Friday, February 26. 201020th US Green OA Mandate: Planet's 147thGreen OA Self-Archiving Mandate Please register your own university's mandate in ROARMAP too, to track progress and to encourage other universities to adopt mandates of their own. Thursday, February 25. 2010Alma Swan: Review of Studies on Open Access Impact Advantage
Swan, A. (2010) The Open Access citation advantage: Studies and results to date. Technical Report. School of Electronics & Computer Science, University of Southampton.
Abstract: This paper presents a summary of reported studies on the Open Access citation advantage. There is a brief introduction to the main issues involved in carrying out such studies, both methodological and interpretive. The study listing provides some details of the coverage, methodological approach and main conclusions of each study. I'd suggested that these studies are clearly ripe for a meta-analysis: Alma Swan JISC Report: How to build a business case for an Open Access policyAlma Swan University of Southampton EnablingOpenScholarship (EOS) & Key Perspectives How to build a business case for an Open Access policy Full version of the report Podcast interview with Alma Swan and Neil Jacobs A new report launched today (25 February 2010) shows how universities can work out how much they could save on their profit and loss accounts as well as increasing their contribution to UK plc when they share their research papers through Open Access. The ‘modelling scholarly communication options: costs and benefits for universities’ report, written by Alma Swan, is based on different types of university. It shows how universities might reduce costs, how they can calculate these saving and their greater contribution to society by following an Open Access route. Neil Jacobs, programme manager at JISC says, “This is the first time that universities will have a method and practical examples from which to build a business case for Open Access and to calculate the cost to them of the scholarly communications process. For example working out the value of researchers carrying out peer-reviewing duties or the comparative costs of the library handling of journals subscribed to in print, electronically, or in both formats. “As universities such as Edinburgh, Salford and UCL lead the world to mandate self-archiving and adopt Open Access policies, this report gives evidence to help universities make informed decisions about how their research is disseminated. There are still issues to overcome and the benefits of adopting an Open Access route can be seen through economies of scale, the more researchers disseminate their work through this route the greater the benefits.” The key findings from the report show: • The annual savings in research and library costs of a university repository model combined with subscription publishing could range from £100,000 to £1,320,000Jacobs adds: “While some research intensive universities may pay more for the subscription-funding to per-article Open Access journal scenario, it should be noted that many research funders, including the Research Councils and Wellcome Trust, may contribute article-processing charges as a part of normal research grants, so that all universities have a potential source of income to cover the majority of such costs. “JISC is working with partners in the sector to overcome the barriers which exist to adopting Open Access.” The report focussed on three approaches to Open Access: Martin Hall, Vice Chancellor at the University of Salford says: “We have recently implemented an Open Access mandate to self-archive. The reason we decided to adopt this approach is that evidence shows that research published online has higher citations and can also be used as a way to promote our competitiveness internationally.”Open access journals - content freely available online using a business model that does not rely on subscriptions If you’re looking to implement an Open Access policy here are four aspects to consider: • Consult across the whole the university on the barriers and benefits of implementing an Open Access policySupporting materials: • How to build a case for university policies and practices in support of Open AccessThe report was commissioned by JISC and written by Alma Swan of EnablingOpenScholarship (EOS), Key Perspectives and University of Southampton. Podcast interview with Alma Swan and Neil Jacobs Tuesday, February 23. 2010Never Pay Pre-Emptively For Gold OA Before First Mandating Green OA
In February 2010, University of Hong Kong signed a hybrid Gold OA "Open Choice" agreement with Springer.
In October 2008 in ROARMAP, University of Hong Kong proposed to the University Grants Committee (RGC/UGC) an Open Access Mandate for all RGC/UGC-funded research. It is not yet clear whether in the meantime this mandate has actually been adopted, by either HKU or RGC/UGC. The proposed mandate itself was an almost-optimal one: It was an Immediate-Deposit mandate, but it seems to have misunderstood the fact that a postprint can be deposited in the Institutional Repository without having to seek "permission" from the publisher. Permissions are only at issue at all for the date when the deposit can be made Open Access: ii. [HKU RGC/UGC-funded researchers] should send the journal the Hong Kong author’s addendum (University of Hong Kong, 2008), which adds the right of placing some version (preprint or postprint) of the paper in their university’s institutional repository (IR). If necessary, seek funds from the RGC to pay open access charges up to an agreed limit; perhaps US$3,000...The proposed mandate's language makes it sound as if HKU wrongly believes that it needs to pay the publisher for the right to deposit! It is to be hoped that this will be clarified and that the deposit mandate will be adopted (both for RGC/HGC-funded research and for unfunded HKU research) before HKU begins to pay any publisher anything at all. Otherwise, as the Houghton Report shows, HKU is gratuitously paying a lot more money for a lot less OA and its benefits.
