Recruiting Content for the Institutional Repository The Barriers…

Recruiting Content for the Institutional Repository: The Barriers Exceed the Benefits :

“Focus groups conducted at Carnegie Mellon reveal that what motivates many faculty to self-archive on a website or disciplinary repository will not motivate them to deposit their work in the institutional repository. Recruiting a critical mass of content for the institutional repository is contingent on increasing awareness, aligning deposit with existing workflows, and providing value-added services that meet needs not currently being met by other tools. Faculty share concerns about quality and the payoff for time invested in publishing and disseminating their work, but disagree about metrics for assessing quality, the merit of disseminating work prior to peer review, and the importance of complying with publisher policies on open access. Bridging the differences among disciplinary cultures and belief systems presents a significant challenge to marketing the institutional repository and developing coherent guidelines for deposit.”

URL : http://journals.tdl.org/jodi/article/view/2068

La transformation numérique au service de la croissance…

La transformation numérique au service de la croissance :

“Alors que débute la deuxième décennie du xxie siècle, l’influence du numérique sur la société mondiale est incontestable. La numérisation est aujourd’hui un élément fondamental dans le fonctionnement de certains domaines de la société tels que la finance, et est amenée à devenir incontournable pour l’ensemble des couches sociales, comme on peut le voir avec la généralisation de la téléphonie mobile et du Web. Pour réussir cette révolution, il faut être capable de l’encourager mais également de contrôler les inévitables déviances et confusions qu’implique le développement des technologies de l’information.

Face à cette transformation irréversible et globale, la France et tout particulièrement l’État français doivent aujourd’hui réussir à se forger une place significative dans la définition des paramètres de la société numérique. Ce changement doit tout d’abord s’effectuer pour que la France rattrape son retard dans la conception et la production de technologies numériques, domaines jusqu’ici dominés par la Chine et les États-Unis. Les entrepreneurs français doivent apprendre à saisir les innombrables opportunités offertes par le numérique.

Dans un deuxième temps, il est nécessaire que l’État français réussisse à suivre le rythme exponentiel des mutations engendrées par les usages et les initiatives personnelles pour être capable de participer à la régulation mondiale d’Internet (dans la mesure où cette régulation est possible), mais aussi afin d’éviter une fracture numérique qui pourrait éprouver certaines catégories de la population.

Pour finir, la puissance publique se doit d’accompagner les citoyens face à une révolution numérique qui transforme tous les aspects de la société. Cette action passe à la fois par une garantie de la neutralité du Net – pour permettre aux français un libre choix des acteurs et des services numériques, mais aussi par une sécurisation des usages, tout particulièrement une sécurisation des transactions.”

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URL : http://www.fondapol.org/wp-content/uploads/2011/06/Note-CORNIOU-211-06-14-WEB-2.pdf

Collaboratory Digital Libraries for Humanities in the Italian…

Collaboratory Digital Libraries for Humanities in the Italian context :

“The study investigates the approach to collaboration in Humanities, within the Italian context, to test the possibility of collaborative digital library for scholars. The research hypothesis is that collaboration can foster innovation and scienti c development: therefore, within Humanities, digital libraries can be the collaborative laboratory for research. Thus, understanding perception of scholars towards collaboration, especially online, and comprehending if wiki systems could be the framework of collaboration were the objectives of the study. A qualitative approach has been adopted, using case study as research method: in-depth, semi-structured interviews to Digital Humanities scholars provide data integrated with interviews with two key informants (one of which is prof. Umberto Eco). The results of the study show that Humanities, within Italian context, do appreciate collaboration and the concept of a collaboratory digital library, though several issues need to be solved. In fact, Humanities are still tied with individual work and collaboration is not easy to pursue, for cultural, technical and political reasons. Great e ort needs to be done at many different levels to eliminate obstacles and facilitate online collaboration for scholars. The study provides a draft model for a collaborative digital library arisen from gathered data.”

