JUSP - The JISC Journal Usage Statistics Portal Ross MacIntyre, Mimas The University of Manchester

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
COUNTER: improving usage statistics Peter Shepherd Director COUNTER December 2006.
Advertisements

Usage statistics in context - panel discussion on understanding usage, measuring success Peter Shepherd Project Director COUNTER AAP/PSP 9 February 2005.
COUNTER Update Peter Shepherd Project Director COUNTER STM Innovations Seminar, 2 December 2005.
© 2008 EBSCO Information Services SUSHI, COUNTER and ERM Systems An Update on Usage Standards Ressources électroniques dans les bibliothèques électroniques.
Usage Statistics in Context: related standards and tools Oliver Pesch Chief Strategist, E-Resources EBSCO Information Services Usage Statistics and Publishers:
Welcome to informaworld TM. The following demo will show you just a few of the features on informaworld TM. Please select where you would like start. ePublication.
Making numbers count Angela Conyers, Evidence Base, Birmingham City University Jisc Digital Festival, March 2014.
JUSP - The JISC Journal Usage Statistics Portal Ross MacIntyre, Mimas The University of Manchester
Demonstrating value: Using JUSP to analyse, compare and inform Angela Conyers, Evidence Base 21 May 2014.
COUNTER: an overview Peter Shepherd Project Director COUNTER Usage Statistics Training Seminar, Oxford, 9 December 2005.
KB+ Overview Anne Simmons. What we’re going to cover  Introduction to KB+ & it’s Uses  Subscription Information  Licences  Journal Statistics in KB+
The COUNTER Code of Practice for Books and Reference Works Peter Shepherd Project Director COUNTER UKSG E-Books Seminar, 9 November 2005.
Managing e-resources Briefing and Update. Parallel Projects/Shared Services JUSP Entitlement Registry ELCAT.


JUSP: building on success Angela Conyers and Jo Lambert 22 nd July 2013, Northumbria International Conference.
Connecting E-Resource Management Systems and Usage Statistics IFLA ERMS Satellite Meeting Cape Town, South Africa August 16, 2007 Oliver Pesch EBSCO Information.
Challenges for the DL and the Standards to solve them Alan Hopkinson Technical Manager (Library Systems) Learning Resources Middlesex University.
KB+, Licences and Usage Statistics Jonathan McAslan Anne Simmons.
Release 4 of the COUNTER Code of Practice for e- Resources and new usage- based measures of impact Peter Shepherd COUNTER May 2014.
Using JUSP with your own data 10 July 2013 Angela Conyers Evidence Base, Birmingham City University JUSP webinar.
Online Resources From Oxford University Press This presentation gives a brief description of Oxford Journals. It tells you: what the journals are; how.
Getting started on informaworld™ How do I register my institution with informaworld™? How is my institution’s online access activated? What do I do if.
Measurement of use and impact of electronic information services Dr Angela Conyers Evidence Base Birmingham City University
Measuring impact: tools for analysing and benchmarking usage Jo Lambert Library Assessment Conference, Seattle 4 August 2014.
Journal Usage Statistics Portal (JUSP) Adding value and assessing impact through a collaborative approach to service development and delivery Angela Conyers.
JUSP Utilising usage data to assist in decision-making Angela Conyers Evidence Base, Research & Evaluation Birmingham City University.
COUNTER usage statistics: Measuring the benefits of the big deals Angela Conyers Evidence Base, Research & Evaluation Birmingham City University.
The COUNTER Code of Practice -Release 1 Released January 14,

JUSP - The JISC Journal Usage Statistics Portal Ross MacIntyre, Mimas The University of Manchester
COUNTER: a practical approach to measuring online usage Peter Shepherd Project Director COUNTER ALA, Chicago, 27 June 2005.
COUNTER and the development of meaningful measures Peter Shepherd Project Director COUNTER IFLA, Oslo, 18 August 2005.
JISC Journal Usage Statistics Portal A simpler way to measure use and impact.

JUSP: Getting to grips with your usage statistics Paul Meehan & Anne Reed - Jisc / Mimas.
Where's the evidence? The role of usage statistics in collection management Angela Conyers Evidence Base, Research & Evaluation Birmingham City University.
How JUSP can help Angela Conyers Evidence Base. What to do with the JR1 Select any time period you like Sort alphabetically by title Sort by total number.

