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Open Access Greater Impact for Minority Health & Health Equity Research Office of Scholarly Communication and Publishing University Library System University of Pittsburgh
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Page 1: Open Access Greater Impact for Minority Health & Health Equity Research Office of Scholarly Communication and Publishing University Library System University.

Open AccessGreater Impact for Minority Health & Health Equity ResearchOffice of Scholarly Communication and PublishingUniversity Library SystemUniversity of Pittsburgh

Page 2: Open Access Greater Impact for Minority Health & Health Equity Research Office of Scholarly Communication and Publishing University Library System University.

Goals for today:

• Educate ourselves about OA

• Understand how OA can positively impact your research and publishing

• Learn about tools that support OA

• Know how the ULS Office of Scholarly Communication and Publishing can help

Page 3: Open Access Greater Impact for Minority Health & Health Equity Research Office of Scholarly Communication and Publishing University Library System University.

Open Access is…

• A family of copyright licensing policies under which authors and copyright owners make their works publicly available

• A movement in higher education to increase access to scholarly research and communication, not limiting it solely to subscribers or purchasers of works

• A response to the current crisis in scholarly communication

Page 4: Open Access Greater Impact for Minority Health & Health Equity Research Office of Scholarly Communication and Publishing University Library System University.

OA Overview

• Open Access literature is digital, online, free of charge, and free of most copyright and licensing restrictions

• Works are still covered by copyright law, but Open Access terms apply to allow sharing and reuse

• All major OA initiatives for scientific and scholarly literature insist on the importance of peer review

Page 5: Open Access Greater Impact for Minority Health & Health Equity Research Office of Scholarly Communication and Publishing University Library System University.

OA is compatible with . . .

• Copyright• Peer review• Revenue (even

profit)• Print• Preservation• Prestige

• Quality• Career

advancement• Indexing• And other features

and supportive services associated with conventional scholarly literature

Page 6: Open Access Greater Impact for Minority Health & Health Equity Research Office of Scholarly Communication and Publishing University Library System University.

Open Access is not . . .

• Open Source—applies to computer software

• Open Content—applies to non-scholarly content

• Open Data—a movement to support sharing of research data (see data.gov)

• Free Access—no charge to access, but all rights may be reserved

Page 7: Open Access Greater Impact for Minority Health & Health Equity Research Office of Scholarly Communication and Publishing University Library System University.

Growth in scholarly publishing• Est. 50 million scholarly research articles

published 1665-2009

• @1.4 million articles per year (2006 est.)—one every 22 seconds!

• Average number of science articles per journal increased by >47% from 1990 to 2009(Times Higher Education, 8 July 2010)

• Number of scientific articles indexed by ISI was 590,841 in 1990 and 1,015,637 in 2009 – a rise of 72% 1990-2009

Page 8: Open Access Greater Impact for Minority Health & Health Equity Research Office of Scholarly Communication and Publishing University Library System University.

Concentration of ownership• Nearly 50% of the content of the merged ISI

Indexes consists of titles from 5 major publishers—– Elsevier– Wiley– Springer– Taylor & Francis– Sage

• Top 3 publishers of science journals (Elsevier, Springer-Kluwer, Wiley-Blackwell) accounted for @ 42% of articles published (2002)

• There were over 2,000 publishers of academic journals; no other publisher accounted for >3% of market share (2002)

Page 9: Open Access Greater Impact for Minority Health & Health Equity Research Office of Scholarly Communication and Publishing University Library System University.

1985 1990 1995 2000 2005 2010 20150

100

200

300

400

500

600

biology

chemistry

engineering & tech

general science

math & comp sci

physics

CPI (general inflation)

ARL expenditures, all serials

year

% c

ha

ng

e s

ince

19

90

Crisis in scholarly journal pricing

Bill Hooker, April 2009. Data sources: Library Journal Annual Serials Price Surveys, Association of Research Libraries, US Dept. of Labor

Page 10: Open Access Greater Impact for Minority Health & Health Equity Research Office of Scholarly Communication and Publishing University Library System University.
Page 11: Open Access Greater Impact for Minority Health & Health Equity Research Office of Scholarly Communication and Publishing University Library System University.

Open Access—Origins

• Crisis in scholarly communication/publishing– Flat to declining collections budgets– More demand for newer, expensive

resources– Greatly increased pricing for serials,

electronic resources• Rise of Internet and Worldwide Web

– Rapid dissemination of new research– Better connectivity between scholars

Page 12: Open Access Greater Impact for Minority Health & Health Equity Research Office of Scholarly Communication and Publishing University Library System University.

