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Published bySeth O'Hara Modified over 11 years ago
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Building Repositories of eprints in UK Research Universities Bill Hubbard SHERPA Project Manager University of Nottingham
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repositories and e-prints... research material available on the web cross-searchable rapid dissemination institutionally based
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e-prints e-prints are electronic versions of research papers and other similar output pre-prints (pre-referred papers) post-prints (post-refereed papers) other material –conference papers, book chapters, reports, etc. key is subjects quality control – particularly peer review
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archives, repositories and OAJ archives repositories open access journals
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why use OAI repositories dissemination of research impact of research access to research easy integration with current practice
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publication & deposition
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Author writes paper
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publication & deposition Author writes paper Submits to journal
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publication & deposition Author writes paper Submits to journal Deposits in e-print repository
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publication & deposition Author writes paper Submits to journal Paper refereed Deposits in e-print repository
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publication & deposition Author writes paper Submits to journal Paper refereed Revised by author Deposits in e-print repository
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publication & deposition Author writes paper Submits to journal Paper refereed Revised by author Author submits final version Deposits in e-print repository
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publication & deposition Author writes paper Submits to journal Paper refereed Revised by author Author submits final version Deposits in e-print repository
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publication & deposition Author writes paper Submits to journal Paper refereed Revised by author Author submits final version Published in journal Deposits in e-print repository
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benefits for the researcher wide dissemination –papers more visible –cited more rapid dissemination ease of access cross-searchable value added services –hit counts on papers –personalised publications lists –citation analyses
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why institutional? institutions have centralised resources: –to subsidise repository start up –to support repositories with technical / organisational infrastructures –to deal effectively with preservation issues over the long term institutions get benefits: –raising profile and prestige of institution –managing institutional information assets –encourages an institutional identity in intellectual output
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SHERPA - Securing a Hybrid Environment for Research Preservation and Access development partners –Nottingham (lead), Edinburgh, Glasgow, Oxford, Sheffield, Leeds, York, British Library and AHDS funding: JISC (FAIR programme) and CURL duration: 3 years, November 2002 – November 2005
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Nottingham eprints
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Nottingham eprints - search
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Nottingham eprints - record
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Arc
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Oaister
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Google search
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Citebase
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Citebase - citation analysis
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repositories set up in each partner institution test papers being added negotiations with publishers discussions on preservation of eprints work on IPR and deposit licences advocacy campaigns starting sharing experiences and formulating strategies SHERPA - progress
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Summary open access repositories are good for research institutional repositories offer one solution supplementary to current practice easy to adopt assistance is available
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http://www.sherpa.ac.uk bill.hubbard@nottingham.ac.uk
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issues collection policy preservation IPR cultural differences and changes
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OAI, OAIS, BOAI OAI - Open Archives Initiative –Open - interoperable archives with an open architecture OAIS - Open Archival Information System reference model –Open - open for comments and contributions; the reference model for archives is developed in an open forum BOAI - Budapest Open Access Initiative –Open - freely accessible, open access
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successful archives arXiv - http://www.arxiv.org/ –Set up 1991 at Los Alamos –Now based at: Cornell University –Covers: Physics, Mathematics, Computer Science –Contents: 250,000 papers (pre-prints and post-prints) other archives: –CogPrints - Cognitive Science –RePec - Economics working papers centralised subject-based archives
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issues collection policy preservation IPR cultural differences and changes
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collection policy document type –pre-prints v. post-prints; authors: staff, students, others? document format –HTML, PDF, Postscript, RTF, ASCII, etc. submission procedures –mediated / DIY; file formats metadata quality standards –self-created metadata
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research preservation issues selection and retention criteria preservation metadata preferred formats life-cycle management cost models... one view is that it can all be set aside for now...
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IPR author permission and licensing terms copyright and copying compliance with publisher copyright terms
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cultural differences and changes different subject cultures –pre-print culture e.g. Physics –pre-print averse e.g. Medicine –Require: different policies or different archives? changing the status quo –advocacy and support
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SHERPA - next stage work on IPR, Deposit licences, Metadata, Preservation increased advocacy within partner institutions support services: document conversion, archiving, IPR advice, and metadata creation adoption of Associate Partners
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Citebase - references
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Nottingham eprints - process
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Nottingham eprints - about and menu
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Citebase - abstract
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