Primary funding is provided by the JISC and ESRC. Based at Manchester Computing, The University of Manchester. 1 1 Getting Technical - Linking UKSG Serial.
1 Jo Lambert and Paul Meehan. JUSP aims Supports libraries by providing a single point of access to e-journal usage data Assists management of e- journals.
Using JUSP to help with the SCONUL return Angela Conyers Evidence Base
Building on sand? Using statistical measures to assess the impact of electronic services Dr Angela Conyers evidence base research & evaluation UCE Library.
Using JUSP to help with the SCONUL return Angela Conyers Evidence Base, Birmingham City University.
"How much?": Aggregating usage data from Repositories in the UK Jo Lambert, Ross Macintyre, Paul Needham, Jo Alcock OR2015.
Primary funding is provided by the JISC and ESRC. Based at Manchester Computing, The University of Manchester. 1 1 Getting Technical - Linking UKSG Serials.
Licensing Evolution ICOLC October 2006 – Rome Lorraine Estelle.
Primary funding is provided by the JISC and ESRC. Based at Manchester Computing, The University of Manchester. 1 1 Getting Technical - Linking UKSG Serial.
The Journal Usage Statistics Portal (JUSP)
Primary funding is provided by the JISC and ESRC. Based at Manchester Computing, The University of Manchester. 1 1 Getting Technical - Linking UKSG Serial.
Some ideas for using JUSP Angela Conyers Evidence Base.

COUNTER/UKSG webinar COUNTER FOR PUBLISHERS Lorraine Estelle, COUNTER Stuart Maxwell, Scholarly iQ.
The JISC Usage Statistics Portal Ross MacIntyre, Mimas The University of Manchester.
Ross MacIntyre MIMAS The University of Manchester
JUSP - The JISC Journal Usage Statistics Portal
The Journal Usage Statistics Portal (JUSP)
How can EBSCO help in the collection of resource usage data for CAUL?
JUSP - The JISC Journal Usage Statistics Portal
Vendor-Supplied Usage Data: Challenges and Opportunities
London – 11th June 2015 (afternoon – part 2)
London – 11th June 2015 (afternoon – part 1)
The JISC Journal Usage Statistics Portal (JUSP)
JISC Journal Usage Statistics Portal
COUNTER Update February 2006.
Journal Usage Statistics Portal (JUSP): a simpler way to measure use and impact
The Journal Usage Statistics Portal (JUSP)
Journal Usage Statistics Portal (JUSP): a simpler way to measure use and impact
JUSP: Getting to grips with your usage statistics
Angela Conyers Evidence Base
Presentation transcript:

JUSP - The JISC Journal Usage Statistics Portal Ross MacIntyre, Mimas The University of Manchester

Consistent, Credible & Compatible Usage Statistics Code of Practice for: –Data elements to be measured –Definitions of these data elements –Output report formats/delivery/frequency/granularity –Methods for measurement and use AAP, ALPSP, ARL, ASA, EDItEUR, JISC, NCLIS, NISO, PA, STM, UKSG

> 225 member organisations Code of Practice Journals & Databases –Release 3 from September 2009 –100 vendors/products compliant (in part) –Auditing standards & procedures –XML DTD for Usage Reports Code of Practice eBooks & eReference –Published March 2006 –10 vendors/products compliant (in part) JR1 = Number of Successful Full-Text Article Requests by Month and Journal JR1a = Number of Successful Full-Text Article Requests by Month and Journal for a Journal Archive JR2 = Turnaways by Month and Journal JR3 = Number of Successful Item Requests and Turnaways by Month, Journal and Page Type JR4 = Total Searches Run by Month and Service JR5 = Number of Successful Full-Text Article Requests by Year and Journal DB1 = Total Searches and Sessions by Month and Database DB2 = Turnaways by Month and Database DB3 = Total Searches and Sessions by Month and Service

Timeline 1998 Nesli 2002 COUNTER* 2003 *J&Db[R1] 2004 Evidence Base report: ‘Nesli2 Analysis of Usage Statistics’ 2005 *J&Db[R2] 2006 Key Perspectives report: ’Usage Statistics Service Feasibility Study’ 2007 Content Complete report: ‘JUSP Scoping Study’ 2008 JISC ITT: ‘JUSP Scoping Study 2’ *J&Db[R3] 2009 JUSP Report 2010 April JISC fund JUSP to service

Mission to assist and support libraries in the analysis of NESLi2 usage statistics and the management of their e-journals collections. 20 NESLi2 e-journal deals/Publishers 132 HEIs taking up NESLi2 deals 3 Intermediaries (gateway/host)

Technical – entity relationships PublisherAggregator Institution Journal Has Agreement PublishesSupplies Access ISSN 'hits' Users

Platforms Journals The database v0.4 Institutions Statistics DealsSuppliers Relationships key: One to many Many to many

