. *other funder OA policies may apply

www.manchester.ac.uk/openaccess/gateway

https://pure.manchester.ac.uk

Email: uml.openaccess@manchester.ac.uk Web: www.manchester.ac.uk/openaccess Email: uml.openaccess@manchester.ac.uk Tel: 0161 306 1517

Open Access Support

Web: www.manchester.ac.uk/escholar Email: escholar@manchester.ac.uk Tel: 0161 275 8728 Web: www.manchester.ac.uk/openaccess Email: uml.openaccess@manchester.ac.uk Tel: 0161 306 1517

Step 1: Think Open Access Step 2: Claim an ORCID (Make Pure profile public)

What are ORCIDs? Open researcher and contributor identifier - ORCID

What are ORCIDs? 0000-0003-2355-7525 0000-0002-0387-880X 0000-0001-5887-2846

What are ORCIDs? 10.1140/epjc/s10052-013-2306-0 0000-0002-1809-5621 ORCID provides a digital identifier that distinguishes you from every other researcher. 

What are ORCIDs? 10.1140/epjc/s10052-013-2306-0 0000-0002-1809-5621 ORCID provides a digital identifier that distinguishes you from every other researcher. 

What are ORCIDs? A definitive record of you and your research activities (e.g. research outputs, funding data, employment history) which is available to other systems via the open ORCID registry A personal profile page which is available via a unique URL (e.g. http://orcid.org/0000-0002-1297-9725)  ORCID is a non-profit, community driven project, open to all researchers in any discipline and at any career stage; there is no commercial interest behind the ORCID project. It is not a social networking site.

University of Manchester uses Pure to connect to ORCID. www.orcid.org

https://documents.manchester.ac.uk/listofpolicies

https://pure.manchester.ac.uk

www.manchester.ac.uk/orcid

Use your ORCID at every opportunity! Manuscript submissions… …funder applications… repositories….. ...use bibliometric analyses to identify potential research collaboration opportunities? ...benchmark the citation performance of my faculty/school/group's outputs? ...incorporate citation data into a bid for grant funding? ...use citation data to assess the research strengths of my faculty/school/group? ...use citation data to inform future publication strategies?

Step 1: Think Open Access Step 2: Claim an ORCID Step 3: Track attention

+ ACADEMIC ATTENTION BROADER ATTENTION Journal Impact Factor Citation counts H-index Number of publications Mentions in news reports References in policy Mentions in social media Mentions in blogs Wikipedia references Reference manager readers … etc. ACADEMIC ATTENTION BROADER ATTENTION + Alternative metrics “altmetrics” Traditional bibliometrics Traditional metrics

Step 1: Think Open Access Step 2: Claim an ORCID Step 3: Track attention Step 4: Engage with social networks

Receive open peer review on your work Follow the main discussions that are happening in your field, discover peers, discover papers, discover jobs Comment on other author’s work; raise your profile as an expert in your field Receive open peer review on your work Post work or share links to authored content to attract wide audiences Track metrics, downloads, page-views, mentions, retweets, “altmetrics” Dar Meshi, Diana I. Tamir, Hauke R. Heekeren, The Emerging Neuroscience of Social Media, Volume 19, Issue 12, 2015, 771–782, http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.tics.2015.09.004

Step 1: Think Open Access Step 2: Claim an ORCID Step 3: Track attention Step 4: Engage with social networks Step 5: Broaden your readership

www.growkudos.com

Great blog post about blogging your journal article! https://medium.com/@write4research/how-to-write-a-blogpost-from-your-journal-article-6511a3837caa

www/library.manchester.ac.uk/my-research-essentials

Step 1: Think Open Access Step 2: Claim an ORCID Step 3: Track attention Step 4: Engage with social networks Step 5: Broaden your readership Step 6: Share your data

Step 1: Think Open Access Step 2: Claim an ORCID Step 3: Track attention Step 4: Engage with social networks Step 5: Broaden your readership Step 6: Share your data Step 7: Choose your homepage

www.about.me

Step 1: Think Open Access Step 2: Claim an ORCID Step 3: Track attention Step 4: Engage with social networks Step 5: Broaden your readership Step 6: Share your data Step 7: Choose your homepage