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Doing More with Open Access Repositories: Recent and Developing Services John MacColl Head, Digital Library University of Edinburgh Scotland, UK

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Presented at TICER Summer School, Tilburg University, August 2007

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Page 1: Doing More With Oa Repositories

Doing More with Open Access Repositories:

Recent and Developing Services

John MacCollHead, Digital Library

University of EdinburghScotland, UK

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Presentation

1 Introduction2 Multi-Venue Publication3 Semantic Enrichment4 Legal Enrichment5 Text-Mining6 Services to Academic Authors: the

Depot7 Overlay Journals

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Presentation8 Ranked Research Output Services9 Open Access and Research

Assessment10 Aggregated ETD Services11 Data Linkage12 Federated Search13 Preservation14 Conclusion

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The battle for content

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UK IR league table, April 2006

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ETDs going strong

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SHERPA steering the UK

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Gold & green

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Publishing simplification tools

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Open Access publishing: financial support

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UK PubMed Central

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BioMed Central journals

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PLOS journals

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UK PMC workflow

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PMC DTD

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Freely available

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Science Commons

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Publication policy

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Scholar's Copyright Addendum Engine

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Neurocommons

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The Depot

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Overlay Journals: a chimera?

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Overlay journals: developing architecture

Source: Van de Sompel, H [et al] 'An interoperable fabric for scholarly value chains' D-Lib Magazine 12 (10) October 2006

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Dutch Cream of Science

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Ranked research output services

Geographical Services

Disciplinary Services

Geographical by Discipline

Disciplinary by Geography

Set of all institutional repositories

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Faculty of 1000

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Research Assessment Exercise

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'Purity' of Open Access institutional repositories

Edinburgh a aGlasgow a a aSouthampton a aOxford a aWhite Rose a aUCL a aBirmingham a a

Metadata record

Full-text referent for each metadata record

Guaranteed active link to referent

Dependent link to referent

Full-text digitisation request option

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Aggregated ETD services

Source: Wells, Andrew. The Australian perspective: innovation and stewardship in building a key national research repository - the Australian Digital Theses Program. Presentation at ETD 2005, University of New South Wales

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CLADDIER

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StORe

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MRC Data Sharing and Preservation Initiative

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Deconstructed peer review?

• Read paper within IR• Consult data within its repository• Review not complete until both have been checked and assessed• 'Formal' publication becomes dependent on informal

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Federated search

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Federated search

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Preservation

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Conclusions

• Complementarity of formal and informal scholarly publishing systems• Emergence of new business models• Cost-neutral shift to a more efficient system• New tools will continue to appear based on well-formed data – including 'literature as data'• Our current task is to clear the ground

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Thank you