OA History—Early Days• Late 1960s/early 1970s

– ERIC, Medline, and Agricola created; ARPANET launched

• 1971– Project Gutenberg formed

• 1991-1994– ArXiv, mp_arc (Mathematical Physics Preprint Archive),

Project Bartleby, Perseus Project, et al., launched

• 1994– Digital Libraries Initiative launched by National Science

Foundation; Social Sciences Research Network (SSRN) launched

• 1996– Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations,

Internet Archive created

Page 13: Open Access Greater Impact for Minority Health & Health Equity Research Office of Scholarly Communication and Publishing University Library System University.

OA History—Early 2000s

• 2000-2003: Tools– PubMed Central launched– First Creative Commons licenses released– Directory of Open Access Journals launched

• 2000-2003: Declarations– Tempe Principles for Emerging Scholarly Publishing– UN Economic and Social Council calls for “universal access to

knowledge and information”– Budapest Open Access Initiative– Bethesda Statement on Open Access Publishing– Berlin Declaration on Open Access to Knowledge in the Sciences

and Humanities

Page 14: Open Access Greater Impact for Minority Health & Health Equity Research Office of Scholarly Communication and Publishing University Library System University.

OA History—Late 2000s

• 2005– NIH Public Access Policy goes into effect: Scientists

receiving NIH grants are asked to deposit in PubMed Central on a voluntary basis

– Wellcome Trust implements Open Access mandate for Wellcome-funded research

– Columbia University, University of Kansas, and Case Western Reserve, adopt statements in support of OA

• 2008– Federal mandate takes effect requiring OA for NIH-funded

research through deposit in PubMed Central– Harvard mandates OA deposit of faculty scholarly works

• 2009– MIT mandates OA deposit of faculty scholarly works

Page 15: Open Access Greater Impact for Minority Health & Health Equity Research Office of Scholarly Communication and Publishing University Library System University.

OA Today

• Over 150 universities around the world mandate Open Access deposits of faculty works

• Directory of Open Access Journals (DOAJ)– lists 7,327 OA journals in 117 countries

– http://www.doaj.org (December 2011)

• Directory of Open Access Repositories (OpenDOAR) – lists 2,161 open archives in 98 countries

– http://www.opendoar.org (December 2011)

Page 16: Open Access Greater Impact for Minority Health & Health Equity Research Office of Scholarly Communication and Publishing University Library System University.

OA@Pitt—History• 2000

– Pitt is signatory to Tempe Principles• 2001

– Electronic Theses and Dissertations (ETDs) begin

– PhilSci-Archive launched for rapid OA dissemination of new research in philosophy of science; “The Pittsburgh Archive”)

• 2002– Pitt is signatory to Budapest Open Access

Initiative– School of Engineering requires deposit of

ETDs in advance of University-wide mandate

Page 17: Open Access Greater Impact for Minority Health & Health Equity Research Office of Scholarly Communication and Publishing University Library System University.

OA@Pitt—History• 2003

– Archive of European Integration created• 2004

– ETDs mandated for all programs with a thesis requirement

– Minority Health Archive launched• 2007

– University of Pittsburgh Press begins working with ULS to provide OA to 500 books on Press backlist

– ULS journal publishing program begins, moving existing print journals to electronic

Page 18: Open Access Greater Impact for Minority Health & Health Equity Research Office of Scholarly Communication and Publishing University Library System University.

OA@Pitt—History • 2008

– ULS published its first e-only Open Access journal, International Journal of Telerehabilitation

• 2009– Senate Plenary Session on Open Access held– D-Scholarship@Pitt institutional repository

launched at Plenary session– Open Access Task Force formed– OA journal publishing increases to 8 titles

Page 19: Open Access Greater Impact for Minority Health & Health Equity Research Office of Scholarly Communication and Publishing University Library System University.

OA@Pitt—Today

• 27 Open Access journals now published with more pending; nearly all are peer-reviewed

• ULS Publications Advisory Board formed

• MHHEA contains more than 2,100 items

• 5 author self-archiving repositories with more planned

• D-Scholarship contains nearly 7,000 items

• Over 750 OA book titles through Press Digital Editions

• Over 4,200 ETDs, migrated to D-Scholarship in November 2011

• Proposed Open Access mandate

Page 20: Open Access Greater Impact for Minority Health & Health Equity Research Office of Scholarly Communication and Publishing University Library System University.

