Amy Nurnberger, Center for Digital Research and Scholarship (CDRS), Columbia University Libraries/Information Services
Publishers Like Open Science (too): the perks of institutional repository / publisher partnerships
Panel: Partnerships between institutional repositories, domain repositories, and publishers
Research Data Access & Preservation Summit 2013
Baltimore, MD April 4, 2013 #rdap13
RDAP 16: Building Without a Plan: How do you assess structural strength? (Pan...
RDAP13 Amy Nurnberger: Publishers Like Open Science (too)
1. Publishers Like Open Science
(too)
the perks of institutional repository /
publisher partnerships
RDAP13–BALTIMORE AMY NURNBERGER CDRS.COLUMBIA.EDU
8. INFORMATION NEEDS
Institutional
Repositories
?
Other
Where are the data?
RDAP13 A. NURNBERGER CDRS.COLUMBIA.EDU
9. INFORMATION NEEDS
How do data get used?
Original
publication
Metastudy
Inter-
disciplinary
publication
How do data get used?
RDAP13 A. NURNBERGER CDRS.COLUMBIA.EDU
11. PLOS
Guest list
Together with their staff
PLOS
and
/
ACADEMIC COMMONS
request the honor of
hosting your data at
ACADEMIC
ACADEMIC COMMONS
COMMONS
COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY
Data planning
Monthly download
statistics and persistent
and collection
URL for citation to follow
Mailings
Hosting
CDRS.COLUMBIA.EDU
12. Benefits
ACADEMIC PLOS
COMMONS Answers to
questions:
/
-Deposited data -Further repository
-What is the options to propose to
-Understanding data status?
authors’ needs to authors
-How are the
build communities, data sharable? -Understanding
outreach, and authors’ needs in order
-What are data
services affiliations? to better devise
-Why?
systems and products
to meet them
CDRS.COLUMBIA.EDU
13. Benefits
PUBLIC GOOD
Better access to data
based on links between
publications and data
ACADEMIC PLOS
COMMONS /
*image not to scale
RDAP13 A. NURNBERGER CDRS.COLUMBIA.EDU
14. Photo Credits
http://www.public-domain- Dropbox:
image.com/science-public-domain-images- https://dt8kf6553cww8.cloudfront.net/stat
pictures/biology-pictures/scientist-in- ic/images/home_logo-vflWA3gZl.png
makeshift-conditions.jpg.html by Peeples
Gary, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Messy office by Mike Davis
Toxicology FDA photo by Michael J. https://secure.flickr.com/photos/cmiked/
Ermarth 8117410092/
https://farm7.staticflickr.com/6136/60084
98653_537656dc86_z.jpg Experimental data by JILA and University
of Marburg
https://farm6.staticflickr.com/5074/58848
USEPA photo by Eric Vance
68990_b50df55552_b.jpg
https://farm5.staticflickr.com/4002/45984
76529_dae4efda26_z.jpg http://www.public-domain-
image.com/cache/textures-and-patterns-
public-domain-images-pictures/wall-
NASA: texture-public-domain-images-
https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File: pictures/big-stones-wall_w725_h544.jpg
Black_Hole_in_the_universe.jpg
RDAP13 A. NURNBERGER CDRS.COLUMBIA.EDU
Hinweis der Redaktion
Relationships are based on commonalities – in this case the commonalities of scholarly communication
Share an audience & we share a commitment to that audience of advancing their scholarship – traditionally by supporting their writing, but going forward by acknowledging the value of the data that back those writings, and making sure that the connections between article and data that are necessary to support the replicability, accountability, and credit required by the scientific enterprise exist
Where do the data go:Where are the supporting data? Whether they are on one the hardrives, or made it to those CDs, or reside in one of those boxes. Or one of these boxes. Or they’re tucked up snug & secure in a repository, and if so we’d love to supply links between the article & the data. Or if they’re elsewhere…
This is especially interesting for esa, who has a strong relationship with dryad & encourages deposit with them, but wonders where the other data get to…Are they even recoverable?
Where do data get used? Often times data aren’t used just for the original publication – a dataset has many lives. Original publication, metastudy, as we see more work connecting environmental sciences with health and social sciences, maybe an interdisciplinary study. It would be nice to know this – first in order to assess the extent of influence that a data set had & then also to be able to follow the linkages from various publications back to the datasets that may support them.And then the question is – after where are they & what happened to them is why?
What is standing in the way of depositing their data, of sharing it. Are they Barriers: of technology, of culture, of convenience – or just that no one had asked before?
Get answers & data in the repository – Provided the guest list by going back through the history of their journals and pulling articles by authors from Columbia university. They provided these to us for review & retrieval of information such as the supporting grant, and dataset types. We use this information to create survey instruments, construct mailings, and prepare data hosting options for the authors