ACS Open Choice allows full re-use

Robert Kiley (Wellcome) has – in very timely fashion – answered the discussion about ACS and the NIH policy:

ACS Open Choice articles – now in PMC and UKPMC

Papers published by the American Chemical Society (ACS) under their Open Choice option are now available in PMC and UKPMC. Currently around 110 papers – drawn from 20 ACS journal titles – are now freely available. These papers can be found by running the following search on UKPMC:
ACS Author Choice [filter]
All future papers published under this model will be made available through these repositories at the time of publication.
ACS Open Choice articles are fully open access in the sense that the licence [PDF link] allows users – for non-commercial research and education purposes – to “access, download, copy, display and redistribute articles as well as adapt, translate text and data mine the content….”
This model meets the requirements of the Wellcome Trust – and the other funders in the UKPMC Funders Group.

The important thing – and I believe it’s new – is that this policy allows full re-use (for non-commercial use) of the material. Although I have some reservations about NC use I welcome the policy as stated by Robert. That means that the ACS is prepared to publish Open Access material if the author/funder pays – which is all that everyone has been asking for.

I am not surprised that Rich finds it confusing. There has been so much misinformation and disinformation that you need to be a Robert Kiley or Peter Suber to know the precise position. But here we are at a situation where everyone seems to have what they want.

  • The ACS gets paid to publish high quality papers.
  • Wellcome (or NIH) pays to get its research disseminated to everyone
  • The whole world can read the research – and thereby up the citation count.
  • The ACS gets paid by subscribers

If alien landed from a foreign planet, I couldn’t explain to them what all the fuss is about… Why should the ACS lobby to terminate a process in which it already participates?

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library of the future – feedback I

I’m pleased to see there is considerable feedback today and to start with I’ll post Peter Morgan’s very thoughtful and useful comment in full. I’ll be seeing what I can distill out of it…

Hello Peter,

While as your sometime peripatetic librarian I can share your disappointment at the resounding silence from librarians, I don’t share your apparent surprise. I would interpret the silence, not as evidence that my fellow librarians don’t care or have nothing useful to contribute, but more simply as an indication that most librarians’ discussions of these issues – and the issues *are* discussed (maybe not enough, granted, but more than might be visible to you) – still typically take place outside the world of blogs and tweets, where only a minority of librarians are active in a medium that you use routinely. The trouble is that we tend to discuss them mainly with other librarians. Yes, it’s certainly legitimate to criticise librarians for not sharing the medium to better effect; but it doesn’t necessarily follow that we don’t care.

And is the world of, say, chemistry so very different? I recall an RSC informatics meeting a year or two back – you were a speaker – at which the chemistry bloggers present agreed that they belonged to a very select bunch of maybe a hundred worldwide, and were not representative of the more conservative chemistry research community as a whole.

Similarly, for every Peter Murray-Rust championing the cause of Open Access, Open Data, etc, we both know that there are many other chemists who appear reluctant to embrace such ideas but who have wish lists of their own. There are indeed librarians who venture out to explore scientists’ needs; but while some of us will have the good fortune to meet a PM-R, others will encounter less enlightened researchers. You can – and do – articulate very clearly what you want from a library, and so can your colleagues in the same lab, but you and they may have radically different agendas. This makes it hard to discern a clear consensus emerging even from the single discipline of chemistry, let alone from scientists en masse. How far is it reasonable or feasible for the peripatetic librarian to engage with each researcher and then prioritise the wish lists that emerge? Isn’t it at least as reasonable for the library to expect researchers to help the process along by trying to develop a consensus on what they require?

I see this as a real problem. It’s difficult for the library to justify the allocation of scarce resources to the development of a service customised to meet the needs of an articulate individual or small group (I’m thinking here of university libraries as I can’t speak for the smaller special libraries of the sort found in, for example, the pharma sector), and even more difficult to see how this could easily scale up across a whole science faculty. If the library does go for the customised approach it risks accusations that it’s ignoring the needs and wishes of a much larger community; and if instead it decides to develop more generic services for that wider community, then it may end up with a product that tries to be all things to all scientists and as result fails to satisfy anyone.

Then there’s the politics of university libraries. The library has to support a broad academic community across the whole university and can’t ignore its other user constituencies. Any significant and sustainable development of services to scientists will have to be resourced. If the resources have to be found from the existing budget, then other services and facilities may suffer. The library will have to judge how best to balance the needs of its different user groups, and its decisions can be influenced by lobbying from interested parties. If historians mount a vigorous defence of “their” library services and nothing is heard from scientists, it’s easy to see how the latter might suffer neglect as a result.

