UKCoRR Open Access Week Activities 2011

This week is open access week, and to celebrate UKCoRR hopes to collate together what our membership is up to. If you’re a UKCoRR member and you have a news article or blog post online about your activities, email the Chair with the link and details, and we’ll add it to the list below.

  • City University: Repository launch party [News article] [OA Week events]
  • Glyndŵr University:  Travelling repository manager visiting academics to collect papers [Blog]
  • London School of Economics: LSE Research Online: In Your Office – visiting academics and research managers.  Awards for the most downloaded/deposited items [News article]
  • University of Edinburgh: Visiting, seminar and press release [News article]
  • University of Glasgow: OA deposit competition [News article]
  • University of Northampton: OA competition and vox pox videos [News article]
  • University of Salford: Repository team comes to you drop in sessions! [News article]
  • University of Sussex: Offering seminars on open access publishing [News article]
  • UWE Bristol: Lunchtime events, competition and interviews with academics [Blog] [Interview 1]
  • Research Support Project: Facilitaing visits between repository managers [Blog]

And a bit of background reading suggested by Seb Schmoller

In other news: Maney Publishing will be offering open access to all Archaeology & Heritage
content from 24th October until 4th November.

Fire and Forget: The Publication Deletion Quandary

What’s the biggest challenge in acheiving open access today? Publisher’s changing their rules? CRISes? Lack of visibility of the repository in the academic community? Insufficent staff?

No, I think it’s the following commonly heard statement

I do not have the final accepted version of the paper. Once published, I delete such materials

How many times have you heard that from an academic? It seems no matter how much we advocate or mandate deposit in our repositories that there seems to be a common mindset that earlier versions of articles aren’t worth keeping. I keep all the itteractions of mine but then I’m a paranoid kinda author whose been burned in the past with data loss.

I’ve often tried to fathom the reason why so many researchers delete earlier versions of their works. One of them I spoke with recently commented that he was worried about using up disk space, but I’d be surprised that given the average hard drive can contain 1000s of articles I say this is just a bit of a hangover from smaller computers.

Personally I’m keen for academics to start thinking along the lines of “submit to publish –> submit to archive –> promote” as the modern scholarly publishing , given that with so many articles being published globally today ensuring that yours are read and become as impactful as possible needs every possible competitive advantage we can bring to bear. Naturally though given the restrictive nature of most publishers Copyright Transfer Agreements (CTAs) in terms of what repositories and authors can do with the published version, it’s key in order to archive that researchers get into the habit of retaining pre-publication versions of publications. Not to mention of course that many of us have mandates requiring the deposit anyway.

But back to the crux – how do we stop academics from the fire and forget publication paradigm (publish->delete)? Education and advocacy are certainly key here, but you’ll forgive me if I’m a little cynical about how much we can change academics time worn publication habits. All of us know there’s a serious inertia that requires an almighty and sharp stick actively waved in their faces (a mandate with teeth or Princeton’s new policy perhaps) before they change.

I’d be especially interested if anyone has any good ideas in this area of practical steps we can take to shift them from this. Even if they’re not depositing knowing that the acceptable versions of the papers are there to be harvested at least makes the OA mountain a little less steep to climb.

And to finish on a positive note it’s not everyone. I met with two academics a week or so ago. One of them said the classic quote at the top. And the other.

Oh I keep every version of my papers

The difference? It was the age – the one whom retained them was a younger researcher, whom had grown up like me with large disk spaces as a matter of course. The one whom didn’t was older. So perhaps over time we may find it gets easier as younger researchers not accustomed to clearing their disk space ever come on stream. We can, perhaps, hope!

Fire and Forget: The Publication Deletion Quandary

What’s the biggest challenge in acheiving open access today? Publisher’s changing their rules? CRISes? Lack of visibility of the repository in the academic community? Insufficent staff?

No, I think it’s the following commonly heard statement

I do not have the final accepted version of the paper. Once published, I delete such materials

How many times have you heard that from an academic? It seems no matter how much we advocate or mandate deposit in our repositories that there seems to be a common mindset that earlier versions of articles aren’t worth keeping. I keep all the itteractions of mine but then I’m a paranoid kinda author whose been burned in the past with data loss.