The database v0.4 Supplier Table Supplier ID Name Type ContactName JobTitle Address Postcode Phone Fax Statistics Table Journal ID Institution ID Publisher ID Supplier ID Platform ID Type YYYYMM Accesses Platform Table Platform ID Name Journal Table Journal ID Title AltTitle ISSN eISSN Subjects Source Institution Table Institution ID Name Type LoginID ContactName JobTitle Address Postcode Phone Fax JISCBand Deal_Details Deal ID YYYY Journal ID Deals_Summary Deal ID Publisher ID Title Relationships key: One to many Many to many

Technical – conversion from.xls

Technical – conversion to.xml

DEMO of JUSPLink to JUSP Prototype

1. Single point of access to all JR1 and JR1A usage statistics as currently downloaded individually from publisher websites User informational text From this page, you can download JR1 and JR1A (archive) reports. You can select data ‘from’ & ‘to’ Interface shows Report – drop down list (JR1 (all), JR1A (archive only) Publisher – drop down list Date Span – from Month & Year – to Month & Year

2. Addition of host/gateway JR1 statistics where relevant User informational text To get a full picture of usage you may need to add usage statistics provided by other services such as Swetswise. This will depend on the publisher. Select publisher and date range to download JR1 reports with Ingenta, Swetswise, Ebsco EJS etc included where appropriate. Interface shows Report – drop down list (JR1 (all)) Publisher – drop down list Date From (m/y) & To (m/y)

3. Excluding usage of backfile collections User informational text JR1 reports include all usage. Some publishers also produce JR1A reports which give only usage of their archive or backfile collections. If you have access to these, you can download here reports that exclude backfile use and show only usage of current titles. Interface shows Publisher – drop down list Date From (m/y) & To (m/y) Data processing notes Titles in JR1 and JR1A matched by ISSN. JR1A usage subtracted from JR1.

4. SCONUL Return (Society of College, National and University Libraries) User informational text Use this data for SCONUL return, which requires total use by Publishers by Academic Year. These tables are used to look at usage trends over time, and to compare usage of the various publisher deals. Interface shows Publisher – drop down list Academic year

5. Summary table to show use of host/gateways User informational text Use this table to see how much of your total usage goes through intermediaries, e.g. Ingenta and Swetswise Interface shows Publisher – drop down list Calendar Year(s) Data processing notes Separate columns for publisher, gateway, host and total. JR1 usage shown in each. Percentage use from each source calculated.

6. Summary table to show use of backfiles User informational text Use this table to see how much of your total usage comes from backfiles Interface shows Publisher – drop down list Calendar Year(s) Data processing notes JR1 total including intermediaries. Shows percentage of total JR1 usage that comes from JR1A.

7. ‘Some more figures’ [sic] User informational text Find the average, median, (monthly) maximum number of requests, standard deviation and variance. Interface shows Publisher – drop down list Calendar year(s)

8. Which titles have the highest use? User informational text Find the (20) titles which have the highest use Interface shows Publisher – drop down list Calendar year(s) Display (20) titles with the highest usage, including publisher, title, issn, no. of requests (descending order).

9. Tables and graphs User informational text See your monthly or annual usage over time as a chart Interface shows Publisher – drop down list Calendar years Data processing notes Show table of monthly totals for each year Draw line graph

10. Benchmarking User informational text Compare usage with others in the same JISC band Interface shows Publisher – drop down list Calendar year(s) JISC Band (‘A’-’J’ & ‘All’) Data processing notes Give total for all libraries in the JISC band and average.

Usage Statistics Portal: Benchmarking functionality 76 Institutions responded to our short survey in reference to the usage statistics portal (benchmarking functionality). Our findings are as detailed below. Question 1: How useful would it be for you to benchmark your institution’s journal usage for each individual NESLi2 publisher against that of other HE institutions? (76 responses) 38 / 76 (50%) = Very useful 36 / 76 (47.4%) = Somewhat useful 2 / 76 (2.6%) = Not useful JISC Collections Benchmarking Survey – March 2010

Question 5. Regarding questions 2-4 above, please indicate which would be your preferred choice regarding benchmarking (74 responses) 37 / 74 (50%) = Named institution 23 / 74 (31.1%) = Listed anonymously (same JISC band) 14 / 74 (18.9%) = Average usage by institutions in the same JISC Band

Questions 10: Regarding questions 7-9 above, which would be your preferred choice? (74 responses) 37 / 74 (50%) = Being anonymised within my JISC Band 30 / 74 (40.5%) = Other institutions being able to see my institution's name 7 / 74 (9.5%) = Being part of an average figure for the Band I am in

Question 6. Is there any other benchmarking criteria you would like to see? Same ‘mission group’ Select our own particular subset of named institutions Similar size and structure Usage, spend and budget for resources Cost per download & cost per FTE - Student and Staff at department / subject level SCONUL divisions (RLUK, old, new, collHE) and by area Scotland / Wales would also be useful Trend over a period of years

