earma conference june 24, 2011 bragança · openaire @ earma 24 june 2011 main goals deliver ^an...
Post on 09-Jun-2020
1 Views
Preview:
TRANSCRIPT
European Research in the OpenAIRE:
Infrastructure & Support for Open
Access to Scientific Information
EARMA Conference
June 24, 2011
Bragança
Birgit Schmidt, Univ. of Goettingen
Eloy Rodrigues, Univ. of Minho
Willow Fuchs, Univ. of Nottingham
OpenAIRE @ EARMA 24 June 2011
Overview
Open Access
How to comply with the EC/ERC OA policies
Practical experiences in the UK
About OpenAIRE
Some examples & conclusions
Open Access: what,
why and how
Open Access is the immediate, online, free availability of research outputs –free of charge and free of most licensing restrictions.
Open Access includes the outputs that scholars normally give away for free for publication; it includes peer-reviewed journal articles, conference papers and datasets of various kinds.
What is Open Access?
Open Access : Why?
Increases access, visibility, and impact of research results
Promotes the progress and efficiency of science and sparks innovation
Maximizes the return of investment in science by making publicly-funded research freely and publicly available
Allows better monitoring, evaluation and management of research activities
OpenAIRE @ EARMA 24 June 2011
Open Access: How?
Gold OA: Open Access Journals, that don’t establishany restriction or barrier on access to the articlesthey publish (currently more than 6500 journals, ≃26% of total number of journals- seewww.doaj.org).
Green OA: Self-archive/deposit a copy of journalarticles into Open Access repositories, institutionalor disciplinary (currently almost 2000 – verwww.opendoar.org /).
Open Access in EU
Open Access in the EU
The European Comission and the European ResearchCouncil want to provide the widest dissemination andaccess to the results of the research they fund.
European Research Council
December 2007
ERC Scientific Council publishes Guidelines for Open Access, as a follow up of its 2006 Statement on Open Access.
ERC, requires:
that all peer-reviewed publications from ERC-funded research projects be deposited on publication into an appropriate disciplinary or institutional repository, and subsequently made Open Access within 6 months of publication.
Open Access Pilot in FP7
August 2008
European Commission launched the Open Access Pilot in FP7 that will run until the end of the Framework Programme
The pilot covers approximately 20% of the FP7 budget and applies to 7 research areas:
1. Energy
2. Environment (including Climate Change)
3. Health
4. Information and Communication Technologies (Cognitive Systems, Interaction, Robotics)
5. Research Infrastructures (e-infrastructures)
6. Science in society
7. Socio-economic sciences and the humanities
Open Access Pilot in FP7
Grant agreements in those 7 areas, signed after August 2008, contain a special clause (Special Clause 39) requiring beneficiaries:
1. to deposit articles resulting from FP7 projects into an institutional or subject based repository
2. to make their best efforts to ensure open access to these articles within six months (Energy, Environment, Health, Information and Communication Technologies, Research Infrastructures) or twelve months (Science in Society, Socio-economic Sciences and Humanities
Open Access in the EU
Chapter 2.5.2. of the Digital Agenda for Europe – Driving ICT innovation by exploiting the single market – refers to effectively managed knowledge transfer activities and states that publicly funded research should be widely disseminated through Open Access publication of scientific data and papers.
Europe 2020 Flagship Initiative Innovation Union has a similar Open Access clause: the Commission will promote Open Access to the results of publicly funded research; and it will aim to make Open Access to publications the general principle for projects funded by the EU research Framework Programmes.
Open Access in the EU
“The question is no longer „if‟ we should have open access. The question is about „how‟ we should develop it further and promote it.”Neelie Kroes
Vice President of the European Commission for the Digital Agenda
How to comply
OpenAIRE @ EARMA 24 June 2011
Complying with FP7and ERC
requirements
What to deposit?
Where to deposit?
When to deposit?
OpenAIRE @ EARMA 24 June 2011
What to deposit?
