Creating Change in Scholarly Communications Heather Joseph Executive Director, SPARC September 21, 2009 TCAL, Austin, TX.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Introduction to Open Access December 2001, Budapest OSI meeting of leaders exploring alternative publishing models. Defined term Open Access Concluded.
Advertisements

Partnering with Faculty / researchers to Enhance Scholarly Communication Caroline Mutwiri.
NIH Public Access Policy What It Means for Authors and for Universities.
Emerging Open Data Policies in the U.S. – An Overview Heather Joseph Executive Director, SPARC JISC/CNI Meeting Edinburgh, Scotland July 2, 2010.
NIH Public Access Compliance Cleveland Health Sciences Library Case Western Reserve University Kathleen C. Blazar.
Open Access: Maximizing the Impact of Research and Scholarship Heather Joseph Executive Director, SPARC Drew University September 10, 2012.
Open Access Advocacy on the National - and International - Level Heather Joseph Executive Director, SPARC June 23, 2011 OAI7 Geneva, Switzerland.
Throwing Open the Doors: Strategies and Implications for Open Access Heather Joseph Executive Director, SPARC October 23, 2009 Educause Live 1.
Christina Hansen, Assistant Vice Chancellor Bob Johnson, Research Librarian for Nursing & Allied Health May 2008 NIH Public Access Policy UCI Libraries.
1 Get Up to Speed on the NIH Public Access Policy UNC-CH Health Sciences Library
Open Access Publishing with Wiley. Gold v Green Open Access Gold or pay to publish Open Access: Article is made freely accessible online to anyone anywhere.
SIX THINGS TO KNOW ABOUT THE UC OPEN ACCESS POLICY Christopher Kelty, Associate Professor Institute for Society and Genetics, Dept. of Anthropology, Dept.
PubMed Central ANCHASL Spring Meeting April 1, 2005 Robert James Associate Director of Public Services Duke University.
Promoting Open Digital Scholarship - A Canadian Library Perspective Leila Fernandez Rajiv Nariani Marcia Salmon York University Libraries, Canada.
NIH Public Access Policy Bethany R. Harris, MSI Research Librarian for Health Sciences Sponsored by the UCI Libraries’ Digital Services Operations Team.
Complying with the NIH Public Access Policy Lisa Oberg, M. Libr. Associate Director for Public and Research Services.
OPEN ACCESS PUBLICATION ISSUES FOR NSF OPP Advisory Committee May 30, /24/111 |
NIH Public Access Policy What it means to OHSU Researchers Presented by: Andrew Hamilton Date: 10/22/2009.
Institutional Compliance with the NIH Public Access Policy: Ensuring Deposit Rights, March 7, 2008 Sponsored by The Association of Research Libraries (ARL)
Journals Full Text Resources Including MedIND. For Scholarly Information We start with Bibliographic Databases having references to journals and other.
Open Access and Scholarly Communications Tyler Walters Julie G. Speer Library Faculty Advisory Board November 20, 2009.
Introduction to Open Access Morag Greig, University of Glasgow.
Federal Research Public Access Act of 2006 Cornyn/Lieberman Open Access Bill Senate Bill 2695.
Authors' Rights & WrongsAuthors' Rights & Wrongs Research Showcase Carnegie Mellon University’s Institutional Repository Dan Hood, Research Showcase Outreach.
NIH Public Access Policy What it means to OHSU Researchers Presented by: Andrew Hamilton Date: 3/18/2007.
WORLD BANK Publications The reference of choice on development The Promise, and Challenge, of Implementing Open Access at the World Bank Carlos Rossel.
Presented by Ansie van der Westhuizen Unisa Institutional Repository: Sharing knowledge to advance research
CREATING CHANGE IN EUROPE : SPARC EUROPE AND SCHOLARLY PUBLISHING Frederick J. Friend SPARC Senior Consultant
Public Access to Publicly Funded Research Heather Joseph Executive Director, SPARC NAGPS Legislative Meeting March 2, 2013.
INFORMATION SOLUTIONS Mary L. Van Allen 21 September 2005 Open Access Journals and citation patterns International Seminar on Open Access for Developing.
Open Access: An Introduction Edward Shreeves Director, Collections and Content Development University of Iowa Libraries
NCBI Webinars Closed captioning: and enter www.captionedtext.com All content, including a video recording, will be available.
