10th European Conference of Medical & Health LibrariesEurope as an Open Book :Cluj 11-16 September 2006 Digital Medical Libraries:
A step ahead for Open Access
Artemis Chaleplioglou
Foundation for Biomedical Research of the Academy of Athens
artemischal@bioacademy.gr 10th European Conference of Medical & Health LibrariesEurope as an Open Book
Contents :Cluj 11-16 September 2006 Contents Introduction
Terms
Libraries without walls: from traditional to digital libraries
Scientific Publishing in the Digital Era
Open Access movement and the Biomedical literature
The impact of OA on European Research
Digital Medical Libraries & Institutional Repositories
Librarians’ meeting new challenges:
Institutional Repositories: The Greek paradigm
Conclusions- Suggestions
Introduction :Cluj 11-16 September 2006 Introduction Worldwide information market in a transition phase
Development of Information and Communication Technologies
Widespread adoption of Internet
New issues are to be discussed
The Publishing Industry is about to change too
A hybrid environment (?)
Medical Libraries (ML) Digital Medical Libraries (DML)
Definitions (1/2) :Cluj 11-16 September 2006 Definitions (1/2) Digital Libraries (DL):
“a body where electronic material on line is held and provided to the public through the means of modern technologies”…“DL is an environment to bring together collections, services, and people in support of the full life circle of creation, dissemination, use and preservation of data, information and knowledge” [DLI, 1997]
E- content is:
“the information, media or other intellectual property at hand. E- content examples, include: a) premium content, b) information services and aggregators and c) free web- pages and downloads” [Utvich, 2005]
Open access (OA) content:
“free available on the public internet, permitting any users to read, download, copy, distribute, print, search, or link to the full texts of articles, crawl them for indexing, pass them as data to software, or use them for any other lawful purpose without financial, legal or technical barriers other than those inseparable from gaining access to the internet itself” [Bailey, 2005]
Definitions (2/2) :Cluj 11-16 September 2006 Definitions (2/2) Institutional Repository (IR):
“a set of services that a University offers to the members of its community for the management and dissemination of digital material created by the institution and its community members. It is most essentially an organizational commitment to the stewardship of these digital materials, including long-term preservation where appropriate, as well as organization and access of distribution” [Lynch, 2003]
Scientific Information:
“a variety of materials produced by an institute and its community members from many units, such as e-prints, technical repartees, theses and dissertations, datasets and teaching materials” [Bailey, 2005]
Scientific information fostering economic growth
Research and innovation are key- issues
Production and widespread dissemination of scientific information settle a country’s scientific status
Internet main distribution channel
Libraries without walls: From Traditional to Digital libraries :Cluj 11-16 September 2006 Libraries without walls: From Traditional to Digital libraries DLs emerged as a technological achievement in the late 90s
Digital scientific information:
the digital version of articles published in a journal, whether the “first copy” is printed or electronic
articles available on the www
DMLs collect & manage biomedical information
Medical information has a strong social & financial impact
DLs accommodate the easy and quick information dissemination
DMLs should find ways to bring their special collections in conjunction with the need for public access to medical information
New issues to discuss
Within this framework IIBEAA decided to create a DL for the needs of its researchers. DL was considered as the best solution for the following reasons:
Researchers can have immediate access to current scientific information from worldwide sources
Currency, availability and much needed specialization of information could only be achieved through electronically transmitted sources
Information communication routes could be established with corresponding medical research institutes
Scientific Publishing in the Digital Era :Cluj 11-16 September 2006 Scientific Publishing in the Digital Era Traditional publishing model included “two-sided” nature and presence on each side of the same agents
Publishers- intermediaries between authors/ producers and libraries, which represent consumers/library- users.
Publishers fulfill a double mission:
Dissemination of good research, by distributing and producing journals
Certification provided by upstream and downstream segments
Easier information dissemination and access to scientific knowledge
Information certification (?)
Transformation of traditional Publishing Models
The financial impact of the scientific information electronically provided
Access of scientific information through Internet and Networks
Libraries in the digital era :Cluj 11-16 September 2006 Libraries in the digital era Roles closely related to those of the publishing industry
Cooperation in the form of consortia
Heal-Link (Hellenic Academic Libraries Link) exists in Greece, providing full text access to electronic scientific journals, e-books and databases, covering a wide subject range of biomedical and social sciences, as well as humanities. Greece is also an official member of SELL (Southern European Libraries Link)
Consortia could be used for Repositories development
DLs developing IRs is an issue discussed in this presentation, as the libraries’ answer to the OA movement.
Open Access & Biomedical Literature :Cluj 11-16 September 2006 Open Access & Biomedical Literature OA to scientific publication & medical research was mainly forced by global social and financial factors:
Developments of scientific community
Market concentration within publishing industry
Advanced public interest for qualitative health information
Primitive samples of OA in early 60s
Only after 90s scientific content was freely available
Followed efforts : Bioline International, Biomed Central, DOAJ, Free Medical Journals, PloS Medicine, SciELO, PubMed Central etc.
The efforts presented above, along with the rest held worldwide, converged in the concern that in order to maximize research results, they should be widely disseminated and available in open access.
The impact of OA on European Research :Cluj 11-16 September 2006 The impact of OA on European Research National and regional open access projects
Developments examined taking under consideration specific structures and organizational profiles of the scholarly publishing markets in Europe
The fact that most of the publishers are commercial companies is strongly related to the developments observed in Europe.
E-print archives exist rather than national platforms with free access to journals.
It is important for Europe to make sure that there is a “level-playing field” in terms of business models for scientific journals, in order to allow for an optimal degree of dissemination and influence of European research.
