Title: eScholarship: Transforming Scholarly Communication
1eScholarship Transforming Scholarly Communication
- Roy Tennant
- California Digital Library
escholarship.cdlib.org/rtennant/presentations/2004
tla/
2Outline
- The Issue
- Methods of Transformation
- The Service Layer
- The Changing Landscape
- Where To From Here?
3The Issue
- The existing paradigm of scholarly communication
is broken - Meanwhile
- new technologies and
- new players (i.e., libraries) who are highly
motivated to get involved are beginning to - offer reasonable alternatives
- So how broken is broken? Let us count the ways
4Economics
- From 1986-2000 the CPI rose 57, while journal
prices rose 227! - Typical research library spent 170 more on
serials in 1999 than 1986, but number of titles
declined by 6! - Under a recent site license, UC paid 31 cents a
second for access to Elsevier titles!
5Access
- Much of the scholarly and research literature is
locked behind the walls of commercial systems - As library budgets fail to keep up, more
literature effectively disappears - Problem is particularly acute for developing
nations - End result research and scholarship suffers
6Methods of Transformation
- Institutional Repositories
- Open Access Journals
- Open Access Books
- New Forms of Communication
7Institutional Repositories
- Strategy for an institution (e.g., research
university) to retain its own intellectual
property and free it up for others - Various software platforms
- ePrints
- bepress
- DSpace
- and implementation strategies
8eprints
http//library.caltech.edu/digital/
9http//repositories.cdlib.org/
10eScholarship Repository Under the Hood
Professor
Admin Asst.
Emails MS Word paper to
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16http//dspace.mit.edu/
17Institutional Repository Implementation Strategies
- Author upload (Harnads self-archiving
strategy) - Centralized upload (e.g., the library)
- Distributed upload (e.g., administrative
assistants w/in university departments or
research units) - Some are focused on papers only, while others
accept nearly anything - Some are focused on solely on preprints, while
others are encouraging postprints
18Open Access Journals
- Peer-reviewed publications with no licensing cost
(free to access) - Example business models
- Professional society sponsorship (e.g., Canadian
Medical Association Journal, Project Euclid ) - Institutional sponsorship (e.g., University of
California eScholarship Repository journals) - Page charges by non-profit publisher (e.g.,
Public Library of Science journals)
19Professional society sponsored
http//www.cmaj.ca/
20http//projecteuclid.org/
21http//repositories.cdlib.org/jmie/sfews/
22http//plos.org/
23Open Access Books
- Growing pockets of scholarly texts
- Typical formats
- HTML
- XML sent as HTML to the browser
- Adobe Acrobat (PDF)
- Main players libraries, university presses,
scholarly societies, government agencies
24http//texts.cdlib.org/escholarship/
25eScholarship Editions Under the Hood
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29New Forms of Communication
- F.W. Lancasters stages of electronic
publication - Computers used to generate print-on-paper
publications. - E-texts that are exact equivalents of printed
versions - E-texts that only exist electronically, but
without taking special advantage of the medium - E-texts that take advantage of the electronic
media's nature - Most efforts highlight so far are stage 2 or 3
- But there are some glimmers of truly new forms
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31The Changing Landscape
- New Publishing Partnerships
- New Tools
- New Standards and Protocols
32New Publishing Partnerships
- Libraries are in many cases becoming online
publishers for other entities - Examples
- California Digital Library (university presses)
- Cornell University Library (prof. societies)
- Stanford University Library via HighWire Press
(prof. societies)
33http//highwire.stanford.edu
34New Tools
- Publishing platforms (e.g., DSpace, Open Journal
System, Edikit, dynaXML, etc.) - Gather/organize/annotate/publish systems (e.g.,
the Scholars Box)
35The Scholars Box in development by the
Interactive University project at UC Berkeley
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37The Service Layer
- Finding open access journals
- Finding items of interest from institutional
repositories - Building search services
38http//www.doaj.org/
39http//oaister.org/
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41Where To From Here?
- Universities should strive to capture their own
intellectual output, and free it up for others - Collectively, we can accomplish what no single
institution can - subvert the dominant paradigm! Power to the
People!