Stevan Harnad American Scientist Open Access Forum Sunday, February 21. 2010Why Funders Need to Mandate Institutional Deposit, Not Institution-External
Robert Kiley (Wellcome Trust) wrote in the American Scientist Open Access Forum:
RK: "we want to avoid a situation where a researcher is required to deposit papers in both an IR (to meet their institution's mandate) and a central repository, like PMC and UKPMC, (to meet the needs of a funder such as the Wellcome Trust)."It is so gratifying to hear that the Wellcome Trust -- the very first research funder to mandate OA self-archiving -- is looking into resolving the problem of multiple deposit (IRs and multiple CRs, Central Repositories).. The solution will have to be bottom-up (IRs to CRs) not top-down (CRs to IRs) for the simple reason that the world's institutions (i.e., universities and research institutes) are the providers of all research, not just funded research, and the solution has to be one that facilitates universal institutional deposit mandates, not just funder mandates. IRs and CRs are interoperable. So, in principle, automatic import/export could be from/to either direction. But since Institutions are the universal providers of all research output, funded and unfunded, across all disciplines, it is of the greatest importance that the solution should be systematically compatible with inducing all institutions to mandate self-archiving. For an institution that has already mandated self-archiving, the capability of automatically back-harvesting some of its own research output is fine but, if you think about it, not even necessary: If it has already mandated self-archiving for all of its output, back-harvesting is redundant, since forward harvesting (IR to CR) is the only thing that's still left to be done. For an institution that has not yet mandated self-archiving, however (and that means most institutions on the planet, so far!) it makes an immense difference whether funders mandate IR deposit or CR deposit. If funders mandate CR deposit (even with the possibility of automatic back-harvesting to the author's IR), institutions that have not yet mandated self-archiving are not only left high and dry (if they aren't mandating local self-archiving for any of their research output, they couldn't care less about back-harvesting the funded subset of it); but the synergistic opportunity for funder mandates to encourage the institutions to mandate self-archiving for the rest of their research output is also lost: Funders instead need to systematically mandate IR deposit: Funder-mandated IR deposit launches and seeds IRs, and makes the adoption of an institutional mandate for the rest of the institutional research output all the more natural and attractive. In contrast, funder mandates requiring institute-external deposit (even if they offer an automatic back-harvesting option) not only fail to encourage institutional deposit and institutional deposit mandates, but they increase the disincentive to do so, and in two ways: (1) Authors, already obliged to deposit funded research institution-externally, will resist all the more the prospect of having to do institutional deposit too (whether for funded or unfunded research); hence they will be less favorably disposed toward institutional mandates rather than more favorably (as they would be if they were already doing their funder deposits institutionally); consequently their institution's management, too, will be less rather than more favorably positioned for adopting an institutional mandate. (2) Worse, some funder mandates (including, unfortunately, the Wellcome Trust mandate) allow the fulfillment of the conditions of the mandate to be done by publishers doing the (central) deposit instead of the authors that are actually bound by the mandate. That adds yet another layer of divergent confusion and diffusion of responsibility to deposit-mandates (apart from making it all the harder for funders to monitor compliance with their mandates), since fundee responsibility for "compliance" is offloaded onto publishers, who are not only not fundees (hence not bound by the mandate), but not all that motivated to deposit any sooner than absolutely necessary, if at all. (This is also, of course, a conflation with Gold OA publishing, where the funders are paying publishers for the OA.) The natural, uniform, systematic and optimal solution that solves all these problems at one stroke -- including the funders' problem of systematically monitoring compliance with their mandate -- is for all self-archiving mandates -- institutional and funder -- to stipulate that deposit should be in the author's IR (convergent deposit). That way (i) each funded institution is maximally motivated to adopt a mandate of its own; (ii) authors have only one deposit to make, for all papers, in one place, their own IRs; (iii) institutions can monitor funder mandate compliance as part of grant fulfillment, and (iv) the automatic harvesting can be done in the sole direction it is really needed: IR to CR. Robert mentions