You’ve pointed out that scientists won’t approach the library and that the librarian has to make the approach. We have to break out of the vicious circle in which libraries don’t deliver what scientists want because they remain unclear as to what that might be, while scientists don’t see any point in telling the library what they want because they see themselves as victims of a history of neglect. I fully agree that librarians need to take a more proactive approach (and I know from personal experience how rewarding and stimulating the ensuing collaborations can be), but this alone is not enough. Part of the challenge facing librarians must be to reverse that situation, i.e. to create an environment in which scientists will instinctively and routinely make the initial approach when necessary, confident that the library will be receptive, able to supply librarians who can discuss and understand the scientists’ needs (simply giving us a list of more journals to which we should subscribe is *not* the answer), and willing to find resources that enable solutions to be delivered.

So my main, admittedly long-winded point, if you’ve managed to stick with me this far, is that the picture isn’t black & white. Much more effort is required from librarians, and your wake-up call will eventually percolate through to a wider library audience; but scientists also need to move towards us if we’re to bridge the gap. You made that move years ago, but you’ve left many of your fellow scientists a long way behind in your wake. How can we help them to catch up?

Can’t make it to Oxford on 2 April, I’m afraid – prior engagement – but I’ll download the proceedings.

Peter

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Would the NIH policy destroy the ACS?

Rich Apodaca, a founder member of the Blue Obelisk, is concerned that the NIH policy on Open Access would put the American Chemical Society out of business. He’s typical of chemists who see ACS journals as the natural place to publish and it’s important that he gets a balanced answer. I’ll give mine but I’d like those more authoritative to help, either on this blog or pointing him to their sources.

Peter, I know there’s been a lot of back and forth on this, but I’ve seen very little in the way of hard data on the subject. Have you?

For example, since the ACS appears to be one of the main opponents of the NIH policy, where can we find a breakdown of the percentage of papers that would be eligible for the mandatory program currently and retroactively? Is it 10%? 20%? 50%? What if you throw NSF funding in there as well?

How do those figures break down by journal?

It doesn’t take a great leap of imagination to see a very dim future indeed for a subscription-oriented journal in which 75% of its content needs to released for free. 10% may not make a dent at all.

I think most chemists would respond rationally to the idea that their favorite grant-producing journal of choice would stand a real chance of going belly up under the NIH policy, but only when presented with the data to back it up.

PMR: Firstly it’s important to realise that Open Access is primarily a business model, and does not affect the quality or volume of publications. Papers are still peer reviewed to the same level and quality. If Rich sees the ACS journals as their favorite grant-producing engines (and that in itself is a commentary on today’s publication world) there is no a priori reason why that should change. The ghastly impact factor will still continue, driven by citations and it doesn’t matter whether the journal is Open or Closed. Some proponents of Open Access claim that it increases citations, so that should be a positive measure. There are enough anecdotal studies that support this view – it’s not overwhelmingly convincing and, of course, there’s no data in chemistry as there are no significant Open Access journals. And, if it’s already seen by chemists (as I have heard) that the only thing that matters in their career is to publish in ACS journals, then the battle has already been won and Impact factors are secondary.

Secondarily, and often misrepresented by oponents of OA, OA does not mean that there is less income. Open Access journals charge authors and Wellcome has pioneered the strategy that funders pay (and I’d prefer the term funder-pays). The full Open Access model can be profitable, as shown by Biomed Central which has been bought by Springer – and presumably that is a business decision based on being profitable. It is, however, extremely difficult to get good financial figures and many of these are guesses. OA advocates will argue that in a full OA economy the income will come from authors, supported by funders. Openents argue that many sectors, such as industry, will get a free ride and this will kill the market. A good example of low-cost Open Access is shown by the Int. Union of Crystallography’s Acta Crystallographica E, which charges a modest fee (ca 150 GBP IIRC) to authors, but this is a specialist data-rich journal and some of the costs will be lower. At the other end many publishers charge ca 3000 USD for Open Access publications and I think this is about the level of the ACS (it depends on whether your are a member, etc.)

Part of the problem is the transitional period. Ironically during this, conventional Closed journals (now “hybrids”) may even be better off. They will have a mixture of Open and Closed articles and I doubt that many subscribers would cancel subscriptions if, say, 50% of articles were Closed and 50% Open. The journal would be paid twice, once by authors and once by subscribers. Some campaigners have argued that this should lead to a reduction in suscriptions and some publishers have repied that they will do so, but it’s mired by the continued rise in journal prices and the secrecy on income. One problem is that there is no indication of what is a fair price for authors – and there are indications that some commercial OA publishers are jumping on the bandwagon and charging high prices for poor quality journals.