FY2000 FY2001 FY2002 FY2003 FY2004 FY2005 FY2006 FY2007 FY2008 FY2009 FY2010 FY2011 -

5,000

10,000

15,000

20,000

25,000

30,000

35,000

40,000

Total number of documentsin ULS e-publications FY2000-FY2011

Page 21: Open Access Greater Impact for Minority Health & Health Equity Research Office of Scholarly Communication and Publishing University Library System University.

FY2000 FY2001 FY2002 FY2003 FY2004 FY2005 FY2006 FY2007 FY2008 FY2009 FY2010 FY2011 -

2 2 3 5 5 5 5 5 6 6 7

-

- - -

- - - 2 3

4

9

27

Open Access Archives E-Journals

Growth in the number ofULS E-Publications

Page 22: Open Access Greater Impact for Minority Health & Health Equity Research Office of Scholarly Communication and Publishing University Library System University.

ULS Journal Publishing Goals

• Propel scholarship at the University of Pittsburgh

• Extend service beyond the home institution

• Save ‘at-risk’ journals without the infrastructure or know-how to go electronic

• Incentivize Open Access publishing worldwide

Page 23: Open Access Greater Impact for Minority Health & Health Equity Research Office of Scholarly Communication and Publishing University Library System University.

Collaboration with University of Pittsburgh Press

• 750+ University of Pittsburgh Press titles freely available through Press Digital Editions

• Co-sponsor for all peer-reviewed journals published by the ULS

• Director Cynthia Miller a member of ULS Publications Advisory Board

Page 24: Open Access Greater Impact for Minority Health & Health Equity Research Office of Scholarly Communication and Publishing University Library System University.

Why Open Access?• Greater access

– More scholars view and read work– Extends the global reach of research– Reduces or eliminates price/permission barriers of

subscription journals

• More progress– Promotes speed, productivity, and knowledge translation– Allows authors to share research for the public good, not

only with colleagues at the University of Pittsburgh but around the world

• Long-term preservation in a trusted repository

• Greater impact

Page 25: Open Access Greater Impact for Minority Health & Health Equity Research Office of Scholarly Communication and Publishing University Library System University.

OA and Its Impact

• Get your work noticed, used, and cited• Make your work available while ideas

are fresh and new• Share your work with colleagues and

students• Publish other scholarly works (books,

articles)• Index in Google, Google Scholar,

OAIster, and other Internet search tools

Page 26: Open Access Greater Impact for Minority Health & Health Equity Research Office of Scholarly Communication and Publishing University Library System University.

Example—ETD

Abdullah, Fawaz Mohammad. “Lean Manufacturing Tools and Techniques in the Process Industry with a Focus on Steel.” Ph.D. diss., University of Pittsburgh, 2003.

– Deposited in Pitt ETD database May 2003

– Downloads to date: 101,606

Page 27: Open Access Greater Impact for Minority Health & Health Equity Research Office of Scholarly Communication and Publishing University Library System University.

Example—New Research

Abbott, Russ. “The Reductionist Blind Spot.” Complexity 14 (2009): 10-22.

– Pre-print deposited in PhilSci-Archive March 2009.

– Downloads of pre-print to date: 19,413

– Origin of top downloads: US, UK, Germany, France

Page 28: Open Access Greater Impact for Minority Health & Health Equity Research Office of Scholarly Communication and Publishing University Library System University.

Example—Faculty Research

Cox, Richard J. “Digital Curation and the Citizen Archivist.” Published in Digital Curation: Practice, Promises & Prospects: Proceedings of DigCCurr 2009, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, April 1-3, 2009.

– Pre-print deposited May 2009

– Downloads to date: 1,105

Page 29: Open Access Greater Impact for Minority Health & Health Equity Research Office of Scholarly Communication and Publishing University Library System University.

Tools for Open Access

• Creative Commons licensing• SPARC Author Addendum• Sherpa RoMEO• Minority Health & Health Equity

Archive

Page 30: Open Access Greater Impact for Minority Health & Health Equity Research Office of Scholarly Communication and Publishing University Library System University.

Creative Commons Licensing

• Open Access alternative to “ALL RIGHTS RESERVED”

• Standard licenses that make it easy for authors to share their work with some rights reserved

• Allows authors to choose the terms of future use that balance between Open Access and protection of the author’s interests

Page 31: Open Access Greater Impact for Minority Health & Health Equity Research Office of Scholarly Communication and Publishing University Library System University.

