COUNTER Update Peter Shepherd COUNTER May 2012. COUNTER - three new developments Release 4 of the Code of Practice Release 4 definitive version now published.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
COUNTER: improving usage statistics Peter Shepherd Director COUNTER December 2006.
Advertisements

Support.ebsco.com EBSCOadmin Reports & Statistics Tutorial.
COUNTER: making statistics useful Peter Shepherd Director COUNTER January 2007.
COUNTER: achievements and future challenges Peter Shepherd Director COUNTER April 2007.
Usage statistics in context - panel discussion on understanding usage, measuring success Peter Shepherd Project Director COUNTER AAP/PSP 9 February 2005.
COUNTER Update Peter Shepherd Project Director COUNTER STM Innovations Seminar, 2 December 2005.
PIRUS Publisher and Institutional Repository Usage Statistics Peter Shepherd ICOLC Europe, Paris 27 October 2009.
How do we keep track of what we do? COUNTER now and in the future? Peter Shepherd Director COUNTER February 2008.
COUNTER in context Where have we got to? Where are we going? Peter Shepherd UKSG, March 2009.
Implications of Release 3 of the COUNTER Code of Practice Vendor Usage Reports: Are we all on the same page now? Charleston Conference November 6, 2008.
California Digital Library NISO Standardized Usage Statistics Harvesting Initiative (SUSHI): Z39.93 Chan Li California Digital Library ALA Midwinter 2009.
© 2008 EBSCO Information Services SUSHI, COUNTER and ERM Systems An Update on Usage Standards Ressources électroniques dans les bibliothèques électroniques.
Usage Statistics in Context: related standards and tools Oliver Pesch Chief Strategist, E-Resources EBSCO Information Services Usage Statistics and Publishers:
Table of Contents – Part B HINARI Resources –Clinical Evidence –Cochrane Library –EBM Guidelines –BMJ Practice –HINARI EBM Journals.
History Study Center Primary and secondary sources documenting global history 2010.
The Role of COUNTER David Sommer JIBS User Group 2009.
Welcome to informaworld TM. The following demo will show you just a few of the features on informaworld TM. Please select where you would like start. ePublication.
Open Stirling: Open Access Publishing and Research Data Management at Stirling Monday 25 th March 2013 Michael White, Information Services STORRE Co-Manager/RMS.
Kathy Perry, VIVA Director With special thanks to Peter Shepherd, COUNTER Executive Director Electronic Resources and Libraries Conference March 19, 2014.
New COUNTER-based usage metrics for journals and other publications Peter Shepherd COUNTER August 2011.
COUNTER: an overview Peter Shepherd Project Director COUNTER Usage Statistics Training Seminar, Oxford, 9 December 2005.
The COUNTER Code of Practice for Books and Reference Works Peter Shepherd Project Director COUNTER UKSG E-Books Seminar, 9 November 2005.
Project COUNTER Trends in Statistical Standards for E- Resource Management March 2005 Oliver Pesch Chief Strategist, E-Resources EBSCO Information Services.
Release 4 of the COUNTER Code of Practice for e- Resources and new usage- based measures of impact Peter Shepherd COUNTER May 2014.
Software Documentation Written By: Ian Sommerville Presentation By: Stephen Lopez-Couto.
National Aeronautics and Space Administration Implementing DSpace at NASA Langley Research Center 1 Greta Lowe Librarian NASA Langley Research Center
Online Resources From Oxford University Press This presentation gives a brief description of Oxford Journals. It tells you: what the journals are; how.
Guillaume Rivalle APRIL 2014 MEASURE YOUR RESEARCH PERFORMANCE WITH INCITES.
Presented by Ansie van der Westhuizen Unisa Institutional Repository: Sharing knowledge to advance research
Getting started on informaworld™ How do I register my institution with informaworld™? How is my institution’s online access activated? What do I do if.
The COUNTER Code of Practice -Release 1 Released January 14,
1 Guidelines For The Future Sharing Best Practice For National Bibliographies In The Digital Era Neil Wilson Information Coordinator IFLA Bibliography.
