changes in scholarly communication: what this means for all authors karen m. albert, mls, ahip mary...

50
Changes in Scholarly Communication: What this Means for All Authors Karen M. Albert, MLS, AHIP Mary Ann Sells, PhD

Upload: zander-prior

Post on 01-Apr-2015

216 views

Category:

Documents


2 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Changes in Scholarly Communication: What this Means for All Authors Karen M. Albert, MLS, AHIP Mary Ann Sells, PhD

Changes in Scholarly Communication: What this Means for All Authors

Karen M. Albert, MLS, AHIP Mary Ann Sells, PhD

Page 2: Changes in Scholarly Communication: What this Means for All Authors Karen M. Albert, MLS, AHIP Mary Ann Sells, PhD

Topics

Open Access - background NIH Public Access mandate Library support plan Office of Sponsored Research

perspective Feedback

Page 3: Changes in Scholarly Communication: What this Means for All Authors Karen M. Albert, MLS, AHIP Mary Ann Sells, PhD

What is Open Access?

“Open-access (OA) literature is digital, online, free of charge, and free of most copyright and licensing restrictions”

Suber, Peter. “Open Access Overview” 2004-2006. Available at: http://www.earlham.edu/~peters/fos/overview.htm

Page 4: Changes in Scholarly Communication: What this Means for All Authors Karen M. Albert, MLS, AHIP Mary Ann Sells, PhD

Goals of OA Accelerate discovery Stimulate further discovery Translate knowledge into public

benefit Improve information access & sharing Reduce costs and inefficiency Support new research strategies like

data mining

Joseph, Heather, “Scholarly Publishing and Open Access: Straight Talk,” MLA Webcast, November 20, 2007. http://www.mlanet.org/education/documents/scholarlypub_manual2.pdf

Page 5: Changes in Scholarly Communication: What this Means for All Authors Karen M. Albert, MLS, AHIP Mary Ann Sells, PhD

Three Major Stakeholder Goals Scholars

quality peer review visibility, citation impact career/tenure support

Publishers – maintain income/profits Librarians

subscription price relief access for users

Page 6: Changes in Scholarly Communication: What this Means for All Authors Karen M. Albert, MLS, AHIP Mary Ann Sells, PhD

Problems with Current Model

Page 7: Changes in Scholarly Communication: What this Means for All Authors Karen M. Albert, MLS, AHIP Mary Ann Sells, PhD

3 Routes to Open Access

Post to a website

Publish in an OA journal (BMC or PLoS)

Publish via a hybrid journal

Page 8: Changes in Scholarly Communication: What this Means for All Authors Karen M. Albert, MLS, AHIP Mary Ann Sells, PhD

OA improves citation rate and visibility

Swan A. Open Access and the progress of science. American Scientist 2007;95:3. Available from http://eprints.ecs.soton.ac.uk/13860/1/American_Scientist_article.pdf

Page 9: Changes in Scholarly Communication: What this Means for All Authors Karen M. Albert, MLS, AHIP Mary Ann Sells, PhD

Why support Open Access?http://www.biomedcentral.com/profiles/movies

Page 10: Changes in Scholarly Communication: What this Means for All Authors Karen M. Albert, MLS, AHIP Mary Ann Sells, PhD

Federal mandate – Chaos?

Page 11: Changes in Scholarly Communication: What this Means for All Authors Karen M. Albert, MLS, AHIP Mary Ann Sells, PhD

New Law

SEC. 218. The Director of the National Institutes of Health shall require that all investigators funded by the NIH submit or have submitted for them to . . . PubMed Central an electronic version of their final, peer-reviewed manuscripts upon acceptance for publication, to be made publicly available no later than 12 months after the official date of publication: . . . in a manner consistent with copyright law.

Page 12: Changes in Scholarly Communication: What this Means for All Authors Karen M. Albert, MLS, AHIP Mary Ann Sells, PhD

Important Dates As of April 7, 2008, all articles arising

from NIH funds must be submitted to PubMed Central upon acceptance for publication.

As of May 25, 2008, NIH applications, proposals, and progress reports must include the PubMed Central reference number when citing an article that falls under the policy and is authored or co-authored by the investigator, or arose from the investigator’s NIH award.