Note that this hybrid publication already exists for most publishers including the ACS and this already fulfills the NIH guidelines. You do the research, you pay an author/funder fee, and the journal publishes your paper Openly. The argument is simply about where the money comes from. Wellcome will pay this willingly. So if you are funded by Wellcome there should be no problem for author, ACS or anyone else. The difficulty may come with funders who don’t pay and institutions that won’t support authors.

So, in conclusion, this is about economics where the proponents hide the facts and the arguments can be highly speculative (“if you do/not do X, then Y would/not happen”). That’s one reason why the Blue Obelisk does not specifically advocate Open Access, but does advocate Open Data (the requirement that all the scientific data associated with an experiment should be available to the world).

But I hope this will be answered more authoritatively by others. If you do this by comments here please add links.

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library of the future – what do I say?

It’s now 9 days since I started thinking about what I was going to say at the JISC LOTF09 meeting at Oxford next week. I’ve sent out 15 posts ion this blog. I’ve used the LOTF09 tag. I use twitter and FriendFeed where two ULibrarians (scilib and D0r0th34) have given me lots of useful comments. But I expected those two…

Otherwise essentially nothing.

OK, I only regenerated this blog 2 weeks ago and so not everyone may have picked it up, but enough of the old regulars have. And bloglinks don’t shut down , they just don’r report anything. I got immediate comment on my Microsoft activities, for example.

But it’s not just me – there is nothing on the web for LOTF09 except the announcement and my blog. This is a meeting at a prestigious university, a fun place to be in the spring, with a wide-ranging panel talking about the “Future of the Library”. Why no discussion elsewhere? When I go to ICT/Informatics meetings there is often huge amounts of discussion before the event. People trying ideas out, making contacts, etc.

I don’t blame the organizers (and I’m grateful to Dicky for sending the Ithaka report).  I’m left with the overwhelming impression that the community is now past caring about the future of the library. That’s essentially what Ithaka said 2-3 years ago – that ULibraries had to be visible and rebrand themselves.  They’re not and they aren’t.

I thought I was going to have a useful debate where ULibrarians criticized and critiqued what I had written. Nothing. If ULibraries wish to survive (at least more than  book museums – which is important) they have to shout about it.

Without strong cogent input from ULibrarians on an innovative future, they have little. And that’s some of what I shall say in Oxford.

If, indeed, anyone turns up.

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Fight the Conyers Bill

Politics often seems sharper in the US that over here – the issues are more clearly lobbied and lobyable in Congress (though remember the software patents European directive?). PRISM may not be using the name much but it’s the same crew of vested interests. US citizens can and should lobby on this… [from Open Access News]
Richard J. Roberts, Protect our access to medical research, Boston Globe, March 23, 2009.  An op-ed.  Roberts won the 1993 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine.  Excerpt:

If you think this is the era of e-government and transparency, it’s time to think again. Hard as it is to imagine, there’s a move afoot in Congress to take away the public’s free online access to tax-funded medical research findings.
That would be bad for medical discovery, bad for patients looking for the latest research results, and another rip-off of the American taxpayer.
Today anyone who wants to investigate a medical topic or see the outcomes of the $30 billion annual taxpayer investment in the National Institutes of Health has simply to visit PubMed Central, the agency’s popular online archive. It provides free access to the knowledge recorded in 80,000 journal articles published each year as a result of NIH grants, plus many other peer-reviewed, open-access research papers.
Under the current policy, which is similar to practices of other funders worldwide, researchers who accept NIH funds must deposit their resulting peer-reviewed scientific articles in the PubMed Central archive. There the articles are permanently preserved in digital form, made searchable, linked to related information, and offered free to all on the Web. It’s a fair deal: Researchers get financial support for their work; taxpayers get a resource that will further advance science and address the public’s need to know.
But a group of well-heeled scientific journal publishers is trying to turn back the clock. They’ve backed legislation to rescind this widely hailed NIH policy. Elsevier , publisher of The Lancet, for example, is part of the Association of American Publishers, which has joined with the so-called DC Principles Coalition to ramrod the bill in Congress.
The giant American Chemical Society is another vocal advocate of the bill.
Not all publishers support the bill, but those who do are among the richest and best connected on Capitol Hill. If the pending legislation passes, public access will take a back seat to publisher self-interest….
PubMed Central is vital for researchers and the public alike. Only through free access can everyone find out where the cutting edge of research lies. With access to the latest studies, patients and their families have a much-needed piece of the puzzle as they consider treatment options and potential outcomes. Educators and students at rich and poor schools alike have an unmatched resource for teaching and learning about the life sciences. Small businesses can put advances in knowledge to work and drive American innovation.
Health advocate Sharon Terry of the Genetic Alliance, whose children have a rare genetic disease, contends that before NIH put its research online, her own search to understand her children’s situation ran into a “wall around published scientific research. Information was being held hostage by outmoded publishing practices.”
The publishers are pulling out all the stops to overturn the current NIH policy….
It is time that publishers stop trying to rob the public of access to NIH research. Instead of rolling back the current NIH policy, we need to strengthen it. For example, NIH should shorten the present one-year wait for public access, which was implemented in response to publisher pressure. Also, public access requirements should be extended to all federal research grants, not just those of NIH.
Just as big financial firms don’t seem to understand that public obligations come with their government bailout funds, some publishers seem clueless about the public’s right to public research. NIH and agencies throughout government owe it to taxpayers to share the findings of their research investments as widely as possible.
Handing publishers the right to lock up research isn’t a government giveaway taxpayers can afford.