URL : http://eprints.rclis.org/handle/10760/15839

Copyright and Open Access for Academic Works …

Copyright and Open Access for Academic Works :

“In a recent paper, Prof. Steven Shavell (see Shavell, 2009) has argued strongly in favor of eliminating copyright from academic works. Based upon solid economic arguments, Shavell analyses the pros and cons of removal of copyright and in its place to have a pure open access system, in which authors (or more likely their employers) would provide the funds that keep journals in business. In this paper we explore some of the arguments in Shavell’s paper, above all the way in which the distribution of the sources of journal revenue would be altered, and the feasible effects upon the quality of journal content. We propose a slight modification to a pure open access system which may provide for the best of both the copyright and open access worlds.”

URL : http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=1647586

The LERU Roadmap Towards Open Access The…

The LERU Roadmap Towards Open Access :

“The LERU Roadmap towards Open Access represents a conscious decision by the League of European Research Universities to investigate new models for scholarly communication and the dissemination of research outputs emanating from LERU universities.”

URL : http://www.leru.org/files/publications/LERU_AP8_Open_Access.pdf

A research study into Practices Policies Plans and…

A research study into Practices, Policies, Plans…..and Promises :

“This is a research study commissioned by the Publishing Research Consortium on the topic of Content Mining of Journal Articles. Content mining is defined as the automated processing of large amounts of digital content for purposes of information retrieval, information extraction and meta‐analysis. This study, carried out between February and May 2011, aims to provide an overview of
current practices, players, policies, plans and expectations for text mining and data mining of content
in academic journals. The research consisted of a series of 29 interviews with experts and people working on content mining and was concluded by a survey among scholarly publishers.

Overall, experts expect a further acceleration of text and data mining into scholarly content, sparked by a greater availability of digital content corpuses, the ever increasing computer capabilities, improved user‐friendliness of software tools and easier access to content. Semantic annotation of content is expected by some to develop into a new standard for STM content, facilitating better and
deeper search and browse facilities into related articles ‐‐ even if use cases and business propositions
are at present in infancy stage only and not yet fully developed.

This optimism on Journal Article Mining is generally shared by publishers across the board who expect an increase in publishers mining their own content. Half of the publishers surveyed also already see an increase in mining requests from third parties. The mining requests that publishers receive are not very frequent (mostly less than 10 per year, a good share even less than 5 per year) and come mostly from Abstracting and Indexing services and from corporate customers. Respondents also note a fair amount of illegal crawling and downloading that suggest unreported mining activities.

Publishers tend to treat mining requests from third parties in a liberal way, certainly so for mining requests with a research purpose. Publishers are less permissive if the mining results can replace or compete with the original content. Few publishers have a publicly available mining policy, the large majority handles mining requests on a case‐by‐case basis. Approximately 30 % of publisher respondents allow any kind of mining of their content without restrictions, in most cases as part of their Open Access policies. For the other publishers, nearly all require information about the intent and purpose of the mining request.

Regarding measures to make content mining easier across multi‐publishers content, the interviews generated a broad spectrum of possible improvements: from the creation of one shared content mining platform across publishers, and commonly agreed permission rules for research based mining requests, to collaboration with (national) libraries and standardization of mining‐friendly content formats including basic, common ontologies. Of these options, the suggestion for more cross publisher standardization of content formats received most support in the survey, especially from the (self declared) mining experts. Collaboration with libraries was least popular, while one content mining platform received a good response overall, but faced less positive responses from those respondents who have expertise or experience in content mining.

The survey results were cross analyzed for differences in responses from small and large publishers, for different types of publishers and for experts versus non‐experts. Size and type of publishers showed no statistically significant deviations, except that larger publishers (with more than 50
journals) receive more mining requests, do more mining of their own content and more often have publicly available explicit permission guidelines for content mining. Differences between expert and non‐experts responses were most prominent regarding solutions to make content mining easier: experts were more articulate in their opinions with a higher rating for standardization of content formats and a lower rating for the creation of one shared content mining platform. Experts were more negative than non‐experts about collaboration with libraries.”

URL : http://www.publishingresearch.net/documents/PRCSmitJAMreport20June2011VersionofRecord.pdf