Page 13: Changes in Scholarly Communication: What this Means for All Authors Karen M. Albert, MLS, AHIP Mary Ann Sells, PhD

Types of Articles

To what does the NIH Public Access Policy apply?

The Policy applies to all peer-reviewed journal articles, including research reports and reviews. The Policy does not apply to non-peer-reviewed materials such as correspondence, book chapters, and editorials.

Page 14: Changes in Scholarly Communication: What this Means for All Authors Karen M. Albert, MLS, AHIP Mary Ann Sells, PhD

Types of Articles

To what does the NIH Public Access Policy apply?

The Policy applies to all peer-reviewed journal articles, including research reports and reviews. The Policy does not apply to non-peer-reviewed materials such as correspondence, book chapters, and editorials.

Page 15: Changes in Scholarly Communication: What this Means for All Authors Karen M. Albert, MLS, AHIP Mary Ann Sells, PhD

Policy applies to those:

1. Directly funded by an NIH grant or cooperative agreement active in Fiscal Year 2008 (October 1, 2007- September 30, 2008) or beyond;

2. Directly funded by a contract signed on or after April 7, 2008

Page 16: Changes in Scholarly Communication: What this Means for All Authors Karen M. Albert, MLS, AHIP Mary Ann Sells, PhD

Centralized Library support planSee library website: http://www.fccc.edu/library/talbot

Karen Albert, Director

Lydia Hecker, Library Technician

Page 17: Changes in Scholarly Communication: What this Means for All Authors Karen M. Albert, MLS, AHIP Mary Ann Sells, PhD

3-step Process

1. Address Copyright

2. Submit article to NIH -- via the Library --

3. Cite PMCID number in grants

Page 18: Changes in Scholarly Communication: What this Means for All Authors Karen M. Albert, MLS, AHIP Mary Ann Sells, PhD

1. Address Copyright - Don’t just sign..

Read your copyright transfer agreement

Authors must retain the right to deposit the work in PubMed Central

Check Library website for journal/publisher policies – Some journals post for you!

Ask the library for help, if policy is unclear

Page 19: Changes in Scholarly Communication: What this Means for All Authors Karen M. Albert, MLS, AHIP Mary Ann Sells, PhD

1. Address Copyright

Some journals submit articles on behalf of their authors ... See library website for list

Page 20: Changes in Scholarly Communication: What this Means for All Authors Karen M. Albert, MLS, AHIP Mary Ann Sells, PhD

1. Address Copyright

Some journals (Elsevier) submit final manuscripts to PMC on behalf of authors.-- You still have to approve the manuscript via the NIH Manuscript Submission system

Page 21: Changes in Scholarly Communication: What this Means for All Authors Karen M. Albert, MLS, AHIP Mary Ann Sells, PhD

• Sign your agreement

•Find Embargo period:The number of months after publication that the full-text manuscript can be made freely available in PubMed Central.

1. Address Copyright – Next steps

Page 22: Changes in Scholarly Communication: What this Means for All Authors Karen M. Albert, MLS, AHIP Mary Ann Sells, PhD

Sample copyright agreement

After acceptance: . . . you may use the accepted version of the Article . . . in the following ways:

12 months after publication you may post an electronic version of the article on your own personal website, on your employer’s website/repository and on free public servers in your subject area.

Page 23: Changes in Scholarly Communication: What this Means for All Authors Karen M. Albert, MLS, AHIP Mary Ann Sells, PhD

Copyright agreement info: Library website: http://www.fccc.edu/library/talbot

Page 24: Changes in Scholarly Communication: What this Means for All Authors Karen M. Albert, MLS, AHIP Mary Ann Sells, PhD

1. Address Copyright - Publisher policy links

Library’s list -- Alphabetical by journal title, indicating journals that do posting for you (unbolded).

Sherpa/ROMEO list: http://www.sherpa.ac.uk/romeo.php

Page 25: Changes in Scholarly Communication: What this Means for All Authors Karen M. Albert, MLS, AHIP Mary Ann Sells, PhD

Library’s list

. . .