Question 11: Please add any additional comments you would like to make If OK with the licence then comparing named institutions would be best/ Happy to be named if all institutions are named Averages are not helpful unless accompanied by other institutional data. Anonymised usage figures would be more useful Institutions within the same JISC Band can vary widely (e.g. do they have a medical school, do they still have a chemistry dept) so you really need the institution name to give any sort of useful benchmarking. Pulling data like FTE and RAE would save us all from having to do that ourselves. Would be useful for NESLi2, however the majority of our deals are outside NESLi2

Participation Agreement - Library 3.PERMITTED USES/ACTIVITIES 3.1The Institution hereby agrees to: permit the Consortium to include its COUNTER-compliant Usage Statistics in the database created for the Journal Usage Statistics Portal Service; permit the Consortium to display the COUNTER-compliant Usage Statistics via the Journal Statistics Portal Service; permit the Consortium to show the COUNTER-compliant Usage Statistics to other participating libraries in the Journal Usage Statistics Portal Service for benchmarking purposes; and be identified in the Journal Usage Statistics Portal Service by: (1) institutional name; (2) JISC Band and (3) institutional group.

Participation Agreement - Library 4.RESPONSIBILITIES OF THE CONSORTIUM 4.1The Consortium agrees to: only provide access to any COUNTER-compliant Usage Statistics collected by the Consortium to authorized users from other participating institutions in the Journal Usage Statistics Portal Service and the Consortium partners; use authentication for access to the Journal Usage Statistics Portal Service; and permit JISC Collections to use the COUNTER-compliant Usage Statistics in the Journal Usage Statistics Portal Service database for negotiation purposes with publishers within the framework of NESLi2.

Participation Agreement – Publisher/Intermediary 3.PERMITTED USES/ACTIVITIES 3.1The Publisher hereby agrees to: provide the Consortium with the COUNTER Usage Statistics of the Institutions, including by using the SUSHI Protocol; 3.1.2permit the Consortium to include the collected COUNTER- compliant Usage Statistics in the database created for the JISC Journals Statistics Portal Project; 3.1.4permit the Consortium to show all COUNTER-compliant Usage Statistics to any NESLi2-eligible Institutions for their own usage assessment and for benchmarking their own usage against that of other Institutions; permit the Institutions to use the information in the JISC Journals Statistics Portal for their SCONUL returns and any other uses agreed between the Publisher and the Consortium; provide the Consortium with usage statistics which are in compliance with the latest COUNTER guidelines; and implement the SUSHI Protocol.

Additional Identified Requirements 11.Getting price information for journals. Download list price of journals as supplied on the publishers website 12.Adding price information for journal lists. See your annual usage with information on list price for each journal 13.‘What titles are in the deal?’ 14.Adding deal information to journal lists. 15.Showing usage/non-usage of titles listed in the deal and titles not listed. 16.Summary table showing usage/non-usage of titles listed in the deal and not listed in the deal. 17.Summary table showing average and median use of titles listed in the deal and titles not listed. 18.Download area 1. Cost per request. 19.Download area 2. Usage of subscribed titles (tabular data) 20.Download area 3. Charts and graphs.

Issues SUSHI – rare indeed! Upload of publisher price lists – lack of machine-readable sources (maybe ONIX Serials – SPS?) Authority files to populate the Journal and Supplier tables Subject categorisation of journals

September 24th, 2010 Cooperative Statistics Server ReDI-HeBIS45

‘To Do’ List Production service Scaling up, more libraries, more publishers Further development of database Further exploration of ‘added value’ services e.g. adding price, subject information, dealing with title changes, publisher transfers etc Further assistance to libraries in analysing own usage Benchmarking COUNTER for eBooks Access Management Refinement

Nicole’s Access Recommendation JISC Collections should define an eduPersonEntitlement, this should be in the form of a URL, and the URL should resolve to a page describing the scope of the entitlement. So something like: with text explaining that this entitlement should be used by JISC Collections Members and Affiliate Members and applied to the accounts of users within the organisation that are authorised to sign JISC Collections sub-license forms on behalf of the organisation. The Member organisations are responsible for effectively assigning and revocating this Entitlement to appropriate members of staff

JISCMail Discussion Institutions fall broadly in to three groups: 1.able to populate entitlements and have IDM processes to request and revocate; 2.able to populate but do not have well defined IDM processes to request and revocate; 3.not capable of managing this process at the moment.

Final Observations Open Source – available to institutions or other consortia Complementary not in competition with licensed software offerings

Q&A This artwork by ADA+Neagoe, originally published in Omagiu Magazine.ADA+NeagoeOmagiu

Q&A * With Apologies to CBS TV show “How I Met Your Mother.”