Post on 25-Feb-2016
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OSTI & Publishers
Brian Hitson and Mark MartinOn behalf of
Walt Warnick, Ph.D.Director, Office of Scientific and Technical Information
U.S. Department of EnergyApril 30, 2012
Building on Win-Win Collaborations between Publishers & U.S. Dept. of
Energy
What Is OSTI?
“The Secretary, through the Office of Scientific and Technical Information, shall maintain within the Department publicly available collections of scientific and technical information resulting from research, development, demonstration, and commercial applications activities supported by the Department.”
Energy Policy Act of 2005
OSTI is a program within DOE’s Office of Science, with a corporate responsibility for ensuring access to DOE R&D results.
Since 1947!
Public access to unclassified, unlimited Restricted access to classified and sensitive
"…the Department’s role as a source of information…is unique and indispensable in the advancement of energy technologies.”-- from Quadrennial Technology Review press release "Our success should be measured not when a project is completed or an experiment concluded, but when scientific and technical information is disseminated…” -- from 2011 Department of Energy Strategic Plan
OSTI Products For specific document or media types
Aggregator Products – federated search Integrates key DOE databases
Covers a range of R&D results (reports, patents, citations, e-prints, etc.)
Integrates >70 nations Provides over 400 million pages of science information from databases and portals
worldwide; performs multilingual search across 10 languages; translation of English content for non-English speakers and non-English content for English speakers
Integrates 12 U.S. federal science agenciesDatabases and websites offer over 200 million pages of science information
OSTI information transactions have increased from 2 million to 250 million.
OSTI Web Traffic
Information Transactions: discrete information exchanges between a user and an OSTI web product.
OSTI & Publishers
OSTI is improving DOE’s ability to demonstrate its research results by collaborating with journal publishers. This involves engaging with publishers to identify and broaden access to the journal articles reporting on research funded by DOE.
DOE-Affiliated Articles by Publisher (2007-2012)
ElsevierAmerican Chemical SocietyAmerican Physical SocietyAmerican Institute of PhysicsInstitute of PhysicsWileySpringerRoyal Society of ChemistryInstitute of Electrical and Electronics EngineersNatureAmerican Geophysical UnionNational Academy of SciencesOptical Society of AmericaTaylor FrancisAmerican Society for MicrobiologyAmerican Meteorological Society American Nuclear SocietyPublic Library of ScienceAmerican Association for the Ad-vancement of ScienceEDP SciencesThe Electrochemical SocietyHealth Physics Society/Lippincott Williams & Wilkins
Source: Web of Science
Elsevier 21%
American Chemical Society19%
American Physical Society18%
American Institute of Physics
8%
Institute of Physics7%
Wiley6%
Springer4%
Wiley Elsevier
• Wiley provides citations to OSTI including abstracts and hyperlinks to landing pages for the publisher versions of the articles.
• Wiley provides full text of articles for use in a dark archive to improve search precision and recall.
• Elsevier provides citations to OSTI including abstracts and hyperlinks to landing pages for the publisher versions of the articles.
• Elsevier provides full text of articles for use in a dark archive to improve search precision and recall.
• OSTI shares technical report literature with Elsevier systems.
Pilot Projects
Enhancing journal article full-text searching:Making citations of DOE-funded journal articles available
in search & retrieval applications operated by OSTI
*A Note About Dark Archive
For reports hosted at laboratories, OSTI maintains a dark archive. Through this existing infrastructure OSTI would
make journal publisher full text searchable.
Dark archives are far less expensive to operate and maintain than bright archives, which need to have the interface and support necessary to make them user-friendly.
For docs hosted off-site, our dark archive automatically connects, downloads, caches and indexes remote files.
This entire process requires no human interaction at the off-site location or OSTI.
CrossRef Adds 2 New Metadata Elements
OSTI has worked with CENDI (the Federal Scientific and Technical Information Managers Group) members to have a standard list of agencies so there will be no ambiguity for agency names.
The current status of the project is that publishers will work with authors to populate the two new metadata elements.
CrossRef has agreed to add two metadata elements to the CrossRef database which would apply to each journal article. The two metadata elements would capture: Funding Agency Grant Number
Estimated completion – 1 year
FundRef Project
Working together to solve the author/contributor name ambiguity problem in scholarly communications
Working to create a central registry of unique identifiers for individual researchers and an open and transparent linking mechanism between ORCID and other current author ID schemes
ORCID anticipates launch of ORCID identifier in late summer 2012 so that authors will be identifiable by a unique ORCID number. This is a major milestone.
Membership includes many publishers, universities, research organizations and foreign governments.
ORCID
OSTI fully supports the new functionality ORCID will provide related to linking different forms of research output to enhance
the scientific discovery process.
SciVerse
WorldWideScience.org content will be made available in an optional search done through Elsevier’s SciVerse hub.
A partnership between WorldWideScience.org and Elsevier’s SciVerse
DataCiteA global
consortium carried out by
local institutions
• DOE is the only U.S. government member of DataCite.
• OSTI assigns digital object identifiers (DOIs) to databases; this service is modeled after what CrossRef has done for journal articles.
• DOE has created 350+ DOIs for databases to date.
• Thus far, the DOIs have only been created for DOE databases; however, OSTI is looking to expand this service to other government agencies.
The Future
OSTI is looking forward to moving from pilot to production.
We’ve gained insight on how projects like these might be structured to achieve success.
Based on these valuable experiences, OSTI believes that future collaborations will continue to gain efficiencies when considering other projects with other publishers.
From Pilot to Production
OSTI is seeking to broaden activities with journal publishers to
further improve DOE’s ability to demonstrate the results of its R&D
activities.
Questions?
Walt Warnick, Ph.D.Director, Office of Scientific and Technical InformationU.S. Department of Energy Office of Science(301) 903-7996(301) 903-8972 (fax)walter.warnick@science.doe.gov