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E-Print Repositories for Research Visibility: T ime to Deposit Pauline Simpson and Jessie Hey 17/10/03.

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Presentation on theme: "E-Print Repositories for Research Visibility: T ime to Deposit Pauline Simpson and Jessie Hey 17/10/03."— Presentation transcript:

1 e-Print Repositories for Research Visibility: T ime to Deposit Pauline Simpson and Jessie Hey 17/10/03

2 Road map Scholarly communication alternatives e-Print Archives e-Prints Soton How to make your research more visible now

3 PUBPUB SUBSUB LIBLIB A R Primary channel - Scholarly Communication – present model Bibliometrics – citation analysis, impact factors Evaluation – RAE, Tenure, Promotion Research funding proposals

4 1774 %

5 Crisis in Scholarly Communication alternate models Open Access Journals Open Archives Initiatives Open = freely accessible - open access journals Open = interoperable - Open Archives Initiative BioMed Central - JISC funding payment of $500 per article 7/03- Publication charge paid = free online access to all Publication charge not paid = subscription only access

6 Changing Publishing Paradigm A uthors R eaders OAI data providersOAI service providers PUBPUB SUBSUB LIBLIB A uthors R eaders Publish Archive/ access Hybrid roles Information flow through Open Archives model Citation analysis

7 TARDis HEFCE – JISC Programme - Focus on Access to Institutional Resources (FAIR) £196,000 Aug 2002 – Jan 2005 (30 months) Project Team –Project Director : Sheila Corrall –Project Manager: Pauline Simpson –Advocacy : Jessie Hey –Software : Chris Gutteridge / Tim Brody –Admin : Natasha Lucas

8 TARDis Aims To set up a sustainable Southampton e- Print archive e-Prints Soton To gain content – full text documents Targeting Academic Resources for Deposit and Disclosure

9 What are e-Prints? e-Prints are: electronic copies of any research output –journal articles, book chapters, conference papers etc even multimedia –they may include unpublished manuscripts and papers prepared for publication (as copyright allows) Also broader and narrower definitions: Academic output - MIT Peer-reviewed – Prof. Stevan Harnad (open access advocate) An e-Print archive is an internet based repository of such digital scholarly publications which can provide immediate and free worldwide access benefiting both author and reader

10 e-Print archives Subject based e-Print archives (centred on author deposit) –Pioneering example is ArXiv set up by Paul Ginsparg at Los Alamos in 1991ArXiv –Successful in limited subject areas –Free EPrints Software developed at Southampton to encourage more self archiving (JISC funding) Open Archives Initiative software standards developed to enable cross searching (OAI-PMH) Alternate models proposed based on institutional research output

11 arXiv usage yesterday

12 A national vision: e-Prints + e-Learning + data Diagram from eBank UK project

13 A national vision: ePrints UK

14 TARDis e-Prints Soton

15 Why contribute your work? To make your research more visible and available in electronic form To promote your work and that of other academics within your community To use it as a secure store for your research publications - which can help you to respond to the many requests for full text and publication data To contribute to national and global initiatives which will ensure an international audience for your latest research (other universities are developing their own archives which, together, will be searchable by global search tools) JRD role: to raise the profile of oceanographic research within the UK and internationally

16 Raising the profile…. Articles freely available online are more highly cited. For greater impact and faster scientific progress, authors and publishers should aim to make research easy to access Nature, Volume 411, Number 6837, p. 521, 2001 Steve Lawrence Online or Invisible? http://www.neci.nec.com/~lawrence/papers/onli ne-nature01/ http://www.neci.nec.com/~lawrence/papers/onli ne-nature01/

17 Southampton research document types

18 Simplifying deposit in EPrints software

19 Choose DIY or give the file and sufficient information for us to continue for you

20 Deposit Process Register yourself once Have the electronic copy ready and open (print out of first page is also useful) Check copyright (journal transfer agreements surveyed by Project RoMEO) Expect to add abstract, keywords Add any useful information on content (eg enhanced diagrams) or to help cite it Check before submitting Can leave in workspace to finish later

21 Solving copyright problems Check a journals copyright transfer agreement here

22 Journal Copyright agreements Research by Project Romeo

23 Ensuring your copyright for self-archiving "I hereby transfer to all rights to sell or lease the text (on-paper and on-line) of my paper. I retain the right to distribute it for free for scholarly/scientific purposes, in particular, the right to self-archive it publicly online on the World Wide Web. The author/s hereby assert their moral rights in accordance with the UK Copyright Designs and Patents Act (1988)."

24 Completed deposit – can be updated if published

25 Cross searching academic resources - finding the pearls 01 Oct - 203

26 Where and Who Deposit your work from now In e-Prints Soton http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/ http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/ Help from: eprints@soton.ac.ukeprints@soton.ac.uk Jessie Hey – deposit assistance, database development for groups Natasha Lucas – admin and assistance Pauline Simpson – Project Manager JRD e-Print representative?


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