2. Objectives What Open Access (OA)is Different types of OA OA Journals/Hybrid Journals Institutional Repositories Where you can find OA publications What does it cost? Who pays? Benefits Funders position on OA How to choose a publication Keeping copyright
3. Current situation Research is publicly funded Personal researchers’ efforts Supported by institutional infrastructure Authors sign away rights in order to publish Given away freely to publishers Publishers make huge profits selling material back Author gets no tangible reward And loses rights to copy material for colleagues, teaching etc… Institution potentially loses out on its investment Economic barriers decrease readership Journals increase in price as purchasing budgets go down
4. "With annual journal price inflation running at double the rate of RPI since 2000, it has distorted the acquisition policies of libraries, with an ever-increasing proportion of budgets being spent on electronic big deals. This leads to diminishing funds for monographs, textbooks, and journals from smaller publishers, which cannot but damage scholarship and teaching in UKHE.“ Phil Sykes, Chair of RLUK and Librarian at Liverpool University, 2010
5. Serials Crisis Average price rise between 2000 -2004 up to 50% Last 5 years Cambridge University Press – median price rise 26.5% Sage – median price rise 93.5% Elsevier – median price rise 36% Elsevier have the highest priced journals
7. “Open access encourages a wider use of information assets and increases citations” Bill Hubbard, 2005
8. “By "open access" to this literature, we mean its free availability on the public internet, permitting any users to read, download, copy, distribute, print search, or link to the full texts of these articles, crawl them for indexing, pass them as data to software, or use them for any other lawful purpose, without financial, legal, or technical barriers other than those inseparable from gaining access to theinternet itself.” Budapest Open Access Initiative 2001
9. 2 Types of Open Access Green OA Self Archiving - to archive an article on: A personal Web site Blog University Web page Institutional Repository (IR) or Subject Repository Gold OA Open Access Journals Journal makes them publicly accessible to all Hybrid Journal – some articles open access
10. Directory of Open Access Journals DOAJ http://www.doaj.org/ International 6508 Journals 509 UK 568464 articles 164 Public Health 441 Medicine 114 Sociology 56 Epidemiology 104 Anthropology
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14. Gold OA / Paid Open Access Free for users to access Articles are made Open Access on payment of a fee Publication process fee/author pays fee Fee can be waived or reduced Price varies but upwards of £1,500 sometimes a lot more The publisher’s PDF
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22. Hybrid Journals Not all the articles are OA Only OA if author chooses payment option Various names: sponsorship, author pays, unlocked, open Becoming more widespread Fees upwards of £2000 but sometimes a lot more Help to comply with Funder requirements for OA Will deposit in UKPMC/PMC
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26. Who pays? You do! or rather your Funders Must include in your grant application a request for open access publishing! Roughly £2000 Funders will not pay for colour pages LSHTM does not have separate funds!! Most institutions don’t!
27. Green OA Self Archiving Institutional Repositories/Subject Repositories 180 UK, 2,000 Worldwide Open to all Full text or metadata Author’s manuscript Embargos
35. Why Institutional Repositories Wider dissemination Greater citations Higher Google rankings Long term availability/preservation Continued format accessibility Accessible to all Control over your research Produce CV’s, profiles Funder compliance LSHTM Repository in new academic year
36. What do they contain? Articles Conference papers Conference proceedings Theses Book chapters/Books Datasets Audio/video
37. Why OA? Increase global readership Greater citations – essential for research career Faster and open exchange of ideas, benefits research and society Allows those in low and middle income countries to access research and contribute to research Better chance of long term preservation Dissemination of funded research, government and funders Increases ease for journalists and bloggers to link to articles Allows people/teachers/ librarians to make copies Can build upon research Helps to tackle rising journal prices for libraries and institutions
38. Funders Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (BBSRC) – OA within 6 months Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC) – OA within 6 months Medical Research Council (MRC) – OA within 6 months Wellcome Trust – OA within 6 months Cancer Research – OA within 6 months International Development Research Centre – OA in their archive at earliest opportunity National Institutes of Health NIH – OA within 12 months
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40. Choosing a publication In application for funding include amount for OA publishing! At least £2000 Check what funder requires – subject repository? Institutional repository? time Check journals position on OA – using Sherpa Romeo http://www.sherpa.ac.uk/romeo/ Ideally an OA journal (DOAJ) If not choose a journal with an OA option Tick OA option Send invoice to funder, OA officer If in doubt contact Library
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44. License to publish Retain your COPYRIGHT!!! Give publishers a license to publish SPARC addendum http://www.arl.org/sparc/author/addendum.shtml Allows publishers to publish and reap rewards allows you to decide how you want to distribute your article in a non commercial way If in doubt contact Library!
45. OA Tips Keep and save electronic copies of your publications Early versions as well as final DO read and submit to Open Access journals DO use the SHERPA Websites DO contact the Library/Repository DO keep your copyright!
46. OA Survey Unlocking attitudes to Open Access National Survey until 30th June https://www.survey.lshtm.ac.uk/openaccess Library blog http://lshtmlib.blogspot.com/
47. Contact Andrew Gray Room 169a in Library, Monday to Wednesday andrew.gray@lshtm.ac.uk 020 7598 8193
48. Links Directory of Open Access Journals http://www.doaj.org/ UK Pub Med (UKPMC) http://ukpmc.ac.uk/ Research Councils UK http://www.rcuk.ac.uk/ Sherpa Juliet http://www.sherpa.ac.uk/juliet/ Sherpa Romeo http://www.sherpa.ac.uk/romeo/ OpenDoarhttp://www.opendoar.org/find.php Library Open Access pages http://www.lshtm.ac.uk/library/libraryinfo/openaccessbackground.html