Facilitate Open Science Training for European Research Iryna Kuchma EIFL Open Access Programme Manager Presentation at the Joint Executive Board Meeting of the European Federation of Psychology Students’ Associations (EFPSA), October 28, 2014,Dobra Voda, Serbia Attribution 4.0 International Open access: What's in there for me? http://www.fosteropenscience.eu Challenges trying to access current research output (e.g. Access denied...) Challenges publishing your articles/disseminating your research output Open access Technology enabled networking & collaboration Over 35% of articles published in journals are based on international collaboration (compared with 25% 15 years ago) Science is increasingly interdisciplinary Novel communication technologies permit modes of interaction that exploit the collective intelligence of the scientific community “It felt like the difference between driving a car and pushing it” (Tim Gowers) Open access (OA) is free, immediate, online access to the results of research, coupled with the right to use those results in new and innovative ways OA for researchers increased visibility usage and impact for their work new contacts and research partnerships OA for research institutions publicises institution's research strengths complete record of the research output in easily accessible form new tools to manage institution's impact OA for publishers increased readership and citations increased visibility and impact the best possible dissemination service for research Strategies to achieve OA OA journals doaj.org 800+ scholarly societies embraced OA (Peter Suber & Caroline Sutton) OA monographs www.doabooks.org OA repositories opendoar.org www.base-search.net www.dart-europe.eu What do you use to search for OA research output? European Commission As of April 2014, more than 50% of the scientific papers published in 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, and 2012 can be downloaded for free on the Internet. (Proportion of Open Access Papers Published in Peer- Reviewed Journals at the European and World Levels— 1996–2013: http://www.science-metrix.com /en/publications/reports#/en/ publications/reports/proporti on-of-open-access-papers-publ ished-in-peer-reviewed-journa ls-at-the) https://openaccessbutton.org/ https://openaccessbutton.org/ OA policies publishes in OA journals or in journals that sell subscriptions and also offer the possibility of making individual articles openly accessible (hybrid journals) publishes in subscriptions journals deposits a machine-readable e-copy of the published version/a final peer- reviewed manuscript accepted for publication in institutional/subject- based/Zenodo repository as soon as possible and at the latest on publication ensures open access via the repository within six months of publication (12 months for publications in the social sciences & humanities) deposits as soon as possible and at the latest on publication, if an electronic version is available for free via the publisher openaire.eu zenodo.org OA benefits for researchers Distribution and usage ● Immediate access to your research output for everyone upon official publication ●More visibility and usage ● Immediate impact of your work ● Intensification of research through fast dissemination and use of research; ● Possibly a citation advantage as well OA benefits for researchers (2) Plus: ●Monitoring of your research output ●Preservation of your research output by your library ●Keeping your rights instead of signing them away Discussions & Recommendations Ten years on from the Budapest OA Initiative: Setting the default to open On policy Every institution of higher education should have a policy assuring that peer-reviewed versions of all future scholarly articles by faculty members are deposited in the institution’s designated repository On policy (2) University policies should respect faculty freedom to submit new work to the journals of their choice. University policies should encourage but not require publication in OA journals, and should help faculty understand the difference between depositing in an OA repository and publishing in an OA journal. On policy (3) Every institution of higher education offering advanced degrees should have a policy assuring that future theses and dissertations are deposited upon acceptance in the institution's OA repository. At the request of students who want to publish their work, or seek a patent on a patentable discovery, policies should grant reasonable delays rather than permanent exemptions. On policy (4) Every research funding agency, public or private, should have a policy assuring that peer-reviewed versions of all future scholarly articles reporting funded research are deposited in a suitable repository and made OA as soon as practicable. On policy (5) Universities with institutional repositories should require deposit in the repository for all research articles to be considered for promotion, tenure, or other forms of internal assessment and review. On policy (6) Insofar as universities, funding agencies, and research assessment programs need to measure the impact of individual articles, they should use article-level metrics, not journal-level metrics Impact and metrics impactstory.org It has become more important where to publish than what to publish The Journal Impact Factor (IF) is frequently used as the primary parameter with which to compare the scientific output of individuals and institutions. The IF, as calculated by Thomson Reuters, was originally created as a tool to help librarians identify journals to purchase, not as a measure of the scientific quality of research in an article. The IF has a number of well-documented deficiencies as a tool for research assessment. 