Daniela Nastasie, PhD BEng(Hons) AALIA Senior Metadata Librarian Repository and Archive Metadata Services UniSA Library Open Access Publishing and UniSA.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Partnering with Faculty / researchers to Enhance Scholarly Communication Caroline Mutwiri.
Advertisements

Repositories, Learned Societies and Research Funders Stephen Pinfield University of Nottingham.
Why self-archive? Elizabeth Harbord Head of Collection Management.
Practical Issues for Institutional Repositories Bill Hubbard SHERPA Project Manager University of Nottingham.
Enlighten: Glasgows Universitys online institutional repository Morag Greig University Library.
Making Your Research Open Access: What you need to know National Biomedical Research Unit in Hearing 15 th November 2010 Willow Fuchs Centre for Research.
Nancy Pontika, PhD Open Access Adviser Repositories Support Project (RSP) Center for Research Communications (CRC) University of Nottingham
Learning Services. edgehill.ac.uk/ls Zoe Clarke and Yvonne Smith The Digital Researcher: Trends in Open Access Publishing.
Hannah Payne Repository Support Officer.  Budapest Open Access Initiative Budapest Open Access Initiative ◦ ‘the free availability of material on the.
Open Stirling: Open Access Publishing and Research Data Management at Stirling Monday 25 th March 2013 Michael White, Information Services STORRE Co-Manager/RMS.
Mark Toole 25 March “the principle that the results of research that has been publicly funded should be freely accessible in the open domain is.
Welsh Repository Network (WRN).  Introduce repositories and their role within institutions  Explore the benefits of an institutional repository to its.
Open Access in Summary Amos Kujenga EIFL-FOSS National Coordinator, Zimbabwe Lupane State University, October 2013 Lesotho College.
OPEN ACCESS PUBLISHING Sally Scholfield UTS Library.
SIX THINGS TO KNOW ABOUT THE UC OPEN ACCESS POLICY Christopher Kelty, Associate Professor Institute for Society and Genetics, Dept. of Anthropology, Dept.
Electronic publishing: issues and future trends Anne Bell.
Promoting Open Digital Scholarship - A Canadian Library Perspective Leila Fernandez Rajiv Nariani Marcia Salmon York University Libraries, Canada.
Swansea University 2013 Open Access: a quiet revolution?
CROWDSOURCING OPEN ACCESS WORKFLOWS: INTRODUCING OAWAL Graham Stone University of Huddersfield This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution.
Learn more about Open Access Breakfast meeting at BMC March 30th 2010 Aina Svensson and Karin Meyer Lundén Electronic Publishing Centre, Uppsala University.
OPEN ACCESS 101 WHAT EVERY FACULTY, RESEARCHER, AND STUDENT SHOULD KNOW Yuan Li Scholarly Communications Librarian Princeton University Library.
Journals Full Text Resources Including MedIND. For Scholarly Information We start with Bibliographic Databases having references to journals and other.
Introduction to Open Access Morag Greig, University of Glasgow.
Protecting Your Scholarship: Copyrights, Publication Agreements, and Open Access Harvard University Office for Scholarly Communication May 11, 2009 Kenneth.
UdR, Bogota, agosto Using technology to improve quality in education – 3 Ian Johnson.
USING SHERPA SERVICES Bournemouth University 26 th October 2011 Making Your Research Open Access: Willow Fuchs Centre for Research Communications University.
Belinda Tiffen Director Library Open Access Publishing: What You Need to Know Research Week UTS:
What does the community of scientists “own”?  What do authors own?  What does the scholarly community own?
ARMA 6 th June Costs and payment of open access article processing charges.
ⓒ UNIST LIBRARY UNIST Institutional Repository ⓒ UNIST LIBRARY
UCL LIBRARY SERVICES The work of UNICA in the context of new modes of publication and dissemination Dr Paul Ayris Chair, UNICA Scholarly Communications.
Presented by Ansie van der Westhuizen Unisa Institutional Repository: Sharing knowledge to advance research
Oliver Bridle RSL Amanda Burls Primary Care Ruth Birth Law Library Sally Rumsey Bodleian Bodley’s “Republic of [Open] Letters” W. Horstmann, A. Ptak- Danchak,
An Introduction to Open Access Randall Library October 21, 2014.
Open Access The Lingo, The History, The Basics, and Why Should We Care.
Open access, institutional repositories and UBIR 21 November 2008 – Sarah Taylor Open access, institutional repositories and UBIR The University of Bolton.
Open Access Publishing Nadine Lewycky, Senior Manager, Research Strategy & Planning Chris Biggs, Metadata and Repository Specialist.
Why (and How to) Publish Open Access Elin H. Frøshaug, University of Oslo Library, Digital Services SUM Research School
Scholarly Communications Through Open Access Graduate Student Orientation 2012 Presented by Isabel Silver, Academic and Scholarly Outreach George A. Smathers.
Open Access, What’s Next ? Publishers and Librarians Working Relationship Maurice Kwong BioMedCentral, Asia CONCERT, November 2010, Taipei.
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.
Scholarly Communication, Author Rights, and GT Library Services Julie G. Speer Faculty Advisory Board Meeting April 14, 2009.
Iryna Kuchma eIFL FP7 and ERC Open Access Policies - How to comply The 8th e-Infrastructure Concertation Meeting Nov 5, 2010 CERN - Geneva.
1 ARRO: Anglia Ruskin Research Online Making submissions: Benefits and Process.
RESEARCH Visibility and Reputation -Library assistance- PHD conference, May 26th 2011 Henk van den Hoogen.
Presented by Ansie van der Westhuizen Unisa Institutional Repository: Sharing knowledge to advance research
Open Access - an introduction, Aleppo, December Open Access – an introduction Ian Johnson.
Open Access and Universal Deposit David Fox Librarians Forum May 11, 2009.
AACP Annual Meeting #RxOA #PharmEd14.  What is Open Access?  Spencer D. C. Keralis Research Associate  Institutional Repositories.
Open Access - from a Library perspective Susan Ashworth, University of Glasgow Library.
Open Access & REF202*.  Green OA  Deposit of pre-print or post-print of accepted paper for publishing within a repository.  Gold OA  Published version.
Open Access Tools for Scholars Scholarly Communication Retreat Wednesday December 12, 2007 Presented by Marcia Salmon.
UC Open Access Policy and UC Publication Management System Adrian Petrisor and Mitchell Brown February 12, 2015 Chancellor’s Advisory Council, UC Irvine.
Open Access/ Parallel publishing at the JU What, Why, How? Marja-Leena Harjuniemi JU.
Open Access Initiatives Memorial University Libraries Lisa Goddard Scholarly Communications Librarian April 2011.
Copyright and RoMEO RSP Summer School Jane H Smith Services Development Officer, SHERPA
Jane H Smith RoMEO Lists publishers general policies on self-archiving of pre- prints and post-prints, including publisher.
UCF Libraries - Scholarly Communication Lily Flick & Sarah Norris June 9, 2016 Using SHERPA RoMEO: Finding policies for self-archiving articles.
Unisa Institutional Repository: Sharing knowledge to advance research Presented by Ansie van der Westhuizen.
RoMEO SHERPA Services Development Officer SUETr/ RSP Copyright for Repositories.
Jane H Smith RoMEO Lists publishers general policies on self- archiving From deposit on website, to institutional repositories.
NRF Open Access Statement
Opening access to quality research materials
Institutional Repository and Friends
Education of a scientist video
Find support in.
Submitting to a subscription-based journal
OPEN ACCESS POLICY Larshan Naicker Rhodes University Library
Unlocking the door: Open Access Janet Smith
Presentation transcript:

Daniela Nastasie, PhD BEng(Hons) AALIA Senior Metadata Librarian Repository and Archive Metadata Services UniSA Library Open Access Publishing and UniSA Research Archive

Do not remove this notice. Copyright Notice COMMONWEALTH OF AUSTRALIA Copyright Regulations 1969 WARNING This material has been produced and communicated to you by or on behalf of the University of South Australia pursuant to Part VB of the Copyright Act 1968 (the Act). The material in this communication may be subject to copyright under the Act. Any further reproduction or communication of this material by you may be the subject of copyright protection under the Act. Do not remove this notice.

1.Academic publishing –Academic publishing models –Archiving and publishers’ policies –Open Access publishing 2.Types of OA publishing –Gold OA –Green OA –Mandated OA 3.UniSA Research Archive (URA) –Role in academic publishing cycle –Role in disseminating research Outline 3

Traditional academic publishing Write Peer Review Publish Read Traditional model 4

Emerging academic publishing Write Peer Review Publish Read Institutional repository 5

Types of research publications  PRE-Print POST-Print PUBLISHED Write Peer Review Publish Read 6

Publishers’ archiving policies Database of archiving agreements (publishers/journals) Sherpa RoMEO Sherpa RoMEO ROMEO colourArchiving policy green can archive - pre-print and - post-print or - publisher's version blue can archive - post-print or - publisher's version yellow can archive - pre-print white archiving not formally supported 7

Open Access publishing - access to electronic scholarly publications in such a way that the material is free for all to read, use and reuse Open Access does not mean ‘not peer-reviewed’ Two main types of Open Access: - gold (‘born OA’) - green Some journals allow both (hybrid) 8 Open Access Publishing

9 Gold Open Access Gold OA - ‘born OA’ Copyright - Authors Archiving rights – ROMEO green (+/- embargo period)

Green OA - Open Access versions of non-OA literature Usually POST-Print !!!! Usually archived in institutional repository Cheapest version of academic publishing 10 Green Open Access

11 Hybrid Open Access

Requirements for OA archiving from funding agencies –publications –research data Sherpa Juliet 12 Mandated Open Access Whether to archive: Deposit required free of charge without any access restrictions What to archive: The full final version version or the author's final peer- reviewed version When to archive: When accepted for publication toleration of publishers' embargos negates this

Publication Archiving vs. OA Publishing Policies Sherpa Juliet Sherpa Juliet Statistics

14 Mandated Open Access

For Authors your work can be freely accessed, distributed and cited worldwide greater exposure = more citations For Researchers free online access to research publications not restricted to what your organisation can afford For Universities increased exposure of research activity shared knowledge and innovation 15 Open Access benefits

Archives and provides long term access to deposited content – digital preservation Enhances impact of research by world wide dissemination Increases visibility of research publications (Google, Trove, OAIster) 16 UniSA Research Archive (URA)

17 URA - Access to Resources

18 URA role in disseminating research URA Google Analytics traffic report 01 Jul Jul 2013

URA role in disseminating research

UniSA Library Publishing Research Guide Australian Open Access Support Group (AOASG) OAKList – similar service to Sherpa Romeo, specialising in Australian journals and publishers Useful Links

Thank you!