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Blue Obelisk in Salt Lake City

I’m very sad I can’t get to the ACS and the Blue Obelisk Meeting – see the Wiki: I wish everyone well.

Our Blue Obelisk meeting in Salt Lake City is taking shape.
It’s set up at Martine for 10 people, Wed 25 March, 7pm
The Martine is a tapas place is located one block south of Temple Square on 100 South between Main and State Streets, 2 blocks east of the convention center
Thanks to Rajarshi for setting this up.
This place is *very* limited in space, at it seems, so we cannot do it like in Boston, where many more people showed up than expected. So if you like to join (which would be great!), please let us know by emailing to blueobelisk-discuss@lists.sourceforge.net
So far we’ve got confirmations from

  1. Martin Walker
  2. Henry Rzepa
  3. Warren DeLano
  4. Rajarshi Guha
  5. Christoph Steinbeck
  6. Robert E. Belford
  7. Kyle Yancey
  8. Jon Holmes

I’m looking forward to meeting you in SLC.
Cheers, Christoph Steinbeck

The Blue Obelisk has no charter, nor anything else specific other than a shared purpose of Open Data, Open Source Open Standards in chemistry.

The Internet has brought together a group of chemists/programmers/informaticians who are driven by wanting to do things better, but are frustrated with the Closed systems that chemists currently have to work with. They share a belief in the concepts of Open Data, Open Standards and Open Source (ODOSOS) (but not necessarily Open Access). And they express this in code, data, algorithms, specifications, tutorials, demonstrations, articles and anything that helps get the message across.

All contributions – however small – are appreciated by the community – it’s a true meritocracy. The seminal peer-reviewed article in J.Chem.Inf. now has a Google Scholar citation count of 44 last time I looked. So, if you believe in citation counts the BO is making an impact. (Or at least its members keep citing it!)

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British Library and Copyright – geeks vs. business

I’ve had a wornderful day talking with Ben White from the BL. Ben is in charge of Intellectual Property matters at the BL and very interested in how Copyright affects science and its practice and dissemination. We spent a lot of time showing practical examples of re-use such as text- and data-mining and discssuing whether copyright or contracts or either get in the way of re-using the information for furthering science.
Here’s the BL’s position…

British Library Chief Executive, Dame Lynne Brindley DBE, speaking at an Intellectual Property Seminar, chaired by Ed Vaizey Shadow Minister for Culture, stated: ‘We are in danger of an escalating arms race between geeks/hackers and tech savvy young people and businesses focussed on lock-down – the music industry has shown the difficulties of DRM based strategies. Let’s put equal imagination in to workable new business models! And we should be aware of trends towards more open innovation models – in software standards, in publishing, in education courseware and in source code. The reward/innovation balance is not a straightforward one.’

