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Repositories for Institutional Open Access: Mandated Deposit Policies

Carr, L., Swan, A., Sale, A., Oppenheim, C., Brody, T., Hitchcock, S., Hajjem, C. and Harnad, S. (2006) Repositories for Institutional Open Access: Mandated Deposit Policies. (Submitted)

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Abstract

Only 15% of articles are currently being made Open Access (OA) through spontaneous self-archiving efforts by their authors. They average 25%-250% more citations in all 12 disciplines tested so far. Ninety-four percent of journals endorse immediate OA self-archiving. There is no evidence that self-archiving induces subscription cancellations. The “OA advantage” consists of: Early Advantage (early self-archiving produces both earlier and more citations), Usage Advantage (more downloads for OA articles, correlated with later citations), Competitive Advantage (relative citation advantage of OA over non-OA articles: disappears at 100% OA), Quality Advantage (OA advantage is higher, the higher the quality of the article) and Quality Bias (authors selectively self-archiving their higher quality articles – a non-causal component: disappears at 100% OA). We are currently comparing the OA advantage for mandated and spontaneous (self-selected) self-archiving. Deposit rates in Institutional Repositories (IRs) remain at 15% if unmandated, but climb toward 100% OA if mandated, confirming surveys that predicted 95% compliance. In the UK, 4 of the 8 research funding councils and the Wellcome Trust mandate self-archiving and it is being considered by the European Commission and the US federal FRPAA. There is no reason for universities to wait for the passage of the legislation. Five universities and two research institutions (including CERN) have already mandated it, with documented success. An Immediate-Deposit/Optional-Access Mandate covers all cases and moots all legal issues: metadata are immediately visible webwide and, where needed, access to the postprint can be set as Closed Access instead of OA throughout any embargo period. Software to support this approach (that allows the author to email individual copies of non-Open Access papers to individual requesters) has been created for both EPrints and DSpace repository platforms.

Item Type:Other
Creator/Authors:
Les Carr
Alma Swan
Arthur Sale
Charles Oppenheim
Tim Brody
Steve Hitchcock
Chawki Hajjem
Stevan Harnad
Keywords:open access, citations, research impact, self-archiving, institutional repositories, policy-making, mandates
Research Group:Current ECS Groups > Web and Internet Science
Old ECS Groups > Intelligence, Agents, Multimedia
Date:October 2006
Information about this record:
Performance Indicator:EZ~08~04~05
Downloads (2010):79
ID Code:13099
Last Modified:23 Sep 2011 10:34
Deposited On:13 Oct 2006 by Harnad, Stevan

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References in Article

Select the SEEK icon to attempt to find the referenced article. If it does not appear to be in this archive you will be forwarded to the paracite service. Poorly formated references will probably not work.

Lawrence, S. (2001) Online or Invisible? Nature 411 (6837): 521

http://www.neci.nec.com/~lawrence/papers/online-nature01/

Hajjem, C., Harnad, S. and Gingras, Y. (2005) Ten-Year Cross-Disciplinary Comparison of the Growth of Open Access and How it Increases Research Citation Impact (pdf 8pp) IEEE Data Engineering Bulletin, Vol. 28 No. 4, December 2005

http://sites.computer.org/debull/A05dec/hajjem.pdf

Sale, Arthur (2006b) Comparison of IR content policies in Australia. First Monday 11(4).

http://eprints.comp.utas.edu.au:81/archive/00000264/

Swan, A. (2006) The culture of Open Access: researchers' views and responses, in Jacobs, N., Eds. Open Access: Key Strategic, Technical and Economic Aspects, chapter 7. Chandos.

http://eprints.ecs.soton.ac.uk/12428/

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