Page 26: Changes in Scholarly Communication: What this Means for All Authors Karen M. Albert, MLS, AHIP Mary Ann Sells, PhD

2. Submit article – Library Form

Page 27: Changes in Scholarly Communication: What this Means for All Authors Karen M. Albert, MLS, AHIP Mary Ann Sells, PhD

2. Submit article

Place request via library web form- including:

1. NIH grant numbers of all FCCC authors

2. Manuscript title and journal name

3. Specify the embargo period

Page 28: Changes in Scholarly Communication: What this Means for All Authors Karen M. Albert, MLS, AHIP Mary Ann Sells, PhD

2. Submit article – Email manuscript + figures

To complete the submission process, please email your manuscript and figures, each attached in a separate file to:    [email protected]

Page 29: Changes in Scholarly Communication: What this Means for All Authors Karen M. Albert, MLS, AHIP Mary Ann Sells, PhD

Two approval steps

Page 30: Changes in Scholarly Communication: What this Means for All Authors Karen M. Albert, MLS, AHIP Mary Ann Sells, PhD

3. Cite PMCID numberIn all grant applications, renewals, or progress

reports:

List the PubMed Central reference number (PMCID) at end of journal citation.

If a PMCID number is not yet available, include the NIH Manuscript Submission system reference number (NIHMS ID) instead.

Example: Varmus H, Klausner R, Zerhouni E, Acharya T, Daar A, Singer P.

2003. PUBLIC HEALTH: Grand Challenges in Global Health. Science 302(5644): 398–399. PMCID: 243493

Page 31: Changes in Scholarly Communication: What this Means for All Authors Karen M. Albert, MLS, AHIP Mary Ann Sells, PhD

PubMed Centralhttp://www.pubmedcentral.nih.gov/

Page 32: Changes in Scholarly Communication: What this Means for All Authors Karen M. Albert, MLS, AHIP Mary Ann Sells, PhD

3. Finding PMCID number

Page 33: Changes in Scholarly Communication: What this Means for All Authors Karen M. Albert, MLS, AHIP Mary Ann Sells, PhD

3. Find PMCID number PMC-formatted article

Page 34: Changes in Scholarly Communication: What this Means for All Authors Karen M. Albert, MLS, AHIP Mary Ann Sells, PhD

Summary of Steps“Upon acceptance for publication”

1. Address Copyright• Check library website lists• Read agreement- sign if allows posting

2. Submit article to NIH (via the Library) Complete library request form Form generates request for manuscript

and figures; Email them to the library Complete NIH emailed approvals

3. Cite PMCID number in grants Retain no. for use in grant applications Request from library, if needed

Page 35: Changes in Scholarly Communication: What this Means for All Authors Karen M. Albert, MLS, AHIP Mary Ann Sells, PhD

Carrot and Stick approach

Page 36: Changes in Scholarly Communication: What this Means for All Authors Karen M. Albert, MLS, AHIP Mary Ann Sells, PhD

How does the new policy impact granting?

Page 37: Changes in Scholarly Communication: What this Means for All Authors Karen M. Albert, MLS, AHIP Mary Ann Sells, PhD

2007 Policy

Information that May Be Included in the Application ・ Published manuscripts and/or abstracts that are publicly available in a free, online format may be referenced in the application. . . While there is no limit to the number of URLs or PMC submission identification numbers that can be cited, applicants should be both judicious and concise.

Materials Allowed in the Appendix:

. . . up to 3 of the following types of publications:

Published manuscripts and/or abstracts only when a free, online, publicly

available journal link is not available.

NIH Extramural News, November, 2006 [http://grants.nih.gov/grants/partners/1106NIHExtramuralNexus.pdf] ; New Limits on Appendix Materials for All NIH/AHRQ/NIOSH Grant Applications Beginning with Receipt Dates On or After January 3, 2007, http://grants.nih.gov/grants/guide/notice-files/NOT-OD-07-018.html

Page 38: Changes in Scholarly Communication: What this Means for All Authors Karen M. Albert, MLS, AHIP Mary Ann Sells, PhD

2008 Policy As of May 25, 2008: NIH applications,

proposals, and progress reports must include the PubMed Central reference number when: Citing an article that falls under the policy And is authored or co-authored by the investigator Or arose from one of the investigator’s NIH awards

This policy includes applications submitted to the NIH for the May 25, 2008 due date and subsequent due dates.