Creative Commons:Licensing Terms

• Attribution (BY) – must credit the author

• No Derivatives (ND) – may reuse the work, but only unaltered from the original

• Noncommercial (NC) – may not use for commercial purposes

• ShareAlike (SA) – allows derivative works, but requires the same CC license terms be applied to any derivative works

Page 32: Open Access Greater Impact for Minority Health & Health Equity Research Office of Scholarly Communication and Publishing University Library System University.

Creative Commons: The 6 licenses

Attribution (CC BY)

Attribution-ShareAlike (CC BY-SA)

Attribution-NoDerivatives (CC BY-ND)

Attribution-NonCommercial (CC BY-NC)

Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike (CC BY-NC-SA)

Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs(CC BY-NC-ND)

Page 33: Open Access Greater Impact for Minority Health & Health Equity Research Office of Scholarly Communication and Publishing University Library System University.

SPARC Author Addendum

• Under traditional agreements, all rights—including copyright—go to the publisher

• Author Addendum—Legal instrument that modifies publisher agreement allowing you to retain certain rights, e.g., copying for classes, sharing with colleagues, placing on webpages or in repositories, et al.

– http://www.arl.org/sparc/author/

• Offers an alternative to the “all or nothing” publisher agreement in which you may sign away these rights

Page 34: Open Access Greater Impact for Minority Health & Health Equity Research Office of Scholarly Communication and Publishing University Library System University.

Sherpa RoMEO

• Searchable database of publisher's policies on self- archiving of journal articles on the Web and in OA repositories

• Helps clarify whether authors can self-archive and under what circumstances

• Developed at University of Nottingham, UK– http://www.sherpa.ac.uk/romeo/

Page 35: Open Access Greater Impact for Minority Health & Health Equity Research Office of Scholarly Communication and Publishing University Library System University.

Minority Health and Health Equity Archive (MHHEA)• Founded 2004• 2,115 records (as of 12/14/11)• Project under way to add relevant

theses/dissertations• Proposal to add presentations from

UNC Minority Health Project

Page 36: Open Access Greater Impact for Minority Health & Health Equity Research Office of Scholarly Communication and Publishing University Library System University.

MHHEA: Research accepted

• Research papers, published or unpublished

• Articles (pre-prints, post-prints)• Books, chapters, sections• Conference/workshop

papers/presentations• Monographs, reports• Multimedia (audio, video, images)• Compositions, performances, exhibitions• Research data• Electronic theses and dissertations

Page 37: Open Access Greater Impact for Minority Health & Health Equity Research Office of Scholarly Communication and Publishing University Library System University.

MHHEA: Not Accepted

• Learning or instructional objects• Student portfolios• Student records• Institutional records• Medical records

Page 38: Open Access Greater Impact for Minority Health & Health Equity Research Office of Scholarly Communication and Publishing University Library System University.

MHHEA: Content

• Content is reviewed for appropriateness to repository policies but is not peer-reviewed

• Peer-reviewed content may be deposited, per copyright and publishers’ guidelines

Page 39: Open Access Greater Impact for Minority Health & Health Equity Research Office of Scholarly Communication and Publishing University Library System University.

MHHEA: Formats accepted

• Word documents• Text files• PDFs• HTML• PowerPoints

• Audio

• Images• Video • XML• Datasets• Archival • And more

Page 40: Open Access Greater Impact for Minority Health & Health Equity Research Office of Scholarly Communication and Publishing University Library System University.

MHHEA: Materials

• Materials can be organized by– Subject

– Type

– Year

– Conference

– Other possibilities?

Page 41: Open Access Greater Impact for Minority Health & Health Equity Research Office of Scholarly Communication and Publishing University Library System University.

MHHEA: Discoverability

• Indexed by – Google Scholar, Google, Internet search

engines

– OpenDOAR: The Directory of Open Access Repositories

– OCLC WorldCat

– Open Archives Initiative harvesters (OAIster, Pennsylvania Digital Library, et al.)

Page 42: Open Access Greater Impact for Minority Health & Health Equity Research Office of Scholarly Communication and Publishing University Library System University.

Be informed

• Open Access at Pitt– Visit http://openaccess.pitt.edu

• MHHEA website– http://minority-health.pitt.edu

• Open Access Week worldwide– Visit http://www.openaccessweek.org

Page 43: Open Access Greater Impact for Minority Health & Health Equity Research Office of Scholarly Communication and Publishing University Library System University.

Contact us

ULS Office of Scholarly Communication and Publishing• Tim Deliyannides, Director

• John Barnett, Scholarly Communications Librarian

• Vanessa Gabler, Electronic Publications Associate

[email protected]


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