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Scholarly Communication: taking back our research report to FITAC November 17, 2003 Wallace McLendon Associate Director for Library Services Health Sciences Library
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What I’ll cover Why our scholarly communication model is broken Are Institutional Repositories the answer, or Is BioMed Central – a marriage of the traditional publishing model with a new business model – the answer
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Source: Create Change (brochure). ARL, ACRL, & SPARC, September 2003.
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Libraries can not sustain journal collections Trends in Molecular Science $140 in 2000, $1015 in 2002 (625% increase) Human Molecular Genetics $1030 in 2000, $1450 in 2002 (41% increase) Journal of the History of Medicine & Allied Sciences $105 in 2000, $240 in 2002 (129% increase)
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Irony of today’s publishing model Faculty produce research articles Faculty submit research to peer reviewed journals and give up ownership of article Other faculty, on behalf of journals, act as editors & peer reviewers accept articles Publishers compile and distribute research Libraries purchase faculty research from the publisher Libraries house & distribute faculty research Faculty use the purchased research to conduct further research
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Today’s (soon yesterday’s) print-derived model: Manuscript Publisher Author transfers copyright or exclusive publishing rights © Free Use Only those who can afford expensive subscriptions or licences have access Result:
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crisis + capabilities = new scholarly communication model? Behind the crisis Inflated journal costs – publisher consolidation Non-negotiation stance of publishers (bundles) Growth in volume of research Loss of non-container scholarly research Capabilities Internet distribution system Digital networks/publish technology availability
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Institutional Repositories (IRs) to the rescue? Digital collections – not links or referrals Provide self-archiving, templates, self-indexing, standards Formats: pre-prints, peer-reviewed articles, monographs, research, book chapters, enduring teaching materials, data sets, conference papers, theses, dissertations, gray literature Open Access: articles freely available through Internet Authors retain copyright: grant rights to disseminate Expands access to research University IRs promote institution and its faculty rather than journal/publisher
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University based IRs DSpace MIT Preserve MIT’s intellectual output -- joined by Columbia, Cornell, Ohio State, Universities of Rochester, Toronto, and Washington DSpace Ohio State University of California e-schlorship Caltech CODA Florida State University Virginia Tech ARNO – Academic Research, Netherlands Online
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Non-University based IRs PLoS - Public Library of Science (PLoS) PubMed Central Sponsored by NIH, hosted by NLM Budapest Open Archive Initiative
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hybrid model A hybrid model in scholarly communication
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Publisher Manuscript Tomorrow’s (today’s at BioMed Central) online-based model: Everyone has access All use is fair use Result: $ Author pays small amount of money or rather, institution pays on author’s behalf OPEN @ CCESS
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BioMed Central Advantages Launched May 2000 First commercial publisher (Current Science Group) 90+ biomed journals Reverse business model removes subscription charges to viewers author $500 fee or institution annual fee of $7,750 Authors retain copyright Secure archiving Searchable/retrievable: PubMed, Biosis, CAS, etc. Online system for submission, peer reviewed Average time of publication 7 weeks – published same day accepted No page constraints “Start a new journal” program -- 24 editorial groups, 26 more to launch 2003 ImagesMD – create own image library Faculty of 1000 – scan & highlight most important papers
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Biology Biochemistry Bioinformatics Biotechnology Cell biology Chemical Biology Developmental Biology Ecology Evolutionary Biology Genetics Genomics Immunology Microbiology Molecular Biology Neuroscience Pharmacology Plant biology Structural Biology The BMC Collection Medicine Anesthesiology Blood Disorders Cancer Cardiovascular Disorders Clinical Pathology Clinical Pharmacology Complementary and Alternative Medicine Dermatology Ear, Nose and Throat Disorders Emergency Medicine Endocrine Disorders Family practice Gastroenterology Geriatrics Health Service Research Infectious diseases International Health and Human Rights Medical Education Medical Ethics Medical Genetics Medical Imaging Medical Informatics and Decision Making Medical Research Methodology Musculoskeletal Disorders Nephrology Neurology Nuclear Medicine Nursing Oncology Ophthalmology Oral Health Palliative Care Pediatrics Pregnancy and Childbirth Psychiatry Public Health Pulmonary Medicine Surgery Urology
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Examples of new journals published by BioMed Central
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Citation/ Indexing The following journals are being tracked by ISI for impact factors – some already have them Arthritis Research & Therapy impact factor: 3.44 BMC Bioinformatics BMC Cancer impact factor: 1.05 BMC Cell Biology BMC Gastroenterology BMC Genetics BMC Genomics BMC Health Services Research BMC Infectious Diseases impact factor: 0.96 BMC Microbiology BMC Molecular Biology BMC Musculoskeletal Disorders BMC Public Health impact factor: 0.29 Breast Cancer Research impact factor: 2.81 Critical Care impact factor: 0.88 Current Controlled Trials in Cardiovascular Medicine Genome Biology Malaria Journal Respiratory Research PubMed / MEDLINE All journals are included in PubMed and the following are in MEDLINE as well Arthritis Research & Therapy BMC Biochemistry BMC Cancer BMC Cell Biology BMC Gastroenterology BMC Genetics BMC Health Sciences Research BMC Infectious Diseases BMC Microbiology BMC Neuroscience BMC Public Health Breast Cancer Research Critical Care Current Controlled Trials in Cardiovascular Medicine Genome Biology Respiratory Research
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BioMed Central’s members include: NHS England All Universities in the UK Cancer Research UK Harvard University, USA The NIH of the US Princeton University, USA University of California (all campuses) Yale University, USA Lund University, Sweden Max Plank Society, Germany World Health Organization, Switzerland L’Institut Pasteur, France CNRS, France INSERM, France La Sapienza, Italy McMaster University, Canada University of Toronto, Canada Kyoto University, Japan and more………
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BioMed Central Health Sciences Library Activities Contact UNC faculty published in BMC Identify, contact journal editors in Health Affairs to assess interest Define HSL’s role in promoting BioMed Central – pay $7,000 annual fee? Recognition of faculty’s patterns of professional recognition, career advancement, tenure perceptions may vary depending on discipline
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Will we see a change in the scholarly communication process? SPARC - Scholarly Publishing and Academic Resources Coalition Duke, NC State, NC Central, and UNC-CH (TRLN) major sponsor International alliance 200+ college & research libraries “constructive response to market dysfunctions in scholarly communication system…[which has] reduced dissemination of scholarship & crippled libraries… serves as a catalyst for action” Create Change www.createchange.org (handout) www.createchange.org Source of information on Institutional Repositories Sponsored by ARLs, ACRLs, Sparc
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Institutional Repositories: Essential Infrastructure for Scholarship in the Digital Age by Clifford A. Lynch, Executive Director, Coalition for Networked Information ARL Bimonthly Report 226 February 2003 institutional repositories can facilitate greatly enhanced access to traditional scholarly content by empowering faculty occurring on a disciplinary basis through the development of e-print and preprint servers, in some disciplines where disciplinary practice is ready, institutional repositories can feed disciplinary repositories directly where the disciplinary culture is more conservative, where scholarly societies or key journals choose to hold back change, institutional repositories can help individual faculty take the lead in initiating shifts in disciplinary practice
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