The discovery of open access books is challenging due to issues with metadata, pricing models, and rights information. Metadata standards like ONIX and CrossRef guidelines can help, along with supplying metadata to discovery services. The Directory of Open Access Books (DOAB) is a key discovery service that reviews publishers and lists their open access book metadata, helping increase downloads by 60%. For open access books to be discoverable in library catalogs, publishers should submit metadata to DOAB and libraries should systematically include DOAB records.
1. Why discovery of open books
is a challenge
How to build a successful OA books programme
ALPSP seminar, 22 February, London
Eelco Ferwerda
OAPEN Foundation
3. OAPEN Foundation
Dedicated to OA books
•OAPEN Library
– Hosting full text collection of OA books (+ chapters)
– Only peer reviewed content
– 150+ publishers, 3400+ books
•Directory of Open Access Books
– Discovery service, 6000 OA books from 170 publishers
•Focus on post publication services:
– Quality assurance
– Deposit, aggregation, archiving
– Discovery and Dissemination
4.
5.
6. Discovery: challenges
Goal of OA:
– take away access barriers, increase reach, usage, and impact of
content
Dependent on discovery:
•Users access content through various sources:
– retailers; e-book aggregators; library vendors; library catalogues;
publishers website
•Third party suppliers struggle with free content:
– zero pricing, no DRM, no commission?
•When a title is discovered:
– is it clear that there is a free version?
•When the OA version is discovered:
– is it clear what rights are attached?
7. Metadata (1)
Using the right metadata is first part of the solution:
1.Conventional metadata for books:
– bibliographic information, isbn, classification codes, keywords,
abstract, etc
1.Metadata for digital content:
– DOI; ORCID; chapter level metadata
1.Metadata for OA content:
– license information (Creative Commons), open access flag,
funder information (FundRef), links to OA collections
– for green OA: embargo, version, link to version of record
8. Metadata (2)
Good practise guidelines for metadata:
•ONIX for books: Editeur FAQ on OA monographs
•CrossRef Best Practises for books
•Jisc/OAPEN metadata model for OA monographs
CrossRef guidelines include:
•Add outbound DOI links from references in books
•Establish editorial practises to ensure DOI linking
•Deposit references with CrossRef
9. Metadata (3)
The purpose of metadata is to support dissemination:
•Formats to supply metadata:
– ONIX 3.0 (book industry)
– MARC21 (library community)
•Provide metadata feeds for various channels:
– Library discovery systems: OCLC WorldCat; ExLibris Primo; ProQuest’s
Summon; EBSCO Discovery
– OA channels: harvesting through OAI-PMH; BASE
– Web resources: Europeana; DPLA
•Hosting & discovery platforms:
– OAPEN; JSTOR; Ingenta Open
– Discovery service for OA books: DOAB
12. DOAB
Discovery service for OA books:
•Publishers apply to be listed
•DOAB reviews applications based on
requirements for OA books
•Listed publishers upload the metadata of their OA
books
•Libraries include the DOAB collection in their
discovery system
13. DOAB works
• DOAB is second largest source of referrals for
OAPEN (20%, after facebook)
• Books listed in DOAB are downloaded 60%
more than unlisted books
• Recent study:
‘…aggregation of OA metadata by a trusted entity such
as DOAB plays a significant role in facilitating OA book
discoverability in library catalogs’
- Aaron McCollough, in: Libraries and the Academy, Vol. 17, No.1 (2017)
14. What you should do
Conclusion of study
Two most important factors to make OA books
discoverable through library catalogs:
1.Publishers should deposit OA monograph
records in DOAB
2.Libraries should systematically opt to include or
display OA monograph records
15. References
Good practise guidelines for metadata:
- ONIX for books: Editeur FAQ on OA monographs
http://www.editeur.org/files/ONIX%203/20140722%20Open%20Access%20e
- CrossRef Best Practises for books
www.crossref.org/06members/best_practices_for_books.html
- Jisc/OAPEN metadata model for OA monographs
https://www.oapen.org/content/sites/default/files/u6/WP3%20Metadata
%20for%20OA%20monographs%20-%2020160607.pdf
Article:
- Aaron McCollough, ‘Does It Make a Sound: Are Open Access
Aonographs Discoverable in Library Catalogs?’ in: Libraries and the
Academy, Vol. 17, No.1 (2017)
https://www.press.jhu.edu/journals/portal_libraries_and_the_academy/
portal_pre_print/articles/17.1mccollough.pdf