1. Do not use journal-based metrics, such as Journal Impact Factors, as a surrogate measure of the quality of individual research articles, to assess an individual scientist's contributions, or in hiring, promotion, or funding decisions. The San Francisco Declaration on Research Assessment (DORA) http://am.ascb.org/dora/ Funders and universities, too, have a role to play. They must tell the committees that decide on grants and positions not to judge papers by where they are published. It is the quality of the science, not the journal's brand, that matters. (How journals like Nature, Cell and Science are damaging science by Randy Schekman: http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2013/dec/09/how-journals-nature-science-cell-damage-science “My personal belief is that we should be focusing on developing effective and diverse measures of the re-use of research outputs. By measuring use rather than merely prestige we can go much of the way of delivering on the so-called impact agenda, optimizing our use of public funds to generate outcomes but while retaining some say over the types of outcomes that are important and what time- frames they are measured over.” Cameron Neylon: Warning: Misusing the journal impact factor can damage your science! http://bit.ly/cbK2DK re-use in research re-use in education re-use in public health re-use in policy development & enactment re-use in industry Cameron Neylon: (S)low impact research and the importance of open in maximising re-use Questions? Comments? Copyright Legal basis: Two options 1. Seek permission from publishers, and only distribute OA copies when succeed in obtaining it. 2. Ask faculty to retain the right to provide OA on the university's terms (and grant the university non-exclusive permission to provide that OA), even if faculty transfer all their other rights to publishers. Practical guidance when submitting journal articles In order to maximize the value of the research you produce in digital environment, it is important for you to take an active role in managing the copyrights to your work. Copyright protection is automatic (at the moment the copyrighted work has been “fixed in a tangible medium,” such as when a written work has been saved on a computer's hard drive or printed). (From SPARC Introduction to Copyright Resources: http://bit.ly/mRHQHT) Practical guidance (2) When you publish in a journal you are typically asked by the publisher to sign a copyright transfer agreement, or contract, that describes the assignment of various rights to the publisher. Assigning your rights matters. The copyright holder controls the work. Transferring copyright doesn’t have to be all or nothing. (From Author Rights: Using the SPARC Author Addendum to secure your rights as the author of a journal article http://bit.ly/cezf0w) A balanced approach Authors: Retain the rights you want. Use and develop your own work without restriction. Increase access for education and research. Receive proper attribution when your work is used. If you choose, deposit your work in an open online archive where it will be permanently and openly accessible. (From http://bit.ly/cezf0w) A balanced approach (2) Publishers: Obtain a non-exclusive right to publish and distribute a work and receive a financial return. Receive proper attribution and citation as journal of first publication. Migrate the work to future formats and include it in collections. (From http://bit.ly/cezf0w) Securing your rights 1. The SPARC Author's Addendum preserves rights for broader use of your research: http://scholars.sciencecommons.org 2. If your research is funded by the donor with an open access mandate, the donor usually offers language that modifies a publisher's copyright agreement to give you the rights to follow donor's open access policy. (From SPARC Introduction to Copyright Resources: http://bit.ly/mRHQHT) Creative Commons licenses creativecommons.org https://creativecommons.org/choose/ Questions? Comments? What students can do Use OA research (find and use OA journals and OA repositories in your field) Share your work: Writing an article for a scholarly journal? Working on your thesis or dissertation? Are you the editor of a student journal? Gain more exposure of your work and ideas What students can do (2) Submit your research articles to OA journals, when there are appropriate OA journals in your field. Deposit your research output in an OA repository. When asked by a colleague to send a copy of one of your articles, self-archive the article instead (see above). (Peter Suber) What students can do (3) Ask journals to let you retain the rights you need to consent to OA. Deposit your data files in an OA repositories along with the articles built on them. Negotiate with conventional journals of experimenting with OA. (Peter Suber) What students can do (4) Take action for OA on your campus (organize an event on campus, pass a resolution in your student government, or ask your student organization to support OA Show your support: Tell the word your want OA to research What students can do (5) From this morning's EFPSA Member Representatives meeting: - hosting a student conference/training/workshops – how to...; - creating a collection of useful links on members organization's webpage; - promoting OA at universities (include professors & librarians) - setting up an OA group on Facebook for students; - using JEPS – good example/possibility What students can do (6) From this morning's EFPSA Member Representatives meeting: - creating an OA promotional website + how to... “Have u ever been denied access to an article?”; - using social networking & social media to promote OA; - talking about OA; - writing something for the local newsletter; - designing a model presentation for students/lecturers “Michael Faraday’s advice to his junior colleague to: “Work. Finish. Publish.” needs to be revised. It shouldn’t be enough to publish a paper anymore. If we want open science to flourish, we should raise our expectations to: “Work. Finish. Publish. Release.” That is, your research shouldn’t be considered complete until the data and meta-data is put up on the web for other people to use, until the code is documented and released, and until the comments start coming in to your blog post announcing the paper. If our general expectations of what it means to complete a project are raised to this level, the scientific community will start doing these activities as a matter of course.” (What, exactly, is Open Science? by Dan Gezelter: http://www.openscience.org/blog/?p=269) Sharing http://xkcd.com/1228/ Questions? Comments? Funding opportunities What would you like to do? Thank you! Questions? iryna.kuchma@eifl.net http://www.fosteropenscience.eu/