Page 39: Changes in Scholarly Communication: What this Means for All Authors Karen M. Albert, MLS, AHIP Mary Ann Sells, PhD

When does the policy apply?

When peer-reviewed journal articles arise from any amount of direct costs funded by NIH, regardless of the source or amount of other funding.

This includes CCSG funds. Use of Shared Facilities Developmental Funds

Page 40: Changes in Scholarly Communication: What this Means for All Authors Karen M. Albert, MLS, AHIP Mary Ann Sells, PhD

How does the policy affect award of your grants?

The Policy is a Term and Condition of Award for all grants and cooperative agreements active in Fiscal Year 2008 (October 1, 2007- September 30, 2008) or beyond.

Compliance is not a factor in the evaluation of grant applications. However, non-compliance is addressed administratively.

You will not receive an award unless you comply with the policy.

Page 41: Changes in Scholarly Communication: What this Means for All Authors Karen M. Albert, MLS, AHIP Mary Ann Sells, PhD

OSR Compliance Support Initial Grant Submission Alert Memo will include

reminders The NIH requires that all investigators funded by the NIH submit

an electronic version of their final peer-reviewed manuscripts upon acceptance for publication to the National Library of Medicine’s PubMed Central.  For more details on the policy, see http://publicaccess.nih.gov/FAQ.htm#b3 or contact our office, Karen Albert or your Administrative Assistant.

You are also required to include the PubMed Central manuscript reference number in NIH applications, proposals, and progress reports when citing an article that falls under the policy and is authored or co-authored by you or arose from the one of your NIH awards.

Informed Grant Specialists will guide you through process 

Page 42: Changes in Scholarly Communication: What this Means for All Authors Karen M. Albert, MLS, AHIP Mary Ann Sells, PhD

OSR Compliance Support

Quality Checklist – NIH Progress Reports

Page 43: Changes in Scholarly Communication: What this Means for All Authors Karen M. Albert, MLS, AHIP Mary Ann Sells, PhD

A Related NIH Mandate

Acknowledge Grants & Shared Facilities

Page 44: Changes in Scholarly Communication: What this Means for All Authors Karen M. Albert, MLS, AHIP Mary Ann Sells, PhD

Acknowledgement Mandate

Requirement is stated in Notice of Grant Award

The statement reads, “Each publication, press release or other document that cites results from NIH grant-supported research must include an acknowledgment of NIH grant support and disclaimer”

Suggested language is, “The project described was supported by Grant Number R0100000 from the National Cancer Institute. The content is solely the responsibility of the authors and does not necessarily represent the official views of the NCI or the NIH”.

Page 45: Changes in Scholarly Communication: What this Means for All Authors Karen M. Albert, MLS, AHIP Mary Ann Sells, PhD

How to comply?

Use Manuscript Tracking System Acknowledge grants Acknowledge Shared Facility Usage

http://manuscript.fccc.edu Navigate from OSR Home Page

Page 46: Changes in Scholarly Communication: What this Means for All Authors Karen M. Albert, MLS, AHIP Mary Ann Sells, PhD

How to comply?

Page 47: Changes in Scholarly Communication: What this Means for All Authors Karen M. Albert, MLS, AHIP Mary Ann Sells, PhD

How to comply?

Page 48: Changes in Scholarly Communication: What this Means for All Authors Karen M. Albert, MLS, AHIP Mary Ann Sells, PhD

Why comply?

Responds to NIH-mandated grant acknowledgment

Validates usage of acknowledged Shared Facilities Helps Business Development Office id valuable IP Creates list of publications for CCSG, dept. heads,

etc. Establishes the foundation for audit system to

alert authors to deposit manuscripts accepted for publication in PubMed Central

Page 49: Changes in Scholarly Communication: What this Means for All Authors Karen M. Albert, MLS, AHIP Mary Ann Sells, PhD

The Future

Further refinement of Tracking System

Streaming the support system Institutional Manuscript Repository Most important outcome: Higher

visibility for our research and staff

Page 50: Changes in Scholarly Communication: What this Means for All Authors Karen M. Albert, MLS, AHIP Mary Ann Sells, PhD

Questions?