Open Access Catherine Boden, Health Sciences Liaison Librarian David Fox, Head of Monographs Presentation to the Musculoskeletal Journal Club College of.
Sociologists for Women in Society: Open Access Publishing Panel Julie G. Speer Summer Meeting 2010 August 15, 2010.
Publishing for the 21 st Century: Open Access for Greater Impact Open Access Week 2010 October 20, 2010.
Digital/Open Access repositories Paul Sheehan Director of Library Services DCU HEAnet National Networking Conference Athlone 11 th November 2005.
Amy Jackson UNM Technology Days July 22,  An institutional repository (IR) is a web-based database of scholarly material which is institutionally.
Publishing Trends: Open the University of Florida Presentation to IDS 3931: Discovering Research and Communicating Science October 21, 2010.
Committed to making the world’s scientific and medical literature a public resource.
Heather Joseph, Executive Director The Scholarly Publishing and Academic Resources Coalition Washington, DC USA THE SCHOLARLY PUBLISHING & ACADEMIC RESOURCES.
 Open access means that information can be freely accessed by anyone in the world using an internet connection. (Sherp Authors &Open access,2006 ) anyone.
Open Access - an introduction, Aleppo, December Open Access – an introduction Ian Johnson.
Open Access What is Open Access? “free availability on the public internet, permitting any users to read, download, copy, distribute, print, search, or.
Open Access: Maximizing the Impact of Research and Scholarship Heather Joseph Executive Director, SPARC February 21, 2013.
Open Access and Universal Deposit David Fox Librarians Forum May 11, 2009.
Mathematics & UHM Library Sara Rutter Spring 2008.
NIH Public Access Policy. The Director of the National Institutes of Health shall require that all investigators funded by the NIH submit or have submitted.
The Current Landscape of Open Access Heather Joseph Executive Director, SPARC ALA Midwinter Meeting Seattle, WA January 26, 2013.
Traditional Distribution Electronic Distribution User Florida Entomologist Issues Reprints FTP.
New Formats and Models for Scholarly Communication: Publication and Access.
Using Open Access Publishing for the Effective Dissemination of African Research PKP PUBLIC KNOWLEDGE PROJECT Ensuring a Journal’s Economic Sustainability,
Open Access Defined An Introduction by Patti McCall.
Open Access to Scholarship: Department Chairs Meeting, 29 May 2009 Brian E. C. Schottlaender & Stefan Tanaka.
Implementing NIH Deposit Policies: Institutional Strategies at the University of Minnesota CNI Spring Task Force Meeting April 7-8, 2008 Minneapolis, MN.
1 The NIH Public Access Requirement [short presentation] June 2013.
Leveraging the Expertise of our Staff and the Information Resources We Manage MIT Libraries Visiting Committee April 13, 2005.
1 The NIH Public Access Requirement [short presentation] November, 2009.
Emerging Trends in Scholarly Communication Heather Joseph Executive Director, SPARC ALA Midwinter Meeting Philadelphia, PA January 26, 2014.
UC Open Access Policy and UC Publication Management System Adrian Petrisor and Mitchell Brown February 12, 2015 Chancellor’s Advisory Council, UC Irvine.
ARL 1 NIH Public Access Policy: Background for Campus Implementation Strategies Karla Hahn ARL Office of Scholarly Communication Coalition for Networked.
Ukpmc.ac.uk As a result of the mandates Research in the open How mandates work in practice 29 th May, 2009 Paul Davey, UK PubMed Central Engagement Manager,
Redefining the Library’s Role through an Institutional Repository Sharon Mader, Dean Jeanne Pavy, Scholarly Communications Librarian Earl K. Long Library.
The New Now: Institutional Repositories and Academia Institutional Repository USM April 17, 2015 Marilyn Billings Scholarly Communication Librarian.
OPEN ACCESS AND OPENNESS AS A PRINCIPLE Adapted from: SARAH L. SHREEVES, UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS AT URBANA-CHAMPAIGN VALE Scholarly Communication Workshop.
NRF Open Access Statement
Impact of the Alternative e-Publishing Model: From Open Access Resources & Self-Publishing toward Librarian’s New Challenges 溫達茂 飛資得資訊 中華民國九十三年十一月.
University of Nigeria, Nsukka
Find support in.
OPEN ACCESS POLICY Larshan Naicker Rhodes University Library
Updated NIH Public Access Policy
Presentation transcript:

Creating Change in Scholarly Communications Heather Joseph Executive Director, SPARC September 21, 2009 TCAL, Austin, TX

SPARC’s Mission SPARC was formed by the library community specifically to be a catalyst for action, in order to stimulate new systems that: Expand dissemination of research results Reduce financial pressures on libraries Leverage the networked digital environment to better serve scholarship

The Issue  Technology lets us bring information to broader audience at little cost, and use in new ways.  Research is cumulative - only through use of findings is the value of research investment maximized.  But, research articles are still only available to fraction of the community of potential users, and what is available often has usage limitations  Call for new framework designed to allow research results to be more easily accessed and used

4 A Focus on Open Access “By open access, we mean its free availability on the public internet, permitting any users 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…” - The Budapest Open Access Initiative

5 Why Open Access Expedite, expand and strengthen our collective ability to leverage our investment in research Improve access and use of results of research to stimulate discovery and innovation. Accelerate the pace of research - create rich resource for scientists to use in new and innovative ways Ensure permanently accessible archive Contribute to the public good

6 So How Do We Move Forward? Educate community (faculty, administrators, students) on opportunities they have now that can contribute to meaningful change. Leveraging Choices in Publishing Venues Expanding Access via Repositories Understanding and Using Copyright Contributing to Local Policy Changes Contributing to National and International Policy Changes

The Numbers

Open Access Increases Impact Lawrence, Steve (2001). “Free online availability substantially increases a paper's impact.” Nature, Vol. 411, No. 6837, p. 521

Metrics

Functionality

11 Author’s Rights

12 What Can You Do? Ensure faculty are aware of quality OA publishing outlets Raise awareness of citation impact advantage Additional measures of quality and impact are also evolving – to faculties advantage OA enables new uses for articles – semantic web, ontologies, deep web links, etc. Understanding how to leverage copyright will help broaden use of articles

Open Access Repositories FEDERATION …exist alongside traditional publishing

ALLIANCE FOR TAXPAYER ACCESS 14 Use…  Need pic of 450,000 per day

Global Network FEDERATION …exist alongside traditional publishing

16 What Can You Do? Help raise awareness of opportunities for faculty to archive articles (and other materials) Movement away from “silos” and towards networks (global). Proof of concept of deep demand when content is high quality Emphasis on services that serve core mission of scholarly and research community Again, critical for faculty to understand copyrights

17 “In an historic vote, the Faculty of Arts and Sciences moved to make the articles that its members public in scholarly journals freely available to anyone…..”

OA Central to Higher Education “The broad dissemination of the results of scholarly inquiry and discourse is essential for higher education to fulfill its long- standing commitment to the advancement and conveyance of knowledge. Indeed, it is mission critical.” --25 U.S. University Provosts, in an Open Letter to the Higher Education Community

ALLIANCE FOR TAXPAYER ACCESS 19 NIH PA Policy Compliance

What Can You Do?  Educate Faculty on purpose of such policies; the wide dissemination of their institutions –and their - research and scholarship  Help raise awareness of the specifics of policies in use – (i.e. non-exclusive license to the institution for non- commercial uses.) and provide copyright grounding.  Help identify faculty champions, and provide forums for campus discussion  Facilitate access to “choice points” and “misconceptions” documents, and to connections to experts for advice.  Policies offering “opt-out clauses” increasing.

ALLIANCE FOR TAXPAYER ACCESS 21 NIH PA Policy Compliance

NIH public access policy Effective April 7, 2008: SEC “The Director of the National Institutes of Health shall require that all investigators funded by the NIH submit or have submitted for them to the National Library of Medicine's PubMed Central an electronic version of their final, peer-reviewed manuscripts upon acceptance for publication, to be made publicly available no later than 12 months after the official date of publication: Provided, That the NIH shall implement the public access policy in a manner consistent with copyright law. ” - U.S. Consolidated Appropriations Act of 2008

ALLIANCE FOR TAXPAYER ACCESS 23 NIH PA Policy Compliance

ALLIANCE FOR TAXPAYER ACCESS 24 WH

25 What Can You Do? Expressly support both top-down mandates (funders, governments) and bottom-up policies (faculty votes). Combination strongly supports community recognition of OA as unprecedented opportunity. Competition emerging – OA as a competitive advantage. No longer “alternative” publishing model Support FRPAA Join the Alliance for Taxpayer Access

Thank you Heather Dalterio Joseph (202)