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Morning After The Night Before Is the future what it used to be? For pre-viewing … [Taken from presentations given to JISC and to the ASA Conference ..] Peter Burnhill Director, EDINA National Data Centre, University of Edinburgh, Scotland UK [email protected] Role in scholarly communication … EDINA’s mission: to enhance productivity in research, learning and teaching In mid-90s, we planned a future, based on host to key A&I Databases: • • • Art Abstracts, Art Retro Index, PAIS, MLA, EconLit , Palmer’s Index to Times Agdex, BIOSIS, CAB-Agriculture, CSA Environment, Land, Life & Leisure Ei Compendex, INSPEC Served most of UK academic market for those But ‘Content Gold Rush’ as rights holders took back licences • Stampede for retail frontage with links to full text and other portals Re-making role … • From Discovery to Delivery • • • [project activity with Mimas: Copac & Zetoc] Suncat, UK national union catalogue of serials National OpenURL Router, as registry of OpenURL resolvers in use Investigating analysis of usage data / e-journals register [see PEPRS below] • Open Access; Access Management • • The Depot, an Open Access deposit facility Access control: Privilege of Membership (rather than Payment of Money) • • • Pioneered use of Shibboleth for JISC and developed pilot federation (SDSS) Technical (metadata) support for UK Access Management Federation (with JANET) JISC Expert Group on Identity & Access Management • Continuing access and preservation of journal content • • • • Access Host for CLOCKSS, with U of Edinburgh as Archive Node Technical support for UK LOCKSS Alliance cooperative Piloting an e-journals preservation registry (PEPRS), with ISSN-IC Post-cancellation access via NESLi2 (PeCAN), with JISC Collections having also diversified into GeoSpatial (GoGeo) and Multimedia (VSM Portal) ‘resources’; and support for JISC with e-learning/OER • Jorum for learning and teaching materials (long term partner with Mimas) A Simple Model of Scholarly Communication Author writes to be recognised by peer community & for institutional ‘research assessment exercise’ purposes … perhaps to be read Key User (Reader) Verbs: Discover Locate Request Access article of interest service on those articles permission to use service to service/article article is the ‘information object of desire’ Reader Scholarly Communication (focus on article–length work published in journals) Author (article) Publisher article serial issue Libraries and Publishers provide framework … the traditional ‘middleware’/infrastructure’ ... with Licence(s) for electronic (online) and print (on-shelf) Licence £ Library (serial) Reader (article) P.Burnhill, EDINA/JISC, 2005 Scholarly Communication (focus on article–length work published in journals) Publisher article serial issue Libraries and Publishers provide framework … the traditional ‘middleware’/infrastructure’ P.Burnhill, EDINA/JISC, 2005 ... with Licence(s) for electronic (online) and print (on-shelf) Licence £ Library (serial) Scholarly Communication (Access to article–length work) Value-add £ services Licensed Online Access Publisher article serial issue F o r m a £ E c o n o m y ILL/ docdel Licence Institutional arrangement Library (serial) Reader (article) Cloud Activity: (1) An Ever-present Cloud of Peers Author (article) peer review learned society Licensed Online Access Publisher article serial issue peer exchange F o r m a £ E c o n o m y ILL/ docdel Licence Institutional arrangement Library ‘invisible college’ Reader (article) Peer-to-Peer Communication F o r m a £ Author (article) peer review learned society peer exchange Publisher article serial issue Licence E c o n o m y Institutional arrangement Library (serial) Informal: ‘invisible college’ and the ‘gift economy’ Reader (article) Scholarly Communication Author (article) peer review learned society article serial issue E c o n o m y ILL/ docdel peer exchange Licence ‘Open Access’ E-prints free2web access Licensed Online Access repositories Publisher F o r m a £ repositories Institutional arrangement ££ Library (serial) Informal: ‘invisible college’ and the ‘gift economy’ Reader (article) Shared Challenge about Assured and Continuing Access Long term digital preservation Author (article) E-prints peer review learned society Continuity of access Publisher repositories article serial issue peer exchange Licensed Online Access E c o n o m y ILL/ docdel Licence E-prints free2web access F o r m a £ repositories Institutional arrangement