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Title: Institutional Repositories: A Publishers Perspective


1
Institutional RepositoriesA Publishers
Perspective
  • Martin Richardson
  • Managing Director
  • Oxford Journals

2
IRs What do authors want?
Ciber Report, 2004
3
Some concerns about IRs
  • A policy of mandated self-archiving of research
    articles in freely accessible repositories, when
    combined with the ready retrievability of those
    article through search engines (such as Google
    Scholar) and interoperability (facilitated by
    standards such as OAI-PMH), will accelerate the
    move to a disastrous scenario. Librarians will
    increasingly find that good enough versions of
    a significant proportion of articles in journals
    are freely available in a situation where they
    lack the funds to purchase all the content their
    users want, it is inconceivable that they would
    not seek to save money by cancelling
    subscriptions to those journals. As a result,
    those journals will die.

ALPSP Response to RCUK proposals
4
Some concerns about IRs
  • Repositories will largely duplicate the content
    of existing high-quality journals, thus
    duplicating costs without providing equivalent
    functionality or any guarantee of the quality or
    authenticity of the deposited version.
  • The Repository model is parasitic upon the peer
    review process as carried out by existing
    journals of reputation, yet threatens their
    existence by allowing readers to bypass them,
    thus threatening their sales income.

Biosciences Federation response to RCUK proposals
5
Some concerns about IRs
  • The Institute of Physics Publishing is concerned
    to see that downloads from its site are
    significantly lower for those journals whose
    content is substantially replicated in the ArXiV
    repository than those which are not.
  • Both the Institute of Physics and the London
    Mathematical Society are troubled to note an
    increasing tendency for authors to cite only the
    repository version of an article, without
    mentioning the journal in which it was later
    published.

Evidence cited by ALPSP in response to RCUK
proposals
6
Some concerns about IRs
  • Oxford University Press made the contents of
    Nucleic Acids Research freely available online
    six months after publication subscription loss
    was much greater than in related journals where
    the content was free after a year. The journal
    became fully Open Access this year, but offered a
    substantial reduction in the publication charge
    to those whose libraries maintained a print
    subscription however, the drop in subscriptions
    has been far more marked than was anticipated.
  • The BMJ Publishing Group has noted a similar
    effect the journals that have been made freely
    available online on publication have suffered
    greatly increased subscription attrition, and
    access controls have had to be imposed to ensure
    the survival of these titles.

Evidence cited by ALPSP in response to RCUK
proposals
7
Self archiving of post-prints in IRs
  • May confuse readers about which version of an
    article is the authoritative version
  • May increase total publication costs
  • May threaten financial viability of journals

8
Oxford Journals Policy
  • Post-print general/default policy is that
    authors retain the right to make the post-print
    of their article available, via self-archiving,
    in institutional and/or centrally organised
    repositories such as PubMed Central providing
    this is done 12-24 months after publication of
    the article in the journal
  • Open Access Authors who wish to make their
    article freely available immediately on
    publication may do so, subject to payment of a
    fee of 800 or 1500, depending on whether the
    authors institution maintains a current online
    subscription

9
An alternative model?
  • Toll-free link
  • Author is free to distribute free link to
    interested colleagues
  • Link resides in IR rather than final PDF
  • Allows continued and consistent collection and
    analysis of usage and citation data
  • It is clear to a casual reader which version of
    an article is the final and authoritative one
  • Less likely to cause subscription cancellation
    and undermine the revenue streams that fund the
    publication process, including peer-review

10
Case Study SHERPA Project
  • partnership with Oxford University Library
    Services, (OULS) in support of the national
    SHERPA project.
  • online access for OULS to 350 articles by Oxford
    University-based authors published in many of the
    Oxford Journals from 2002-2004
  • searchable via the OULS pilot institutional
    repository and available free of charge to
    researchers across the globe

11
The OUP/Sherpa Project
Metadata toOxford Eprints
Link to OUP for PDF full text delivery
OAI harvesters crawl and index OAI-compliant
websites
(Self-archiving)
Oxford University Eprints I.R.
12
Case Study SHERPA Project
13
Case Study Free archives
  • NAR (Nucleic Acids Research) articles deposited
    in PubMed Central with 6 month delay during 2004.
  • NAR articles made freely available immediately
    following publication from January 2005, when
    whole journal began to be published Open Access.

14
Case Study Free archives
Nucleic Acids Research/PubMed Central online usage
Full-text downloads
No delay
6 months delay
Source PubMed Central
15
Case Study Free Archives
  • Average subscription circulation trend for 8
    journals with free back issue archives

16
In Summary
  • Needs careful experimentation, particularly
    around the models of including original research
    articles in repositories
  • Initial evidence suggests that free access to
    research articles via IRs may lead to cancelled
    journal subscriptions
  • A distributed system for IRs to provide access
    to finally-published articles would be preferable
    to self-archiving of postprints
  • Need clarity on version of articles (pre-print,
    post-print or authoritative publisher version)
    deposited in IR
  • Further research is needed to establish whether
    dissemination via Institutional Repositories is
    cost effective

17
For further information, please contact
Martin Richardson Managing Director Tel 44 (0)
1865 353380 Fax 44 (0) 1865 353200
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