Published version
– publisher’s final version of the paper, including all modifications from the peer review process, copyediting and stylistic edits, and formatting changes (usually a PDF document)
OR
Final manuscript accepted for publication
– final manuscript of a peer-reviewed paper accepted for journal publication, including all modifications from the peer review process, but not yet formatted by the publisher (also referred to as “post-print” version).
OpenAIRE @ EARMA 24 June 2011
Where to deposit?
Institutional repository
– of the research institution with which they are affiliated
OR (If this is not possible)
Subject based/thematic repository
OR
Orphan Repository provided by OpenAIRE for articles that can be stored neither in institutional nor in subject-based/thematic repositories
Deposit workflow
18OpenAIRE presentation Paris 16.3.2011
18
OpenAIRE @ EARMA 24 June 2011
When to deposit?
Researchers should deposit their articles or manuscripts in a relevant repository immediately upon acceptance for publication, to be made open access within six or twelve month depending on the FP7 research area
6 Months Access Embargo 12 Months Access Embargo
ERC All grant recipients after 2007
FP7 in the thematic areas:"Health", "Energy", "Environment" (including Climate Change)", and "Information & communication technologies" (“Cognitive Systems”, “Interaction” and “Robotics”)
in the activity:"Research infrastructures" (e-infrastructures)
in the thematic area:"Socio-economic Sciences and the Humanities"
in the activity:"Science in Society"
OA Publishing Costs
100% refund:
For other activities not covered by paragraphs 1 and 2, inter alia, management activities, training, coordination, networking and dissemination (including publications), the contribution may reach a maximum of 100% of the total eligible costs.
(FP7 Grant Agreement, Annex II General Conditions, Article 16.4 )
Practical experiences
in the UK
Funder Polices
15 UK Funder policies (including Research Councils)
+ International
See
Low compliance
www.sherpa.ac.uk/juliet/
Does your current / usual funding agency have an open access policy or mandate?
(Responses for 65 that did have mandate)
Does your institution have a repository?
130 responses. All had a repository.
0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60% 70% 80% 90% 100%
my institutional has an OA policy or mandate
my subject area has a self-archiving culture
my funder has an OA policy or mandate
it results in academic reward
it results in professional recognition
it can result in a citation advantage
it helps me to make contact with potential collaborators
it helps me to get information out more quickly
it increases the amount of publicity of my work
I believe the results of publicly-funded research …
it improves accessibility to my work
When I DO make my work open access (OA), I do it because:
Strongly disagree or disagree Neutral Agree or strongly agree
0% 20% 40% 60% 80% 100%
I do not know how to make my work OA
it is just not a concern of mine
it takes too much time and effort (I’m too busy)
I do not know much about OA
I am concerned about plagiarism
I have concerns about copyright
I am concerned about publishers’ legal rights
I am concerned about peer review
it is too expensive
I need to publish in high impact journals
When I DO NOT make my work open access (OA) it is because:
Strongly disagree or disagree Neutral Agree or strongly agree
Swan, A and Brown, S. (2005) Open Access self-archiving: An author study (Key Perspectives Limited, Cornwall, UK), http://eprints.ecs.soton.ac.uk/10999/1/jisc2.pdf
“If your employer or research funder REQUIRED you to deposit copies of your articles in an open archive, what would be your reaction?”
What you can do to support OA
• Learn about institutional and funder policies
• Find out how your research grant workflow fits with your institutional repository
• Inform academics about IP and copyright issues
• Tell your colleagues about Open Access and the requirements that your institution needs to meet
• Manage research outputs in accordance with institutional policies
• Link your research management system with your OA repository
• Support “gold” OA with an institutional OA publishing fund
About OpenAIRE
OpenAIRE @ EARMA 24 June 2011
OpenAIRE: Implementing the Open
Access Pilot in All EU Member States
31
12/2009 – 11/2012
OpenAIRE @ EARMA 24 June 2011
The Project
OpenAIRE = Open Access Infrastructure for Research in Europe
December 2009 – November 2012
Budget: 5 Mio. with 4,1 Mio. EC contribution
Partners: All EU member states (except Luxembourg) plus Norway
32
OpenAIRE @ EARMA 24 June 2011
Main Goals
Deliver “an electronic infrastructure and supporting mechanisms for the identification, deposition, access, and monitoring of FP7 and ERC funded articles”.
