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Published byMadison Walker Modified over 8 years ago
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Digital Commons digitalcommons.unl.edu
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Digital Commons is: an “institutional repository” (IR) a resource for scholarly communication an opportunity for electronic publishing
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What does it contain? published articles, reports, essays, books, reviews conference presentations, papers, and proceedings theses and dissertations unpublished working papers teaching materials (“learning objects”) electronic journals department records and archives
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The “institutional repository” (IR) receives and archives one electronic copy preserves this copy permanently in the UNL Libraries collections migrates the data as formats evolve provides and controls electronic access creates a stable URL with a unl.edu address
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Scholarly Communication supports collaboration among UNL faculty and with sources outside the University establishes sites to disseminate UNL research and build communities of engaged researchers in a particular area. provides a central searchable repository for otherwise scattered information
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Electronic Publishing places scholarly publication tools directly in the hands of the faculty each publication “series” is controlled by its own editorial board or administrator no limits on article length or number, size, or colors of illustrations access can be open or restricted to a subscription list
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Applications UNL units can archive electronic records and documents Scholars can share materials among a restricted group Faculty can publish their work electronically on the Internet Library can build and manage digital collections
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Benefits to scholars: Your work becomes accessible immediately, 24/7, worldwide becomes visible to common search engines (such as Google) gets viewed and cited more frequently can attract collaborators or supporters is identified with your name and date of submission is collected in one place has a permanent home
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Who controls the copyright ? the author or author-entity the party to whom copyright may have been sold or licensed by the author not the library not the university (unless by separate agreement)
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Rights to published works 92% of journals allow pre-publication posting to an IR 60% of journals allow post-publication posting most publishers will grant permission to authors for deposit in their home institution’s repository
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Publishers who allow some form of self-archiving: American Economics Association American Institute of Physics American Mathematical Society American Psychological Association Am. Soc. of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology American Society of Plant Biologists Annual Reviews Arnold Publishers BioMed Central Biophysical Society Blackwell BMJ Publishing Group CAB International Cambridge University Press Ecological Society of America Elsevier Geological Society IEEE John Wiley Johns Hopkins University Press Kluwer National Academy of Sciences Nature Publishing Group Oxford University Press Royal Society Sage Springer Verlag Taylor & Francis See http://www.sherpa.ac.uk/index.htmlhttp://www.sherpa.ac.uk/index.html
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What the IR wants: CONTENT all of your published articles, or as many as you can muster conference papers, presentations, speeches, interviews, etc. U.S. patents working papers, field notes,... works in submission honors theses or projects updated data-sets or addenda
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“Article” page structure
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Site structure
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Site structure rules a community can contain another community or a series a series can only contain articles; a series cannot contain another series each article must be contained in a series; a community cannot contain an article (directly) The top 2 levels appear in the “front directory”
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A “community” can be a: college school department program laboratory institute center publication collection other
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Access to work can be: open to the public restricted to a subscription list completely restricted (i.e., not available, but archived for safe-keeping)
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How do I get started ? 1. Establish a “series” (1-page questionaire) or identify an existing one 2. Log in to register and receive a password at http://digitalcommons.unl.edu/cgi/myaccount.cgi http://digitalcommons.unl.edu/cgi/myaccount.cgi 3. Begin uploading files Submitting an article takes less than 2 minutes.
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To establish a “series” 1. Decide its affiliation or sponsoring “community” (department, school, college, etc.) 2. Give the series a name 3. Recruit or volunteer the series administrator(s) 4. Decide who may view materials 5. Email the information to proyster@unl.edu proyster@unl.edu
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Costs There are no costs to the publishing unit. Hardware, set-up, programming, maintenance, and support costs are paid by the UNL Libraries.
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Additional services peer-reviewing software masthead and home page design page design and layout templates monthly usage and linkage reports by email subscription marketing and accounting services through bepress.com (fees are based on a portion of the income)
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Other benefits: context sensitive searching (e.g., search this series vs. search the entire collection) saved searches and email notification of new matches generation and export of bibliographies email notification of new content support for non-static resources (sound, video, data sets, hypertext, executables)
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Contact Paul Royster Coordinator of Scholarly Communications UNL Libraries 306 Love Library 402 472-3628 email: proyster@unl.eduproyster@unl.edu site: http://digitalcommons.unl.edu/http://digitalcommons.unl.edu/
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