Library (serial) Informal: ‘invisible college’ and the ‘gift economy’ Reader (article) Forecasting change for the traditional model? Author (article) Publisher * All is Licensed, whether for: •Open Access •Privileged of Membership Access •Payment of Cash Access article serial issue Licence* Library (serial) Reader (article) P.Burnhill, EDINA/JISC, 2005 (2) Peer2Peer Pressure Cloud Author (article) F o r m a £ Publisher article serial issue learned society Licence peer review Institutional arrangement Library (serial) peer exchange free2web access Informal: ‘invisible college’ and the ‘gift economy’ Reader (article) E c o n o m y (3) Cumulus Web Formation, will come to dominate Author (article) F o r m a £ Publisher article serial issue Licence Institutional arrangement Web 2.0/3.0: Semantic web mash-ups, Blogs. RSS feeds, Wikis free2web access Library (serial) Role of Institutional Repositories? peer exchange Informal: ‘invisible college’ and the ‘gift economy’ Reader (article) E c o n o m y (4) The Challenge in forecasting futures F o r m a £ Value-add £ services Author (article) Publisher article serial issue Role of learned society? Publisher engagement Web 2.0/3.0: Semantic web mash-ups, Blogs. RSS feeds, Wikis free2web access peer exchange Open peer review? Licence E c Library o (serial) n Role of Institutional o Institutional arrangement m Repositories y Informal: ‘invisible college’ and the ‘gift economy’ ? Reader (article) What network-level choice? For (resource) discovery? • Does Internet mean Google [full product range], Science Direct [and equivalent commercial offerings]? • What is the contribution at the national level? • • For journal content and other literature? For other resources, eg geo-spatial, learning materials, etc For (resource) locate, request and access? • Some resources are ‘open’, others require authorisation: do we plan structure for both? – Delivery of product and services ‘at the network level’ – Delivering service (collecting revenue - directly or indirectly) at the nation state, consortium or institutional level? 17 Scholarly Communication (Focus on formal (£) economy for licensed online access to article– length work published in journals) Publisher article serial issue ScienceDirect, Scopus, etc [licensed] access to article online GoogleScholar Licence = authorisation Serials managers OpenURL Resolver Library (serial) OPAC A&I ‘discover’ LibPortal ‘locate/access’ authentication UKAMFed Shibboleth/Athens ‘request’ Reader (article) Scholarly Communication Publisher (Institutional & JISC Components) article serial issue NESLi2 A&I Licence= authorisation eg WoK, CABI OPACs Serials managers OpenURL Resolver Library (serial) eg JSTOR IoPArchive LibPortal authentication licensed access to article online P.Burnhill, EDINA/JISC, 2005 F o r m a £ ‘discover’ ‘request’ ‘locate/access’ Reader (article) e c o n o m y Scholarly Communication [historical] (Four projects funded by the JISC as ‘JOIN-UP’: with focus access to article–length work published in journals) A&I zetoc Licence Xgrain: GetRef Library (serial) Docusend: non-BL docdel ‘discover’ licensed access to article P.Burnhill, EDINA/JISC, 2005 Zblsa: GetCopy ‘locate’ Reader (article) F o r m a £ e c o n o m y Scholarly Communication (Historical: JOIN-UP Project Outcomes) A&I zetoc Licence GetRef Open URL resolver Library (serial) m2m GetRef for articles in Institutional & Subject Portals GetCopy ‘discover’ National OpenURL Router licensed access to article ‘locate’ OpenURL Resolvers:‘appropriate copy’ national OpenURL router: ‘appropriate resolver’ Reader (article) Scholarly Communication (JISC/RSLP establishes SUNCAT as UK serials union catalogue) Publisher article serial issue ISSN Register CONSER DOAJ other than in local OPAC SUNCAT Licence 1. Locate & discover serials held in UK 70 largest libraries 2. Upgrade OPACs have good bib. records 2 3. metadata on electronic access subscriptions/deals NISO/Onix/DLF(ERMI) licensed access to article P.Burnhill, EDINA/JISC, 2005 OPACs UK research libraries (national, university & specialist) Serials managers ‘discover’ ‘locate’ Reader (article/serial) Scholarly Communication (Bringing JISC-funded components together with bought-in 3rd party products) DOAJ ISSN Register Licence ETOCs A&I zetoc SUNCAT Serials managers GetRef OPACs Open URL resolver Library (serial) authentication ‘discover’ m2m ‘locate’ ‘request’ licensed access to article ‘access’ GetCopy National OpenURL Router Reader (article) Scholarly Communication: inter-working; use