two other points below: publisher resistance to CR deposit and the question of XML: (a) In the OAI-compliant, interoperable age, there is no need for the full-texts to be located in more than one place (except for redundancy, back-up and preservation, of course). If the full-text is already in the IR, all the CR needs to harvest is the metadata and the link. (Besides, once universal OA mandates usher in universal Green OA, everything will change and optimize even further, But for now, the real hurdle is getting to universal Green OA, and the retardant is institutional sluggishness in mandating self-archiving. That is what makes convergent reinforcement -- instead of divergent competition -- from funder mandates so crucial at this time.) (b) In the not too distant future, authors will all be providing XML anyway. What is urgently missing today is not XML but those all-important refereed-article full-texts (final refereed drafts), in any format. It would be exceedingly short-sighted to put extra needless hurdles in the path of getting that urgently needed full-text OA content today, just because we are in such an unnecessary hurry for XML! (Again, once we have universal Green OA, all kinds good of things will happen, and happen fast, as a matter of natural course. But right now, we are needlessly -- and very short-sightedly -- over-reaching for inessentials like XML or the publisher's proprietary PDF, and for centrally deposited full-texts (and, for that matter, for the adoption of authors' addenda reserving copyright, as well as for the transition to Gold OA publishing) at the cost of continuing to fail, year after year, to do the little it would take to usher in universal Green OA.) RK: "To... simply use the SWORD protocol to move content from repository A to repository B... does not address the rights issues....some publishers ... allow authors to self-archive papers in an IR, but... NOT [in a CR]"But the question we need to clear-headedly ask ourselves about this fact is: So what? What we urgently need now is universal Green OA, regardless of locus. There is no particular rush for CR full-texts, and Green publishers have already blessed immediate IR deposit. Why balk at that, and needlessly insist on more, only to get much less? (This is precisely what has been going on year after year now, with the myopic, counterproductive and gratuitous divergence of funder mandates from institutional mandates.) RK: "In addition to the rights-management problem, there are other issues we need to address such as how a manuscript, ingested from an IR, could be attached to the relevant funder grant, and how a researcher could be motivated to "sign-off" the version of the document in PMC/UKPMC, given that they would have already deposited in the IR. [As you may be aware, every author manuscript in PMC and UKPMC is converted to XML. To ensure that no errors are introduced through this exercise, authors are required to sign-off the conversion before it can be released to the public archive.]"But why, why all this? There's an urgent need for the full-texts. There's no urgent need for the XML. There's an urgent need for an OA version somewhere, but no urgent need that it must be in a CR. The CR need merely harvest the metadata. Nothing to sign off. Nothing to convert. And the eager institutions will be only too happy to monitor and ensure fundee compliance both for doing the deposit (which should be immediately upon acceptance of the final refereed draft for publication) and for setting access to the deposit as OA (whenever the allowable embargo, if any, elapses). Gratuitous pseudo-problems are being allowed to get in the way of powerful immediate practical solutions in these complicated and arbitrary self-imposed criteria. (Let us not forget that this has all been hastily improvised in the past 4 years; we are not talking about longstanding, rational, time-tested canonical criteria here!) RK: "In view of these issues our preferred approach is to encourage researchers to deposit centrally, and then provide IR's with a simple mechanism whereby this content can be ingested into their repository. Of course, even with the UKPMC to IR approach there may be rights management issues to address. This development work has only just begun but I will keep you (and this list) abreast of progress."I hope some further thought will be given to the many reasons adduced here to explain how the proposed solution (CR deposit and automatic IR import capability) is still needlessly far from being the optimal solution, which is the simple, pragmatic alternative that would deliver far more OA at no loss whatsoever: both funders and institutions mandate IR deposit and CRs harvest the metadata from the IRs. -- 2009 -- Where to Mandate Deposit: Proxy Deposit and the "Denominator Fallacy" On the Wellcome Trust OA Mandate and Central vs. Institutional Deposit Conflating OA Repository-Content, Deposit-Locus, and Central-Service Issues Institutional vs. Central Repositories: 1 (of 2) Institutional vs. Central Repositories: 2 (of 2) Beyond Romary & Armbruster On Institutional Repositories Funder Grant Conditions, Fundee/Institutional Compliance, and 3rd-Party Gobbledy-Gook NIH Open to Closer Collaboration With Institutional Repositories OA Mandates: Location, Location, Location Universities and their IRs Can Help Monitor Compliance With Funder Mandates Napoleon, the Hexagon, and the Question of Where to Mandate Deposit Waking OA's Slumbering Giant: Why Locus-of-Deposit Matters for Open Access and Open Access Mandates Repositories: Institutional or Central? -- 2008 -- Which Green OA Mandate Is Optimal? Institutional and Central Repositories: Interactions Alma Swan on "Where researchers should deposit their articles" Nature's Offer To "Let Us Archive It For You": Caveat Emptor Institutional Repositories vs Subject/Central Repositories Optimizing the European Commission's Open Access Mandate NIH Invites Recommendations on How to Implement and Monitor Compliance with Its OA Self-Archiving Mandate One Small Step for NIH, One Giant Leap for Mankind How to Integrate University and Funder Open Access Mandates Institutional OA Mandates Reinforce and Monitor Compliance With Funder OA Mandates European Research Council Mandates Green OA Self-Archiving Optimize the NIH Mandate Now: Deposit Institutionally, Harvest Centrally -- 2007 -- Deposit Institutionally, Harvest Centrally -- 2006 -- Central versus Distributed Archives Preprints, Postprints, Peer Review, and Institutional vs. Central Self-Archiving France's HAL, OAI interoperability, and Central vs Institutional Repositories The Wellcome Trust Open Access Self-Archiving Mandate at Age One Optimizing OA Self-Archiving Mandates: What? Where? When? Why? How? Central versus institutional self-archiving -- 2000 - 2006 -- American Scientist Open Access Forum Threads on: Central versus institutional self-archiving Central Versus Distributed Archives Stevan Harnad American Scientist Open Access Forum Critique of "Impact Assessment," Chrisp & Toale, Pharmaceutical Marketing 2008
The following is a (belated) critique of:
"Impact Assesment," by Paul Chrisp (publisher, Core Medical Publishing) & Kevin Toale (Dove Medical Press). Pharmaceutical Marketing September 2008 "Open access has emerged in the last few years as a serious alternative to traditional commercial publishing models, taking the benefits afforded by technology one step further. In this model, authors are charged for publishing services, and readers can access, download, print and distribute papers free at the point of use."Incorrect. Open Access (OA) means free online access and OA Publishing ("Gold OA") is just one of the two ways to provide OA (and not the fastest, cheapest or surest): The fastest, cheapest and surest way to provide OA is OA Self-Archiving (of articles published in conventional non-OA journals: "Green OA") in the author's Institutional Repository. "Although its ultimate goal is the free availability of information online, open access is not the same as free access – publishing services still cost money."Incorrect. There are two forms of OA: (1) Gratis OA (free online access) and (2) Libre OA (free online access plus certain re-user rights) "Other characteristics of open access journals are that authors retain copyright and they must self-archive content in an independent repository."Incorrect. This again conflates Green and Gold OA: Gold OA journals make their own articles free online. In Green OA, articles self-archive their articles. "researchers are depositing results in databases rather than publishing them in journal articles"Incorrect. This conflates unrefereed preprint self-archiving with refereed, published postprint self-archiving. Green OA is the self-archiving of refereed, published postprints. The self-archiving of unrefereed preprints is an optional supplement to, not a substitute for, postprint OA. "a manuscript may be read more times than it is cited, and research shows that online hits per article do not correlate with IF".Incorrect. "Research shows" that online hits (downloads) do correlate with citations (and hence with citation impact factors). See references cited below. "Faculty of 1000 (www.f1000medicine.com)... asks opinion leaders in clinical practice and research to select the most influential articles in 18 medical specialties. Articles are evaluated and ranked..."Expert rankings are rankings and metrics (such as hit or citation counts) are metrics. Metrics can and should be tested and validated against expert rankings. Validated metrics can then be used as supplements to -- or even substitutes for -- rankings. But the validation has to be done a much broader and more systematic basis than Faculty of 1000, and on a much richer set of candidate metrics. Nor is the purpose of metrics "pharmaceutical marketing": It is to monitor, predict, navigate, analyze and reward research influence and importance. Bollen, J., Van de Sompel, H., Hagberg, A. and Chute, R. (2009) A principal component analysis of 39 scientific impact measures in PLoS ONE 4(6): e6022, Brody, T., Harnad, S. and