Open access: What's in there for me? And some ideas for advocacy programmes Facilitate Open Science Training for European Research Iryna Kuchma EIFL Open Access Programme Manager Presentation at the Member Representatives’ Meeting of the European Federation of Psychology Students’ Associations (EFPSA), October 28, 2014,Dobra Voda, Serbia Attribution 4.0 International Introduction Your name, University/college/school, Have you had any experience of open access publications? Have you already published an academic article in the open access (OA) journal or deposited your research output in OA repository? http://www.fosteropenscience.eu “Once upon a time, there was a planet much like our own. Billions of people lived on it, and they all needed food. Many people had time-consuming jobs that prevented them from growing their own, but most of them were able to eat because there were farmers.” http://www.theguardian.com/science/blog/2012/feb/10/parable-farmers-teleporting-duplicator “The farmers grew food for everyone, and it was carried around the world by distributors. Although each farmer only grew one kind of food, they were able to eat many different foods, because every farmer had access to what others produced.” http://www.theguardian.com/science/blog/2012/feb/10/parable-farmers-teleporting-duplicator “The distributors were keen to ensure the quality of the food they distributed, so they set up a system where farmers reviewed each others' food, rejecting any that wasn't good enough. Some distributors were considered better than others, because they rejected more of the food that farmers gave them, distributing only the very finest.” http://www.theguardian.com/science/blog/2012/feb/10/parable-farmers-teleporting-duplicator “One day, a wizard invented a marvellous machine that allowed food to be teleported almost instantly from one place to another. More amazing still, the food would still be in the first place as well as the second. The same food could then be teleported to a third place, and a fourth – as many as you liked. Not only was the Teleporting Duplicator an astonishing machine, it was also very cheap. Soon, millions of people all over the world had them.” http://www.theguardian.com/science/blog/2012/feb/10/parable-farmers-teleporting-duplicator “"Wait a minute," said the distributors, "what about us? We're a valuable part of the supply chain. We add value. It would be much better if we continued to distribute food the old way, with trains and ships."” http://www.theguardian.com/science/blog/2012/feb/10/parable-farmers-teleporting-duplicator “"You can't just cut us out of the food distribution process", they said. "It would be much better if farmers and ordinary people were not allowed to operate Teleporting Duplicators. We'll operate them for everyone, and sell the duplicated food."” http://www.theguardian.com/science/blog/2012/feb/10/parable-farmers-teleporting-duplicator “Some of the farmers were angry about this. "We have a way to distribute food now," they said. "It's fast and cheap. Now that our food can be freely duplicated, it would be wrong to limit access by letting you charge a fee for it. Food isn't scarce any more: it has great value but very little cost. We have to pass that value on to the world."” http://www.theguardian.com/science/blog/2012/feb/10/parable-farmers-teleporting-duplicator “When people do not have access to food they die quickly. When they don't have access to science they die more slowly.” http://www.theguardian.com/science/blog/2012/feb/10/parable-farmers-teleporting-duplicator Does this reminds you of something? What challenges did you have trying to access current research output? What challenges did you have 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? https://openaccessbutton.org/ https://openaccessbutton.org/ OA repository (cont.) OA repositories FOSS to set up, free technical support. Low installation and maintenance costs, quick to set up and gain benefits. Institutions can mandate OA, speeding development. 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) Questions? Comments? OA policies @bernardrentier: - University that doesn't know what papers its faculty publishes is like a factory that doesn't know what it produces - An empty repository is useless; a partly filled repository is partly useless; there is a need for an institutional OA policy @bernardrentier: - Don't impose, just inform researchers that only publications in the repository will be considered for evaluation - Mandate, keep authors at the core, communicate permanently, be coherent, reduce constraints - @ORBi_ULg – a personal workspace, provides statistics and has a widget to generate publications lists – content in personal/faculties webpages Máire Geoghegan-Quinn, European Commissioner for Research, Innovation & Science: “Putting research results in the public sphere makes science better & strengthens our knowledge- based economy. The European taxpayer should not have to pay twice for publicly funded research. That is why we have made OA to publications the default setting for Horizon 2020, the EU research & innovation funding programme." 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 “Policies on OA to scientific research results should apply to all research that receives public funds. Such policies are expected to improve conditions for conducting research by reducing duplication of efforts and by minimising the time spent searching for information and accessing it. This will speed up scientific progress and make it easier to cooperate across and beyond the EU. Such policies will also respond to calls within the scientific community for greater access to scientific information.” http://bit.ly/Q3sDJ9 ““Enabling societal actors to interact in the research cycle improves the quality, relevance, acceptability and sustainability of innovation outcomes by integrating society’s expectations, needs, interests and values. Open access is a key feature of Member States’ policies for responsible research and innovation by making the results of research available to all and by facilitating societal engagement.”