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Office of Scientific and Technical Information
Brian Hitson Associate Director Office of Scientific and Technical Information U.S. Department of Energy Introduction Opening Remarks
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What is “Grey” Wikipedia: “…a body of materials that cannot be found easily through conventional channels such as publishers…” “ information that is not searchable or accessible through conventional search engines or subject directories and is not generally produced by commercial publishing organisations.” (National Library of Australia) Webster’s Dictionary: “An achromatic colour between the extremes of black and white.” Defining grey literature - examples
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“Between the extremes of black and white”
published journals books professional society conference proceedings preprints e-prints technical reports lectures numeric data sets audio/visual media blogs fora, etc. ideas concepts thought Grey literature also used to describe “deep web”. Grey = Deep
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Two Key Challenges of the “Deep”
1. What you don’t know can hurt you (or, at least, it could help you). Challenges of grey literature. Expand on: storage/preservation issues, accessibility, and exponential growth
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Two Key Challenges of the “Deep”
2. Time = money and delayed progress. Challenges of grey literature. Expand on: storage/preservation issues, accessibility, and exponential growth
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Overcoming Challenges of the “Deep” First Deep Web Search Engine:
Deep Web Databases Surface Web Federated search drills down to the deep web where scientific databases reside How federated searching enables better access to grey literature First Deep Web Search Engine: Science.gov
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Prominent Deep Web Search Engines
Science.gov ScienceAccelerator.gov E-print Network Science Conference Proceedings Federal R&D Project Summaries
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WorldWideScience.org – makes grey literature from around the world available
Background/history of WWS.
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WorldWideScience.org Databases/Portals
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WorldWideScience.org History
Concept introduced by OSTI Director, Walt Warnick, June 2006, Bethesda, Maryland Bilateral U.S.(DOE)/ U.K. (British Library) partnership, January 2007, London More background/history, and current status
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WorldWideScience.org History Continued
Demonstration of first prototype, June 2007, Nancy, France Multilateral governance structure, WorldWideScience Alliance, established June 2008, Seoul Common ingredient: International Council for Scientific and Technical Information (ICSTI) More background/history, and current status
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WorldWideScience.org Facts and Figures
Searches 49 science databases and portals sponsored by governments and national institutions in 54 countries Covers scientific literature from over three-fourths of the world’s population Includes a vast quantity of science (over 375 million pages), much of which is grey literature
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Describe WWS searching and variety of databases and portals being searched
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Highlight ETDEWEB record (technical report from Denmark) as an example of grey literature being searched via WWS
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Highlight another record showing grey literature, in this case, a brochure published in the U.K.
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Screen capture from NORA, which in turn has pulled a record from the University of Bergen
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Record from CSIR
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Record from Nepal Journals Online
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Record from ARROW, in this case, an Australian thesis with full text available.
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What’s Next for WWS.org? Overcoming scalability issues
Offering alerts service Searching multilingual sources Discuss preservation issues and emergence of new formats as future challenges
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Broader Challenges in “Grey”
Improving access to and search of emerging grey literature: Multimedia sources Images Data sets
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ICSTI Technical Projects
Numeric Data Multimedia Web 2.0 Describe each TACC project – goals and status
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Conclusions Grey is… Global Growing
Good…for science medicine technology Concluding remarks
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