Title: How Does Digitization Affect Scholarship
1How Does Digitization Affect Scholarship?
- Roger C. Schonfeld
- Ithaka
- http//www.ithaka.org/research
- June 1/3, 2007
- NASIG
- Louisville, Kentucky
2What Is the Optimal Model for a Scholarly Journal?
- Print, online, or dual-format?
- Standalone journal title or inclusion in
publisher-specific bundles or multi-publisher
aggregations? - Open access?
- Indexed by general web search engines?
- Commercial or non-profit?
- Sustainability?
- Many other characteristics as well
- How do we even come up with a framework to
analyze which of these might be best?
3My Presentation Today
- Two-sided markets as the framework
- The author side of the market
- An overview of our study on the impact of
digitization - Some preliminary findings from our study
- NO ANSWERS.
4Two-Sided Markets
5Two-Sided Markets
- An economic network having two (or more) distinct
user groups which need one another - Characterized by having a platform intermediary
that balances the interests of the two sides of
the market - Credit card networks
- Merchants
- Cardholders
- Video game consoles
- Games
- Players
- Audio/video formats
- Content providers
- Listeners/viewers
6A Scholarly Journal as a Two-Sided Market
- A scholarly journal also has two sides.
- It must attract
- Sufficient articles to motivate scholars to read
it - Sufficient scholars to motivate authors to submit
articles to it - Quality
- The higher quality the authors, the higher
quality the readers - The higher quality the readers, the higher
quality the authors - All these characteristics will apply to any
platform or interface for the exchange of
scholarly materials, even if the traditional
journal were remade in some database or
repository form
7Traditional Pricing Models
- Four parties have traditionally contributed, each
to a varying degree depending on the journal, to
its revenues - On the reader side,
- Library (institutional) subscriptions
- Individual (reader) subscriptions
- On the author side,
- Page charges and other author fees
- Advertising fees
- How to determine their relative distribution?
8A Journals Value on the Demand Side
- How valuable is this platform to a librarian?
- ?
- How valuable is this platform to a reader?
- ?
9A Journals Value on the Supply Side
- How valuable is this platform to an advertiser?
- ?
- How valuable is this platform to an author?
- ?
10What Characteristics Are Important to Authors?
11Journal Characteristics Important to an Author
- When it comes to influencing decisions about
journals in which to publish an article of yours,
how important to you is each of the following
possible characteristics of an academic journal? - The journal makes its articles freely available
on the Internet, so there is no cost to purchase
or to read. - The journal permits scholars to publish articles
for free, without paying page or article charges. - Measures have been taken to ensure the protection
and safeguarding of the journals content for the
long term. - The current issues of the journal are circulated
widely, and are well read by scholars in your
field. - The journal is highly selective only a small
percentage of submitted articles are published. - The journal is available to readers not only in
developed nations, but also in developing
nations.
12Preferences for Academic Journals, 2006
Percent of faculty who believe that each
characteristic is very important in
influencing the decisions where to publish their
articles
13Authors Seek to Maximize the Impact of their Work
- Authors prefer to submit their articles to
journals that will maximize the impact of their
work within their field. - While there are some disciplinary differences
between preferences among the six journal
characteristics, the overall finding is
consistent. - How might the effectiveness or impact of a given
journal have changed in recent years? - Digitization and online availability
- More widely accessible (big deal and/or open
access) - Other characteristics?
14Our Study of the Effects of Digitization and
Online Availability on Impact
15People, Funding, and Timeline
- Researchers
- Mark McCabe, Professor of Economics, Georgia Tech
Principal Investigator - Chris Snyder, Professor of Economics, Dartmouth
Co-Principal Investigator - Roger Schonfeld, Manager of Research, Ithaka
- Funded by a grant from The Andrew W. Mellon
Foundation - Hundreds of publishers, aggregators, and archives
helped provide us with data - Data collection is completed, analysis is
underway, full findings are expected to become
available by late summer (2007)
16Our Methodology
- Three Disciplines
- History
- Economics
- Biological Sciences
- 100 journals in each discipline, comparing
journal-year by journal-year - 50 that were digitized early on
- 50 that were digitized only more recently or not
at all - Examine citations TO these journals that appeared
from 1980 to 2005 - Complete citation databases obtained from ISI,
all citations to these 300 journals appearing
anywhere in the ISI index between 1980 and 2005 - Regression analysis using a Poisson process
17Focusing on 100 Economics/Business Titles
- Our dataset
- Average year journals began publishing 1948
- Average year articles were published 1980
- Average year of citation to these articles
(between 1980 and 2005) 1995 - Average of 37 citations per year to each title
- Journal articles from 1980 were available online
by 2005 via the following sources - The journal publishers had 19 economics titles
online, with a mean online date of 2002. - Digitizer A had 39 economics title online, with a
mean online date of 2001. - Digitizer B had 14 economics titles online, with
a mean online date of 2003 - Digitizer C had 34 economics titles online, with
a mean online date of 2002.
18The Long Tail of Citations
19Preliminary Findings The Effect on Backfiles
- Restrict sample to materials published in
1956-1968 - Digitizing these journal title-years has
increased inbound citations by approximately
7-17. - And the effect grows steadily as the materials
are available online longer by 2005, inbound
citations to these digitized journal titles was
increased by more than 50 and perhaps by as much
as 200.
20The Effect on Backfiles Channels
- Different channels (ie sources of online
availability) offer different effects. At the low
end, being available through one channel
increases citations by 3-15, while at the high
end being available through another channel
increases citation by 8-18 - And in 2005, one channel may actually not have
increased online effects at all, while another
did between 11-39 and a third from 13-81. - Questions
- Are some types of channels more effective than
others? - Do more channels yield more impact?
- Is widest availability the key?
21The Effect on Current Issues
- Restrict sample to materials published in
1995-2005 - There is a strong and significant effect from
digitization, but the dataset is more complicated
and requires additional analysis. - Availability through publisher websites are not
always the optimal distribution mechanism to
increase citations. - At the same time, longer embargo periods clearly
decrease the ability of a given channel to
increase citations.
22Further Questions
- How do the disciplines vary one to the other?
- Due to the importance of backfiles, will history
or biological sciences have greater digitization
effects on impact? - Does year of source-item publication matter?
- Will references to older articles increase more
than references to more recently published
articles?
23Implications?
24Implications
- Upshot Digitization has clearly had a strong and
significant positive impact on scholars ability
to find and cite relevant references. There is
significant value both to being online and to
digitizing backfiles, though there are
significant differences among channels - Implications for Publishers?
- ?
- Implications for Libraries?
- ?
- Implications for Authors?
- ?
- Implications for Readers?
- ?
25The Effect of Digitization on Scholarship
- Roger C. Schonfeld
- rcs_at_ithaka.org
- 212-500-2338
- http//www.ithaka.org/research