Additionally, offer “a special repository for articles that can be stored neither in institutional nor in subject-based/thematic repositories”.
All deposited articles will be visible and freely accessible world-wide through a new portal to the products of EU-funded research, built as part of this project.
Work with several subject communities to explore the requirements and practices to deposit, access and manage research datasets in combination with research publications.
Helpdesk
Orphan repository
OpenAIRE portal
Study &
OpenAIREplus
OpenAIRE @ EARMA 24 June 2011
OpenAIRE & EU Agenda
OpenAIRE‘s aims & activities embed into >> Digital Agenda for Europe>> Innovation Union
Current EC consultations
– Green Paper on a Common Strategic Framework (CSF) for future EU Research and Innovation Funding – consultation & hearing in May
– Communication announcing EC policies and actions within the future Common Strategic Framework (CSF) / Proposal of a set of actions for Member States – by the end of 2011
OpenAIRE @ EARMA 24 June 2011
Slides: http://www.slideshare.net/ccbuhr/access-to-scientific-
information-the-role-of-the-eu-8234428
OpenAIRE @ EARMA 24 June 2011
Slides: http://www.slideshare.net/ccbuhr/access-to-scientific-
information-the-role-of-the-eu-8234428
OpenAIRE Portal
OpenAIRE @ EARMA 24 June 2011
Let us know about your
publications
If you have already deposited your publication into an OA repository >> Claim your publication
If you haven‘t done this yet >> Deposit your publication
OpenAIRE @ EARMA 24 June 2011
Claim publications
If repository is not OpenAIRE compliant
Announce your publication
OpenAIRE @ EARMA 24 June 2011
Claim publications
OpenAIRE @ EARMA 24 June 2011
OpenAIRE @ EARMA 24 June 2011
OpenAIRE @ EARMA 24 June 2011
OpenAIRE Compliant Repositories
Find out if your institutional repository is OpenAIRE compliant
In July 2010 the OpenAIRE team released the OpenAIRE Guidelines 1.0 - for content providers of the OpenAIRE information spacehttp://www.openaire.eu/en/component/attachments/download/31.html
If not, get it validated
Advocate for compliance at your local library
OpenAIRE @ EARMA 24 June 2011
If no institutional or disciplinary
repository available use the
OpenAIRE @ EARMA 24 June 2011
After registration & login
you can upload publications
OpenAIRE @ EARMA 24 June 2011
Helpdesk
OpenAIRE @ EARMA 24 June 2011
OpenAIRE @ EARMA 24 June 2011
Some examples &
conclusions
OpenAIRE @ EARMA 24 June 2011 EU Offices – December 14, 2010
OpenAIRE @ EARMA 24 June 2011
OpenAIRE @ EARMA 24 June 2011
Tools
OpenAIRE @ EARMA 24 June 2011
Conclusions: How to support
your researchers
Inform researchers about eligibilty of publication costs and ask them to add a budget to Project Proposals. (GA Annex II.16.4)
During the project
– Check the FP7 projects for Special Clause 39 and researchers of the IDEAS/ERC programme
– Inform project coordinators and researchers about their obligations resulting from the EC/ERC open access policies
– Provide resources online: leaflet, checklist, link to local library and helpdesk on www.openaire.eu
– Use NCP newsletters to promote the OA policies
– Follow-up with researchers and help with them with their final report
Collaborate with your local library
– Provide an OA repository and adjust to OpenAIRE Guidelines
– Working together with the research office inform researchers about the OA policies and support them in copyright issues
– Help identifying and uploading publications
– Promote the OA policies on website and at events
55
OpenAIRE @ EARMA 24 June 2011
Further Information
OpenAIRE website http://www.openaire.eu
Further details on the open access pilot in FP7 http://ec.europa.eu/research/science-society/open_access
Follow us on twitter: @OpenAIRE_eu
top related