Digital Medical Libraries & Institutional Repositories :Cluj 11-16 September 2006 Digital Medical Libraries & Institutional Repositories Access to scientific research Individual web pages
OA repositories/ archives OA journals
DMLs developing Institutional Repositories
managing the intellectual capital produced by the community members of the institution
creating a framework appropriate for the collection, dissemination and preservation of scientific information,
developing a concrete content management policy facing parameters
reassuring the adoption of all necessary measures to ensure long-term preservation of archived digital material
IRs development within DMLs functional content could provide multiple advantages
the new ways of information linkage, retrieve and preservation,
the increased use of library’s e-content,
the production of added value services and personalized information products,
the dissemination of evaluated and high quality scientific information etc
Digital Medical Libraries & Institutional Repositories the next step :Cluj 11-16 September 2006 Digital Medical Libraries & Institutional Repositories the next step DMLs setting up publishing mechanisms for scientific information
Make authors believe the need for providing open access scientific information
Researchers need to be persuaded that the OA is a trustworthy publishing model
Libraries have to examine the bio-medical information market in order to study the authors’ response
Quality & Authenticity
End users prefer reading evaluated papers
Researchers prefer publishing their work in reputable journals
Institution’s organizational and scientific profile is a guarantee for the IRs e-content
Peer- reviewing process
DMLs need to adopt promotion techniques- Communication strategies, along with market researches and promotion campaigns
Organize seminars
Librarians’ meeting new challenges :Cluj 11-16 September 2006 Librarians’ meeting new challenges Librarians’ of the 21st century are creating added value knowledge themselves, ensuring their libraries’ viability and competency.
Medical librarians meet the same challenges within their specialized field:
set policies
cooperate with computer science engineers and other fields
develop subject- based portals
decide what metadata to store and present
understand copyright issues
select, organize and filter the repositories e-content quality
create metadata, controlled vocabularies and thesauri
develop quality control management
create preservation methods and techniques
promote the project using public relations and promotion techniques,
prepare the scientific community to accept the coming changes in the publishing industry and
train users in IR deposit and searching procedures
Institutional Repositories: The Greek paradigm :Cluj 11-16 September 2006 Institutional Repositories: The Greek paradigm The National Documentation Centre of Greece
Environment where it can host an IR containing the scientific information produced by the National Research Institute
Collector’ s role of scientific information produced in Greek language, by producing bilingual (English- Greek) metadata, available to the scientific community worldwide
It will act as an e-content management centre & an outlet for overcoming language barriers giving researchers a link to their international counterparts
Institutional Repositories: The Greek paradigm :Cluj 11-16 September 2006 Institutional Repositories: The Greek paradigm Foundation for Biomedical Research of the Academy of Athens
Project in progress- The policy that will be finally adopted is under discussion and the project’s final results are not to be published yet
Two Phases:
Phase A (May - June 2006) Library’s Initiative/ surveys/ possible scenarios
Phase B (…- May 2007) Marketing techniques/ data re-evaluation
Survey Method: Questionnaires/ Interviews
User categories taking part: a) Researchers b) Technical Scientists
Total No.: 100
Dealing Issues: metadata extraction, preservation requirements, information access, retrieval etc.
It is noticeable that it was the Foundation’s DL that took the initiative in proposing the aforementioned project
Would you publish original work in an Open Access Journal ? :Cluj 11-16 September 2006 Would you publish original work in an Open Access Journal ?
BIOMED CENTRALInstitution Name: Foundation for Biomedical Research of the Academy of AthensPeriod of report: 01 June 2006 -> 30 June 2006 :Cluj 11-16 September 2006 BIOMED CENTRALInstitution Name: Foundation for Biomedical Research of the Academy of AthensPeriod of report: 01 June 2006 -> 30 June 2006
Are you familiar with the idea of IRs as publishing models with freely accessible content ? :Cluj 11-16 September 2006 Are you familiar with the idea of IRs as publishing models with freely accessible content ?
Would you publish original work in an Institutional Repository ? :Cluj 11-16 September 2006 Would you publish original work in an Institutional Repository ?
Would you support the Library’s effort to develop an IR within the Foundation? :Cluj 11-16 September 2006 Would you support the Library’s effort to develop an IR within the Foundation?
In General… :Cluj 11-16 September 2006 In General… The Participants’ comments section:
Publishing Industry still dominant
exercises strong scientific and social effects
countries like Greece are not to set novel publishing models yet; instead follow the worldwide model
IIBEAA’s importance was underlined including the innovative research projects and the scientific achievements that they are taking place in the Foundation
The Library’s response :Cluj 11-16 September 2006 The Library’s response The results were not the expected ones
In order to change the dominant situation the Library will:
Organize educational seminars & lectures
Print and distribute brochures to the Laboratories
Print posters presenting the DL’s affiliation with the OA movement
Use the web site to inform visitors about the OA movement and IRs development
Promote the creation of a National Institutional Coalition for the OA e-content (research foundations, academic institutions, government organizations)
Search for International partners coming from biomedical institutions
Campaign already in progress
After May 2007 the Library will move on to the second phase of the Survey
Library & Informatics Dpt discuss about possible scenarios & IR Policies
Personnel needs and technical equipment (software/hardware) are being estimated
Conclusions- Suggestions :Cluj 11-16 September 2006 Conclusions- Suggestions In order to manage e-content in medical libraries using repository techniques, cooperation at national and international level is needed.
Strongly related policies among Europeans, regarding medical e-content and a common approach to its financial treatment is also of essence.
There are actions to be taken under the European Community’s initiative
The greatest Information Organizations and Federations support scientific e-content’s open dissemination
What libraries should do? :Cluj 11-16 September 2006 What libraries should do? Promoting business models for legal- deposit of scientific e-content under their functional structure and set reliable policies, which will guarantee the contents quality
Thank you for your attention… :Cluj 11-16 September 2006 Thank you for your attention…