COUNTER: a practical approach to measuring online usage Peter Shepherd Project Director COUNTER ALA, Chicago, 27 June 2005.
COUNTER and the development of meaningful measures Peter Shepherd Project Director COUNTER IFLA, Oslo, 18 August 2005.
The role of knowledge bases in improving discoverability now and in the future- why national and international collaboration is key The role of knowledge.
Depth customization of DSpace: Best practices and techniques of institutional repository at IIT Kanpur, India By S. K. Vijaianand V. D. Shrivastava Gaurav.
COUNTER Code of Practice: An update ICOLC Spring Meeting April 2007 Montreal, Canada Presented by Oliver Pesch EBSCO Information Services.
State Records Office of Western Australia.NET Proof of Concept Project Slideshow: Prototype Online Disposal Authority/Recordkeeping Plan System Project.
COUNTER: background, Codes of Practice, current activities, future developments Peter Shepherd Director COUNTER January 2008.
COUNTER and the development of standards for usage reports Marthyn Borghuis, Elsevier COUNTER Executive Committee For: CALISE-Taiwan.
Usage versus Cost Analytics for Selection Management and Informed Purchase Decisions MTA Budapest, October 2012.
Gathering, Integrating and Analyzing Usage Data: A look at collection analysis tools and usage statistics standards, and important questions to consider.
PART 1: INTRODUCTION TO BLOG Instructor: Mr Rizal Arbain FB:Facebook/rizal.arbain Website: H/P: Ibnu.
Project Counter in brief Jim Self University of Virginia Library ARL Survey Coordinators Meeting Chicago, Illinois June 24, 2005.
Usage statistics in Action Lorraine Estelle, Director of COUNTER EIFL General Assembly 2015 THURSDAY, 12 November 2015.
Usage Consolidation & Analytics Digital Interest Group Jay Glaisyer, Senior Director of Sales.
PIRUS 2 Creating a common standard for measuring online usage of individual articles Paul Needham, Cranfield University Peter Shepherd, COUNTER October.
PIRUS 2 organizational, economic and political issues Peter Shepherd COUNTER The PIRUS project has been funded by JISC. the UK Joint Information Systems.
COUNTER/UKSG webinar COUNTER FOR PUBLISHERS Lorraine Estelle, COUNTER Stuart Maxwell, Scholarly iQ.
PIRUS 2 Creating a common standard for measuring online usage of individual articles Ross MacIntyre, Mimas, The University of Manchester Paul Needham,
SUPPORTING PEOPLE PROVIDER FORUMS An overview of Supporting People’s new approach to Performance Monitoring and Quality Assurance.
PIRUS2: Developing a standard for individual article usage statistics Peter Shepherd COUNTER UKSG Annual Conference April 2010.
Taming the E-Chaos Through Standards and Best Practices An Update on Recent Developments Betty Landesman NC Serials Conference March 21, 2016.
Paul Needham Franklin-Wilkins Building (Waterloo) 14 October 2009 The PIRUS2 Project is funded by:
COUNTER Code of Practice - an introduction to Release 4
PIRUS PIRUS -Publisher and Institutional Repository Usage Statistics
PIRUS Publisher and Institutional Repository Usage Statistics Peter Shepherd ICOLC Europe, Paris 27 October 2009.
Towards REF 2020 What we know and think we know about the next Research Excellence Framework Dr. Tim Brooks, Research Policy & REF Manager, RDCS Anglia.
PIRUS 2 Developing Practical Standards for Recording and Reporting Online Usage at the Individual Article Level Paul Needham, Cranfield University - Project.
Peter Shepherd COUNTER March 2012
The IPT user interface and data quality tools
PIRUS 2 Creating a common standard for measuring online usage of individual articles Paul Needham, Cranfield University Peter Shepherd, COUNTER Madrid.
Software Documentation
Introducing the IRUSdataUK pilot
SUSHI, COUNTER and ERM Systems An Update on Usage Standards
Wrangle those (e)-Dogies!
COUNTER Update February 2006.
Guide to Usage Statistics
swimming instead of drowning in data: Usage statistics SIUC
Springshare’s LibInsight: E-Journals/Databases Dataset
Presentation transcript:

COUNTER Update Peter Shepherd COUNTER May 2012

COUNTER - three new developments Release 4 of the Code of Practice Release 4 definitive version now published Usage Factor a new usage based measure of journal impact detailed statistical analysis completed Draft Code of Practice for journal Usage Factor now available for comment PIRUS – Publisher and Institutional Repository Usage Statistics recording and reporting usage at the individual article level Final project report now available; provides a promising basis for implementation technical issues largely resolved; organizational and business model proposed but not yet finalised Growing publisher interest in implementation

COUNTER Release 4 - objectives A single, unified Code covering all e-resources, including journals, databases, books, reference works, multimedia content, etc. Improve the database reports Improve the reporting of archive usage Enable the reporting of mobile usage separately Expand the categories of Access Denied covered Improve the application of XML and SUSHI in the design of the usage reports Collect metadata that facilitates the linking of usage statistics to other datasets, such as subscription information

Release 4: main features A single, integrated Code of Practice covering journals, databases, books, reference works and multimedia content An expanded list of Definitions, including terms such as Gold Open Access, Multimedia Full Content Unit, Record View, Result Click, as well as different categories of Access Denied, etc. that are used for the first time in Release 4 Improved database reports that include reporting of Result Clicks and Record Views, in addition to Searches (Sessions removed)

Release 4: main features Enhancements of the SUSHI (Standardised Usage Statistics Harvesting Initiative) protocol designed to facilitate its implementation by vendors and its use by librarians A requirement that Institutional Identifiers, Journal DOI and Book DOI be included in the usage reports, to facilitate not only the management of usage data, but also the linking of usage data to other data relevant to collections of online content. A requirement that usage of Gold Open Access articles within journals be reported separately in a new report: Journal Report 1 GOA: Number of Successful Gold Open Access Full-text Article Requests by Month and Journal. A requirement that Journal Report 5 must be provided

Release 4: main features Modified Database Reports, in which the previous requirement to report Session counts has been dropped, and new requirements, to report Record Views and Result Clicks, have been added. (Database Report 3 has also been renamed Platform Report 1). A new report, Multimedia Report 1, which covers the usage of non- textual multimedia resources, such as audio, video and images, by reporting the number of successful requests for multimedia full content units New optional reports covering usage on mobile devices A description of the relative advantages of logfiles and page tags as the basis for counting online usage Flexibility in the usage reporting period that allows customers to specify a date range for their usage reports

Release 4: Journal Report 5

Release 4: Database Report 1

Release 4: Multimedia Report 1

Release 4: recording and reporting usage on mobile devices The following optional additional reports enable usage on mobile devices to be reported separately: Journal Report 3 Mobile: Number of Successful Item Requests by Month, Journal and Page Type for usage on a Mobile Device Title Report 1 Mobile: Number of Successful Requests for Journal Full-text Articles and Book Sections by Month and Title ( formatted for normal browsers/delivered to mobile devices AND formatted for mobile devices/delivered to mobile devices) Title Report 3 Mobile: Number of Successful Requests by Month, Title and Page Type (formatted for normal browsers/delivered to mobile devices AND formatted for mobile devices/delivered to mobile devices) COUNTER will recognize as usage on a mobile device, which may be reported in the above reports, any usage that meets one of the following criteria: useragents that have the word mobile in the string useragents that are included in the WURFL list. WURFL is the Wireless Universal Resource FiLe, a database containing the profile of mobile devices; this database may be found at: usage via a proprietary mobile App provided by the publisher/content provider

Release 4: timetable for implementation Deadline date for implementation of Release 4: 31 December after this date only vendors compliant with Release 4 will be COUNTER compliant Between now and 31 December 2013, Release 4 and the existing Releases of the Codes of Practice are valid

Full details of Release 4 will be found on the COUNTER website at: COUNTER Code of Practice -Release 4

Usage Factor: background Usage Factor: providing a new perspective UF is a complementary measure that will compensate for the weaknesses of Impact Factors in several important ways: UFs will be available for a much larger number of journals coverage of all fields of scholarship that have online journals impact of practitioner-oriented journals is better reflected in usage usage is recorded and reported immediately upon publication of an article availability of UF will reduce the current over-emphasis of IFs authors would welcome a usage-based measure for journals

Usage Factor: who will benefit? Four major groups will benefit from the introduction of Usage Factors: Authors, especially those in practitioner-oriented fields, where citation-based measures understate the impact of journals, as well as those in areas outside the core STM fields of pure research, where coverage of journals by citation-based measures is weak. Publishers, especially those with large numbers of journals outside of the core STM research areas, where there is no reliable, universal measure of journal impact, because citation-based measures are either inadequate or non-existent for these fields Librarians, when deciding on new journal acquisitions, have no reliable, global measures of journal impact for fields outside the core STM research fields. They would use usage-based measures to help them prioritise journals to be added to their collections. Research Funding Agencies, who are seeking a wider range of credible, consistent quantitative measures of the value and impact of the outputs of the research that they fund.