of what others provide; what is missing: Journals Portal? article serial issue Onix DOAJ A&I ETOCs ISSN Register Licence peer review learned society Xref Publisher zetoc Copac, WorldCat, Other Catalogues SUNCAT Serials managers Open URL resolver OPACs CONSER Library (serial) GetRef CLOCKSS ‘discover’ ‘locate’ Intute Search licensed access to article M as new Reader Reader (article) GoogleScholar/Facebook/spaces ‘open access’ to article IRs OpenDOAR the Depot what visions have others had? 25 1) a comprehensive electronic journal system • “Recent technological advances … developed largely independently of .. scientific and technical communication, will provide all the components” – word-processing equipment [and] personal computers for the preparation of articles .. will benefit publishers who can handle electronic output. … – telecommunications infrastructure is already available … • “Should a National Periodical Center come into existence, – [it] would be ideally situated to take advantage of any electronic output from publishers. – it could assist in the distribution functions now handled exclusively by publishers. Libraries and smaller publishers .. would benefit. • “This … is highly desirable and currently achievable … within next 20 years, – a majority of articles will be handled [in part this way] but not all articles will be … Much-read articles may still be distributed in paper form” 26 1) a comprehensive electronic journal system [1978] • “Recent technological advances … developed largely independently of … scientific and technical communication, will provide all the components” – word-processing equipment [and] personal computers for the preparation of articles .. will benefit publishers who can handle electronic output. … – telecommunications infrastructure is already available … • “Should a National Periodical Center come into existence, – [it] would be ideally situated to take advantage of any electronic output from publishers. – it could assist in the distribution functions now handled exclusively by publishers. Libraries and smaller publishers .. would benefit. • “This … is highly desirable and currently achievable … within next 20 years, – a majority of articles will be handled [in part this way] but not all articles will be … Much-read articles may still be distributed in paper form” • “some at NSF were disappointed because other studies forecast much quicker implementation” Donald King: study in 1978, published in 1981, reviewed in 1983 ‘Scientific journals in the United States: Their production, use and economics’, King, McDonald and Roderer, 1981 Out of Print. Review by C. Lee Jones, Bull. Med. Lib. Assoc. 71(4) 1983; available http://pubmedcentral.nih.gov) 27 2) Pricing model for the future “… goal is to give people access to as much information as possible …. “… experience has been that as soon as usage is metered on a per-article basis, there is an inhibition on use or a concern about exceeding some budget allocation” 28 2) Pricing model [projected] for the future [2000] “Elsevier’s goal is to give people access to as much information as possible on a flat fee, unlimited use basis. “Elsevier’s experience has been that as soon as usage is metered on a per-article basis, there is an inhibition on use or a concern about exceeding some budget allocation” Karen Hunter, Elsevier, March 2000 PEAK 2000 Conference ‘Brings Librarians, Publishers, Economists Together’ – a path breaking conference at University of Michigan, looking at Traditional Subscription vs Bundled vs Per Article – Now published, 8 years later * as ‘Economics and usage of digital libraries: byting the bullet’, Jeffrey K. MacKie-Mason and Wendy Pradt Lougee (eds). Ann Arbor, Michigan: University of Michigan University Library, Scholarly Publishing Office 2008 • But could have been found & read during past 8 years on Internet/Web • anytime, anyplace at www.si.umich.edu/PEAK-2000 29 This takes us back to an earlier JISC Vision about access Based on privilege of membership, not payment of money • Library Card (Shibboleth) not Visa Card • End users respond to different price-effort models; if not money then effort. King & Tenopir • But will credit crunch mean cancellations and end of Big Deal? Just another way of saying “free at the point of use” • walk-in libraries; the development of JISC and its services • ‘Digital library developments - a realistic future?’, Lyn Brindley & Derek Law, 1997, INSPEL, 31 (4) pp 195-203 • also available at http://en.scientificcommons.org/38270314 30