- D-Scholarship@Pitt
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Transcript - D-Scholarship@Pitt
Open Access
publishing at Pitt:
alignment with local and
global OA policies
Timothy S. Deliyannides
Director, Office of Scholarly Communication and Publishing
University Library System, University of Pittsburgh
Library Publishing Forum 2014
Kansas City, MO, March 6, 2014
Overview
Open Access program aligned with institutional
mission
Journal publishing program – central to advocacy
for Open Access
Challenges:
– Maintaining quality
– Promoting reuse rights
Intentional alignment with partners whose mission
and policies support our goals
Open Access: key to strategic plan for
Innovation in Scholarly Communication
Support researchers in
– efficient knowledge production
– rapid dissemination of new research
– open access to scholarly information
Build collaborative partnerships
around the world
Improve the production and sharing of scholarly
research
Support innovative publishing services
Establish trusted repositories for the research output of
the University
A Comprehensive Program for OA
Support for Gold Open Access:
– Publishing journals, books and conference proceedings
– Open Access Author Fee Fund; COPE
Support for Green Open Access:
– 6 global, subject-based repositories
– Local institutional repository and OA Mandate
Learning and teaching about OA
Advocacy and support for our OA partners
Measuring and marking success
Why become a Publisher?
Incentivize Open Access
Transform the subscription pricing system that
punishes libraries and scholars
Provide services that scholars understand, need
and value
Deepen our understanding of scholarly
communications issues
OA publishing/dissemination activities
Institutional repository (EPrints)
6 global subject-based author self-archiving
repositories (EPrints)
Conference proceedings (PKP OCS)
Monographs – new, e-only books (PKP OMP)
OA digital editions of Pitt Press backlist titles
Pennsylvania Digital Library (PKP Open Harvester)
ULS E-Journal Publishing
http://www.library.pitt.edu/e-journals
35 scholarly journals published by ULS
45 additional journals hosted by ULS
(through Scholarly Exchange® hosting service)
Most are Open Access (standard license: CC BY)
Based on PKP Open Journal Systems (OJS)
Editorial teams are located around the world
Six journals have multilingual content
Base package services
Production hosting environment with 24/7 support
ISSN registration
Assignment of Digital Object Identifiers (DOIs)
Consultation on editorial workflow
Advice on best practices in e-publishing
Graphic design services
Custom article template design
Web-based training for editorial staff
Base package services (continued)
Hosting of back issues
Registration with abstracting
and indexing services
Web site usage statistics
Marketing and promotion
Archiving and preservation (LOCKSS)
Print on demand (Espresso Book Machine)
Altmetrics at article level (Plum Analytics)
Journal Publishing Strategies
Maintain quality and
academic integrity
Choose partners carefully
Rely on self-sufficient editors
Work smart, not hard
Keep costs low
Ongoing monitoring/evaluation of academic quality
Ensuring and Maintaining Quality
Journal Proposal Form
Selection criteria
Publications Advisory Board
– Advises on major policy decisions
– Reviews journal proposals
Periodic audits of journal content
and peer review processes
Assessment of research impact
Innovation in journal publishing
Open Peer review
– Dialogic Pedagogy: http://dpj.pitt.edu
– Dual OJS sites
– simultaneous open and traditional peer review
Harvard Dataverse integration
– Research data deposited along with manuscript submission
– Based on OJS plugin
Alternative metrics (PlumX)
– Article-level altmetrics on every article abstract page
Measuring success: altmetrics
Altmetrics pilot
project (PlumX by
Plum Analytics)
Aggregates dozens of
traditional and new measures
article-level altmetrics widget
imbedded in OJS journals and
Eprints repositories
Scholarly Exchange®
http://www.scholarlyexchange.org
45 additional Open Access journals
Acquired by the ULS in 2012
Hosting service only
ULS is NOT the publisher and does not provide full
publishing services
Benefits small journals in low-resource settings
Low-barrier entry to OA publishing
Sustaining our publishing program
Since 2012, we charge fees for services to
publishing partners
We incentivize Open Access through subsidies
We subsidize Pitt publications
Pitt student publications are still free!
Partners may charge APCs; no examples yet
Alignments to support OA publishing
Founding member of Library Publishing Coalition
Member, Compact for Open-Access Publishing Equity
(COPE)
Major Development Partner for Public Knowledge
Project (PKP)
Member, Open Access Scholarly Publishers
Association (OASPA)
Member, Directory of Open Access Journals (DOAJ)
OASPA’s mission
Exchange Information
Set Standards
– uniform definition of OA publishing
– best practices for OA scholarly communications
– ethical standards
Advance OA business & process models
Advocate for Gold OA
Educate the research community and public on OA
Promote Innovation
How does membership benefit us as a
library publisher?
STANDARDS help maintain and defend quality
Provide tools for advocacy and teaching about OA
Forum for discussion of key issues and trends
Keeps us connected with current information
Inspires confidence in potential publishing partners
OASPA Code of Conduct
Maintain rigorous peer review process for
published content
Editorial boards with recognized experts
Transparency for:
– Peer review process and policies
– Author fees and policies (if any)
– Author copyright/licensing policies
– Author submission instructions
OASPA Membership Criteria
At least one gold OA journal with original research
Articles must be peer-reviewed
No reader registration required to access content
OA policy equivalent to CC BY, however use of the CC
BY-NC license also permitted
Desirable: DOIs for articles, indexing/discoverability,
COPE membership, archiving policy
Compliance with OASPA Code of Conduct
Membership led to changes for us
clarified our policies
improved our transparency
improved our Web site
adopted well-articulated code of conduct
changed to more open definition of OA,
encouraging downstream reuse
CC BY - our standard license
Renegotiated with all publishing partners in 2012
Successfully converted more than half
20 journals now use CC BY
Pushback in some disciplines
All new journals since the change are CC BY
Our three subscription-based journals
remain at CC BY-NC-ND
Coming soon: DOAJ Seal criteria
archival arrangement with an external party
permanent identifiers (handles, DOIs, etc) for articles
article level metadata provided to DOAJ
machine-readable licensing information embedded in
article level metadata
allow reuse and remixing of its content in
accordance with a CC-BY or CC-BY-NC license
deposit policy registered in a deposit policy directory
(like SHERPA/RoMEO)
http://www.library.pitt.edu/e-journals