Carr, L. (2006) Earlier Web Usage Statistics as Predictors of Later Citation Impact. Journal of the American Association for Information Science and Technology (JASIST) 57(8) 1060-1072. Harnad, S. (2008) Validating Research Performance Metrics Against Peer Rankings . Ethics in Science and Environmental Politics 8 (11) doi:10.3354/esep00088 The Use And Misuse Of Bibliometric Indices In Evaluating Scholarly Performance Harnad, S. (2009) Open Access Scientometrics and the UK Research Assessment Exercise. Scientometrics 79 (1) Also in Proceedings of 11th Annual Meeting of the International Society for Scientometrics and Informetrics 11(1), pp. 27-33, Madrid, Spain. Torres-Salinas, D. and Moed, H. F., Eds. (2007) Lokker, C., McKibbon, K. A., McKinlay, R.J., Wilczynski, N. L. and Haynes, R. B. (2008) Prediction of citation counts for clinical articles at two years using data available within three weeks of publication: retrospective cohort study BMJ, 2008;336:655-657 Moed, H. F. (2005) Statistical Relationships Between Downloads and Citations at the Level of Individual Documents Within a Single Journal. Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology 56(10): 1088- 1097 O'Leary, D. E. (2008) The relationship between citations and number of downloads Decision Support Systems 45(4): 972-980 Watson, A. B. (2009) Comparing citations and downloads for individual articles Journal of Vision 9(4): 1-4 Friday, February 19. 2010Sweden's 2nd Green OA Mandate, World's 146thGreen OA Self-Archiving Mandate Please register your own university's mandate in ROARMAP too, to track progress and to encourage other universities to adopt mandates of their own. Thursday, February 18. 2010Open Access Mandates and the "Fair Dealing" Button
Sale, A., Couture, M., Rodrigues, E., Carr, L. and Harnad, S. (2010) Open Access Mandates and the "Fair Dealing" Button. In: Dynamic Fair Dealing: Creating Canadian Culture Online (Rosemary J. Coombe & Darren Wershler, Eds.)
ABSTRACT: We describe the "Fair Dealing Button," a feature designed for authors who have deposited their papers in an Open Access Institutional Repository but have deposited them as "Closed Access" (meaning only the metadata are visible and retrievable, not the full eprint) rather than Open Access. The Button allows individual users to request and authors to provide a single eprint via semi-automated email. The purpose of the Button is to tide over research usage needs during any publisher embargo on Open Access and, more importantly, to make it possible for institutions to adopt the "Immediate-Deposit/Optional-Access" Mandate, without exceptions or opt-outs, instead of a mandate that allows delayed deposit or deposit waivers, depending on publisher permissions or embargoes (or no mandate at all). This is only "Almost-Open Access," but in facilitating exception-free immediate-deposit mandates it will accelerate the advent of universal Open Access. The Immediate Practical Implication of the Houghton Report: Provide Green Open Access Now
Harnad, S. (2010) The Immediate Practical Implication of the Houghton Report: Provide Green Open Access Now. Prometheus 28 (1): 55-59
ABSTRACT: Among the many important implications of Houghton et al’s (2009) timely and illuminating JISC analysis of the costs and benefits of providing free online access (“Open Access,” OA) to peer-reviewed scholarly and scientific journal articles one stands out as particularly compelling: It would yield a forty-fold benefit/cost ratio if the world’s peer-reviewed research were all self-archived by its authors so as to make it OA. There are many assumptions and estimates underlying Houghton et al’s modelling and analyses, but they are for the most part very reasonable and even conservative. This makes their strongest practical implication particularly striking: The 40-fold benefit/cost ratio of providing Green OA is an order of magnitude greater than all the other potential combinations of alternatives to the status quo analyzed and compared by Houghton et al. This outcome is all the more significant in light of the fact that self-archiving already rests entirely in the hands of the research community (researchers, their institutions and their funders), whereas OA publishing depends on the publishing industry. Perhaps most remarkable is the fact that this outcome emerged from studies that approached the problem primarily from the standpoint of the economics of publication rather than the economics of research. Wednesday, February 17. 2010Poland's 1st Green OA Self-Archiving Mandate, Planet's 145thInstitutional Repository Green OA Self-Archiving Mandate Please register your own university's mandate in ROARMAP too, to track progress and to encourage other universities to adopt mandates of their own. "All newly published manuscripts must be immediately deposited in the repository in the final reviewed version (not publisher's proprietary pdf). Deposits will become available immediately or after expiration of embargo..."
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