Usage Factor Project - aims and objectives The overall aim of this project was to explore how online journal usage statistics might form the basis of a new measure of journal impact and quality, the Usage Factor for journals. Specific objectives were to answer the following questions: Will Usage Factor be a statistically meaningful measure? Will Usage Factor be accepted by researchers, publishers, librarians and research institutions? Will Usage Factor be statistically credible and robust? Is there an organizational and economic model for its implementation that would cost-effective and be acceptable to the major stakeholder groups. The project is being carried out in three Stages: Stage 1 ( ): market research Stage 2 ( ): modelling and analysis Stage 3 ( ): further tests based on draft Code of Practice

Usage Factor Project - next steps Stage 3 Objectives Publication of a draft Code of Practice for the Journal Usage Factor Further testing of the recommended methodology for calculating Journal Usage Factor Investigation of an appropriate, resilient subject taxonomy for the classification of journals Exploration of the options for an infrastructure to support the sustainable implementation of JUF Investigate the feasibility of applying the Usage Factor concept to other categories of publication

Usage Factor Project - draft Code of Practice The Code of Practice will be consistent with COUNTER and will provide: A list of Definitions and other terms that are relevant to Usage Factor A methodology for the calculation of Usage Factor as a median value, including specifications for the metadata to be recorded, the content types and article versions whose usage may be counted, as well as the Publication Period and Usage Period to be used. Specifications for the reporting of the Usage Factor Data processing rules to ensure that Usage Factors are credible, consistent and compatible, including protocols for identifying and dealing with attempts to game the Usage Factor Specifications for the independent auditing of Usage Factors A description of the role of the Central Registry for Usage Factors in the consolidation of usage data and in the publication of Usage Factors The draft Code of Practice for Usage Factors is now available for comment on the Usage Factor page of the COUNTER website at:

PIRUS : why now? Increasing interest in article-level usage More journal articles hosted by Institutional and other Repositories Authors and funding agencies are increasingly interested in a reliable, global overview of usage of individual articles Online usage becoming an alternative, accepted measure of article and journal value Knowledge Exchange report recommends developing standards for usage reporting at the individual article level Usage-based metrics being considered as a tool for use in the UK Research Excellence Framework and elsewhere.

PIRUS : why now? Article-level usage metrics now more practical Implementation by COUNTER of XML-based usage reports makes more granular reporting of usage a practical proposition Implementation by COUNTER of the SUSHI protocol facilitates the automated consolidation of usage data from different sources.

PIRUS : mission and project aims Mission To develop a global standard to enable the recording, reporting and consolidation of online usage statistics for individual journal articles hosted by Institutional Repositories, Publishers and other entities Project aims Develop COUNTER-compliant usage reports at the individual article level Create guidelines which, if implemented, would enable any entity that hosts online journal articles to produce these reports Propose ways in which these reports might be consolidated at a global level in a standard way.

Reliable usage data will be available for journal articles, wherever they are held Improved service to authors: authors are increasingly interested in knowing the level of usage of their articles (PLoS has been providing this information since 2009) A PIRUS Code of Practice, based on existing COUNTER protocols, will provide publishers with a common, practical standard for delivering article-level usage data to their authors The PIRUS standard can, in principle, be extended to cover other categories of content PIRUS: benefits

Technical: a workable technical model for the collection, processing and consolidation of individual article usage statistics has been developed. Organizational: an organizational model for a Central Clearing House that would be responsible for the collection, processing and consolidation of usage statistics has been proposed. Economic: the costs for repositories and publishers of generating the required usage reports, as well as the costs of any central clearing house/houses have been calculated and a model for recovering these costs has been proposed. PIRUS: project outcomes

PIRUS: next steps Development of a draft PIRUS Code of Practice, based on the outcomes of the PIRUS project, for the recording and reporting of usage at the individual article level Further information on PIRUS: 11.pdf