I’ve often tried to fathom the reason why so many researchers delete earlier versions of their works. One of them I spoke with recently commented that he was worried about using up disk space, but I’d be surprised that given the average hard drive can contain 1000s of articles I say this is just a bit of a hangover from smaller computers.

Personally I’m keen for academics to start thinking along the lines of “submit to publish –> submit to archive –> promote” as the modern scholarly publishing , given that with so many articles being published globally today ensuring that yours are read and become as impactful as possible needs every possible competitive advantage we can bring to bear. Naturally though given the restrictive nature of most publishers Copyright Transfer Agreements (CTAs) in terms of what repositories and authors can do with the published version, it’s key in order to archive that researchers get into the habit of retaining pre-publication versions of publications. Not to mention of course that many of us have mandates requiring the deposit anyway.

But back to the crux – how do we stop academics from the fire and forget publication paradigm (publish->delete)? Education and advocacy are certainly key here, but you’ll forgive me if I’m a little cynical about how much we can change academics time worn publication habits. All of us know there’s a serious inertia that requires an almighty and sharp stick actively waved in their faces (a mandate with teeth or Princeton’s new policy perhaps) before they change.

I’d be especially interested if anyone has any good ideas in this area of practical steps we can take to shift them from this. Even if they’re not depositing knowing that the acceptable versions of the papers are there to be harvested at least makes the OA mountain a little less steep to climb.

And to finish on a positive note it’s not everyone. I met with two academics a week or so ago. One of them said the classic quote at the top. And the other.

Oh I keep every version of my papers

The difference? It was the age – the one whom retained them was a younger researcher, whom had grown up like me with large disk spaces as a matter of course. The one whom didn’t was older. So perhaps over time we may find it gets easier as younger researchers not accustomed to clearing their disk space ever come on stream. We can, perhaps, hope!

Fire and Forget: The Publication Deletion Quandary

What’s the biggest challenge in acheiving open access today? Publisher’s changing their rules? CRISes? Lack of visibility of the repository in the academic community? Insufficent staff?

No, I think it’s the following commonly heard statement

I do not have the final accepted version of the paper. Once published, I delete such materials

How many times have you heard that from an academic? It seems no matter how much we advocate or mandate deposit in our repositories that there seems to be a common mindset that earlier versions of articles aren’t worth keeping. I keep all the itteractions of mine but then I’m a paranoid kinda author whose been burned in the past with data loss.

I’ve often tried to fathom the reason why so many researchers delete earlier versions of their works. One of them I spoke with recently commented that he was worried about using up disk space, but I’d be surprised that given the average hard drive can contain 1000s of articles I say this is just a bit of a hangover from smaller computers.

Personally I’m keen for academics to start thinking along the lines of “submit to publish –> submit to archive –> promote” as the modern scholarly publishing , given that with so many articles being published globally today ensuring that yours are read and become as impactful as possible needs every possible competitive advantage we can bring to bear. Naturally though given the restrictive nature of most publishers Copyright Transfer Agreements (CTAs) in terms of what repositories and authors can do with the published version, it’s key in order to archive that researchers get into the habit of retaining pre-publication versions of publications. Not to mention of course that many of us have mandates requiring the deposit anyway.

But back to the crux – how do we stop academics from the fire and forget publication paradigm (publish->delete)? Education and advocacy are certainly key here, but you’ll forgive me if I’m a little cynical about how much we can change academics time worn publication habits. All of us know there’s a serious inertia that requires an almighty and sharp stick actively waved in their faces (a mandate with teeth or Princeton’s new policy perhaps) before they change.

I’d be especially interested if anyone has any good ideas in this area of practical steps we can take to shift them from this. Even if they’re not depositing knowing that the acceptable versions of the papers are there to be harvested at least makes the OA mountain a little less steep to climb.

And to finish on a positive note it’s not everyone. I met with two academics a week or so ago. One of them said the classic quote at the top. And the other.

Oh I keep every version of my papers

The difference? It was the age – the one whom retained them was a younger researcher, whom had grown up like me with large disk spaces as a matter of course. The one whom didn’t was older. So perhaps over time we may find it gets easier as younger researchers not accustomed to clearing their disk space ever come on stream. We can, perhaps, hope!

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