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ICSTI: news items
- To: epc@iucr.org
- Subject: ICSTI: news items
- From: Pete Strickland <ps@iucr.org>
- Date: Mon, 22 Nov 2004 11:41:27 +0000
- Organization: IUCr
---------- Forwarded Message ---------- Subject: Wellcome Trust introduces new proposals for grantees, and liaises with NLM Date: Thursday 04 November 2004 5:31 pm From: Barry Mahon <barry.mahon@IOL.IE> To: ICSTI-L@DTIC.MIL Research publishing and Open access Latest developments from the Wellcome Trust: November 2004 The Trust is now working in partnership with the National Library of Medicine (NLM) to establish a European site for PubMed Central (the free to access, digital archive of biomedical and life sciences journal literature, wholly funded by the National Institutes of Health in the United States). In the future, we are proposing that Wellcome Trust grantees will be required to deposit an electronic version of their peer reviewed research articles in PubMed Central (or the European PMC, once established) no later than six months after the date of publication. In addition, the Trust will provide grantees with additional funding to cover the costs of page processing charges levied by open access publishers, such as Public Library of Science and BioMed Central. There will also be additional funding to cover the cost of converting files into the metadata schema required for deposition in PubMed Central. These initiatives were set out in a letter to all UK university vice-chancellors [see http://www.wellcome.ac.uk/assets/wtx022820.pdf] on 1 November 2004 and a question and answer sheet provides more information on them [see http://www.wellcome.ac.uk/assets/wtx022821.pdf.] Bye, Barry ------------------------------------------------------- ---------- Forwarded Message ---------- Subject: NFAIS Annual Conference For your information, and action if you intend to go, see http://www.nfais.org/press/2005_ANCO_theme_announce.htm ------------------------------------------------------- ---------- Forwarded Message ---------- Subject: Information on EU project in STI Date: Thursday 18 November 2004 6:13 pm From: Barry Mahon <barry.mahon@IOL.IE> To: ICSTI-L@DTIC.MIL Dear All, I made contact with the team undertaking the project launched by the EU in May 2004 on the future developments of STI in the EU and elsewhere. You may recall that ICSTI made a proposal to undertake the work which was unsuccesful. The project budget is around 250,000 Euro. I have just received the following information from them: The results of the EU study are expected for the summer 2005. The EU study is performed jointly by the University of Toulouse 1 and the Université Libre de Bruxelles (ULB). The team brings together economics researchers from ULB ECARES (European Centre for Advanced Research in Economics and Statistics) and from Toulouse IDEI (Institut d'Economie Industrielle) as well as specialists in information sciences from the libraries of both universities. The study will provide a detailed overview of the behaviour of the market and its actors, addressing the issues at stake, such as economic models, technologies, open access resources, legal environment, data archiving, etc. The researchers will also undertake an economic analysis of this behaviour in terms of competition policy and knowledge-diffusion concerns, and a pilot study on the specific economic modelling of the behaviour of market participants. A preliminary set of recommendations will be discussed and validated with a representative sample of stakeholders and actors on the market. This workshop has not been scheduled yet but I will keep you informed of further developments. We are of course interested in the activities of ICSTI and would be grateful if you could provide us with information about your organisation, its role and activities. Best regards, Françoise Vandooren Libraries Head Office Université Libre de Bruxelles If any of you have more information on the project or those undertaking it or have been approached by the team it might be interesting to share it, if you can. Bye, Barry ------------------------------------------------------- ---------- Forwarded Message ---------- Subject: scholar.google.com Google's search engine for Science Date: Thursday 18 November 2004 6:13 pm From: Barry Mahon <barry.mahon@IOL.IE> To: ICSTI-L@DTIC.MIL With thanks to Jill O'Neill of NFAIS for this and apologies to those of you who have already been alerted. Bye, Barry > From today's New York Times: SAN FRANCISCO, Nov. 17 - Google Inc. plans to announce on Thursday that it is adding a new search service aimed at scientists and academic researchers. Google Scholar, which was scheduled to go online Wednesday evening at scholar.google.com, is a result of the company's collaboration with a number of scientific and academic publishers and is intended as a first stop for researchers looking for scholarly literature like peer-reviewed papers, books, abstracts and technical reports. Google executives declined to say how many additional documents and books had been indexed and made searchable through the service. While the great majority of recent scholarly papers and periodicals are indexed on the Web, many have not