.” http://bit.ly/Q3sDJ9 Why? “Businesses will also benefit from wider access to scientific research results. Small and medium-sized enterprises in particular will improve their capacity to innovate. Policies on access to scientific information should therefore also facilitate access to scientific information for private companies...” http://bit.ly/Q3sDJ9 Why? (2) OA and economic growth Over 80% of the private sector is classified as SMEs in Europe and they play a key role in innovation. Quantifiable evidence to how much lack of OA costs SMEs: Houghton, J., Swan, A., and Brown, S. (2011) Access to research and technical information in Denmark http://eprints.ecs.soton.ac.uk/22603 “Both access and access difficulties involve costs: If around 60 minutes were characteristic for researchers (the average time spent trying to access the last research article they had difficulty accessing), then in the current environment the time spent dealing with research article access difficulties might be costing around DKK 540 million (EUR 72 million) per year among specialist researchers in Denmark alone.” “Access barriers and delays involve costs: It would have taken an average of 2.2 years longer to develop or introduce the new products or processes in the absence of contributing academic research. For new products, a 2.2 years delay would cost around DKK 36 million (EUR 4.8 million) per firm in lost sales, and for new processes it would cost around DKK 211 000 per firm.” “Use of Open Access materials is widespread: More than 50% used free institutional or subject repositories and Open Access journals monthly or more regularly, and among researchers 72% reported using open institutional or subject repositories and 56% open access journals monthly or more regularly.” “The Internet has fundamentally changed the world of science and research. For instance, research communities have been experimenting with new ways to register, certify, disseminate and preserve scientific publications. Research and funding policies need to adapt to this new environment. It should be recommended to Member States to adapt and develop their policies on OA to scientific publications.” http://bit.ly/Q3sDJ9 OA policies alignment Questions? Comments? 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 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. http://www.sherpa.ac.uk/romeo/ 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 licences 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 Have you implemented any OA projects already? How to get started righttoresearch.org How to Get Started STEP ONE: Get Up To Date, Get Connected STEP TWO: Get Your Organizations, Student Government, and Friends on Board STEP THREE: Educate on Campus How to Get Started (2) STEP FOUR: Advocate on Campus STEP FIVE: Advocate Nationally How to Get Started (3) STEP SIX: Adopt Open Access Yourself When it comes time to publish your own work, make it openly accessible by either publishing in an OA journal or posting your article in OA repository. How to Get Started (4) Doing so will not only help others by allowing them to read and build upon your work, but it will also help you. Many studies have shown a significant increase in citations (up to 600%) when an article is made openly available rather than locked behind a pay wall. OA advocacy Dr. Vilma Petrikaitė, President of Lithuanian Society of Young Researchers: “Openness has been included in our strategic plan as the most important value – as a framework for collaboration, creativity and development” She and other young researchers now consider OA as a means to assure the quality of their research Lithuania The Lithuanian Society of Young Researchers is an active member of the national OA Working Group that also includes representatives from the Research Council of Lithuania, the Lithuanian Science Academy, the Lithuanian Research Library Consortium, the Research & Higher Education Monitoring & Analysis Center, Agency for Science, Innovation & Technology & major universities Lithuania (2) Students for OA in Poland Students for OA in Poland Connecting students and leading OA advocates: Workshop „OA. Free admission to knowledge”: to prepare OA awareness raising campaign and to develop strategies and tools for opening research output and educational materials at their universities Students for OA in Poland (2) OA Campaign calling students to advocate for OA: “OA. You can do it better than hamster” Open Science Library “I will publish the results of my PhD related research in an OA repository so that everyone can benefit from it.’’ Comment of a PhD student at the University of Belgrade in a questionnaire after one of the workshops where OA was presented and explained Serbia My thesis is in OA, what about yours? A team of students demonstrated OA IR to 19 Chairmen of departments at Jomo Kenyatta University of Agriculture and Technology OA IR became a part of the University performance contract for the year 2012- 2013 thereby ensuring that there is a commitment to achieving the stated goals Kenya The University of Nairobi OA Policy [approved in December 2012 by the Senate members, who supported it overwhelmingly, and signed by the Vice Chancellor] was a result of collaboration between the Medical Students Association of Kenya (MSAKE), the University of Nairobi Library and the office of DVC Research, Production and Extension of the University of Nairobi Kenya (2) “OA policy, policies on IP and plagiarism have a positive impact on the capacity and visibility of the University of Nairobi research agenda” http://ow.ly/lRKpa University of Nairobi Sharing http://xkcd.com/1228/ Funding opportunities What would you like to do? Thank you! Questions? iryna.kuchma@eifl.net http://www.fosteropenscience.eu/