been easily accessible to the public. The engineer who led the project, Anurag Acharya, said the company had received broad cooperation from academic, scientific and technical publishers like the Association of Computing Machinery, Nature, the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers and the Online Computer Library Center. For the rest of the article, click through at: http://www.nytimes.com/2004/11/18/technology/18google.html ------------------------------------------------------- ---------- Forwarded Message ---------- Subject: Fwd: Google's Scholarly Search Service does not sidestep the need for Open Access Institutional Archiving Date: Friday 19 November 2004 7:41 am From: Barry Mahon <barry.mahon@IOL.IE> To: ICSTI-L@DTIC.MIL A commentary on the new Google service (and Hilda Ceredeira of ICTP reminds me that www.scirus.com does the same thing) and the OA movement. Bye, Barry Subject: Google's Scholarly Search Service does not sidestep the need for Open Access Institutional Archiving Date: Thu, 18 Nov 2004 08:55:08 +0000 Google's new scholarly search service (scholar.google.com) may deliver to the scientific and scholarly worlds some of the facilities that the OA community have been labouring over - most specifically a search service which is limited to scholarly and scientific resources but which unites material from all web sites within that domain across the complete spectrum of scholarly enquiry. It also provides a basic (but highly welcome) level of citation analysis so that individual papers are listed with an entry which indicates how many citations they have received. As far as gross coverage goes, a search for the definite article indicates that 315 million articles (or at least, citable scholarly artefacts) have been indexed - a figure that appears to correspond to 13 years of the world's scientific and scholarly peer-reviewed research journal output. (Doubtless further analyses will soon show a more accurate interpretation of this figure and the relative coverage of each discipline.) It may be tempting to suggest that in the face of such an overwhelming resource, there is little point in putting continued effort into Institutional Archiving, with its administrative overheads and individual metadata entry requirements for each paper. After all, with Google on the job, all we apparently need to do is to encourage individual researchers to leave a copy of their papers on the web! This is, after all, in line with Harnad's original "Subversive Proposal" from ten years ago. However, we need to bear in mind some crucial factors (a) Google is indexing data from commercial publishers as well as the open web - and so it may still be impossible for any individual to read the vast majority of articles that are returned as the result of a query (again, more thorough analysis will give a better indication). (b) Most researchers aren't even putting their articles on the web let alone in a managed institutional repository (and for the same reasons - they don't see the need, they are worried about copyright etc etc). So Google is not offering increased Open Access, just improved resource discovery of current ad-hoc OA. To advance we still need to offer carrot and stick, policies and mandates, and that is one of the places where a managed Institutional Archive comes into its own. An institutional archive offers many advantages to the institution in terms of research management, reporting, statistics gathering, publicity and research assessment. These institutional benefits mean that the institutional support, policies and mandates are more likely to be forthcoming, which in turn WILL DIRECTLY increase the amount of open access material available. (Of course it's not all stick! The carrot comes in the form of improved impace, automatically generated CVs, up-to-date bibliographies on personal web pages and the enormous relief of automatic data collection for institutional bean-counters - an enter-once system which caters for the many uses to which researchers need to apply their output.) Google, of course, indexes entries in Institutional Archives! Whether EPrints or DSpace, these OA repositories are providing grist to Google's mill. So the Google scholarly search engine is a welcome addition to the arsenal of services that researchers use to mine the literature - but it is still OA Institutional Repositories that provide the best chance of getting readable copies of those papers into Google! --- Les Carr EPrints Development Manager & University of Southampton Institutional Repository Manager ------------------------------------------------------- -- Best wishes Peter Strickland Managing Editor IUCr Journals ---------------------------------------------------------------------- IUCr Editorial Office, 5 Abbey Square, Chester CH1 2HU, England Phone: 44 1244 342878 Fax: 44 1244 314888 Email: ps@iucr.org Ftp: ftp.iucr.org WWW: http://journals.iucr.org/ NEWSFLASH: Complete text of all IUCr journals back to 1948 now online! Visit Crystallography Journals Online for more details _______________________________________________ Epc mailing list Epc@iucr.org http://scripts.iucr.org/mailman/listinfo/epc
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