Very true – and the balance in science is particularly important as:

  • Authors create the information with (usually) public funding
  • Authors do not expect or want any financial reward
  • Authors and funders want the results to be re-used by others
  • The work is usually understaken with the benefit of the human race in mind

PMR: Copyright and contracts can often stand in the way of re-use for science. Sometimes this is unintentional, but users dare not infringe copyright and libraries often sign additional contracts which have very powerful constraints about the amount and purpose of re-use.
Ben has a special request: Can anyone think of important scientific monographs which are out of print but in copyright and which it would be valuable to have access to? Things that the general public might have heard of… I can’t immediately do this in chemistry. Please add as comments or mail me…

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libraries of the future – Ithaka report

In preparing for LOTf09 I asked the organizers for some guidance and got a helpfiul reply:

Hi Peter
I would like your to talk to include the research/scientific needs as this is an important perspective, in terms of questions – we will be driven by the questions although on the day anyone can post to the blog and the twitter feeds which are going to be monitored live and you will be able to see all of this – you will also have an opportunity to review all the questions posed by the audience and at the pre meeting indicate which ones you feel you would like to answer.
Your blog is very interesting – you may have seen this already but this report?  -it explores the relationship between faculty and the library in the states – http://www.ithaka.org/publications/facultyandlibrariansurveys
I have just posted a short review on the Libraries of the future blog – By the way the tag for the event is #LOTF09, –
Dicky Maidment-Otlet
Communications Manager
JISC Executive

PMR: I hadn’t seen it – I read nothing (the information universe is infinite – I am finite – so I read 0% of all information – thanks to H2G2). It confirms my rough impressions:

The (In)visibility of the library
An important lesson is that the library is in many ways falling off the radar screens of faculty. Although
scholars report general respect for libraries and librarians, the library is increasingly disintermediated
from their actual research process. Many researchers circumvent the library in doing their research,
preferring to access resources directly. Researchers no longer use the library as a gateway to information,
and no longer feel a significant dependence on the library in their research process. Although the library
does play essential roles in this process, activities like paying for the resources used are largely invisible
to faculty. In short, although librarians may still be providing significant value to their constituency, the
value of their brand is decreasing.

This is an area of concern for all those concerned with the information strategy of the modern campus, but
is of particular importance to the library itself; if attention and support fades from the library, its ability to
contribute to the intellectual work of the campus diminishes, and its continuing institutional well-being
may be threatened. Libraries should be aware of this decreasing visibility and take steps to improve the
value of their brand by offering more value-added services to raise their profile on campus. It is essential
to their long-term viability that libraries maintain the active support of faculty on their campuses, a factor
which will be most effectively obtained by playing a prominent, valued, and essential role in the research
process. By understanding the needs and research habits of scholars in different disciplines, libraries can
identify products and services which would be appreciated by and of use to these scholars. Such efforts to
be involved in the research process offer benefits to scholars, by providing them with services to improve
their efficiency and effectiveness, as well as to libraries, recapturing the attention of scholars and
contributing to a general awareness of and respect for the library’s contributions.

[…]

…And of Science in Particular
The information age has most significantly impacted the sciences, which are experimenting with a wide
range of new models of scholarship and communication, and demanding an increasing level of campus
support. Serving the information needs of cutting-edge scientists for tools and infrastructure requires a
coherent strategic approach, aligning the expertise of academic administrators, technologists, librarians,
and others on campus. As our findings make clear, however, despite this growing significance of
information to scientists, the role of the library is diminishing in importance fastest amongst this group.
Libraries are providing these high-growth fields value in the acquisition of resources – for example in
licensing costly journal collections – but otherwise have been relatively absent from the workflow of
these high-growth fields, with an associated decline in perceived value. Some efforts have been made by
research libraries to engage more deeply in the broader workflow of scientific research, but at the system
level these efforts have been marginal, while commercial providers are making a major push to interject
themselves throughout the scientific research value stream. Deep consideration of how the library
community can best serve scientists and preserve scholarly values in the face of a rapidly changing and
increasingly commercial ecosystem is needed, both on the local and the system level.

That was 2.5 years ago. It’s worse now. I hate to say it, but the scientific library of the future is PRISM.

Unless we stop them.

Which we can, but only if we become revolutionaries.

I haven’t heard anything in the last few days from ULibrarians (apart from Dorothea who has blogged the issue, so they can’t plead ignorance)…. Please say something.

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librarians of the future – part IV

This is the final set of ideas as to what libraries (or librarians) of the future should look like for LOTF09 in Oxford. (BTW there is no current use of the tag on Technorati other than me – in contrast to some meetings where the blogosphere buzzes before the event). I’ve had very little reaction – of course I cannot command the blogosphere but it’s essentially Dorothea and 1 other usual suspect – and than mainly through FriendFeed/Twitter. So I have had to ask IRL and talked with 4 scientists whom I know well. I’ll summarize later. Here’s the last of my heroes – remember that these are the people who affect my. Altogether 1 is a ULibrarian, 1 is a ULibrary organization, and 1 is a University. All the others come from outside the University Library sector and funding.

  • Peter Suber. Peter epitomizes the Open Access movement. There are many others who deserve credit, but I have chosen Peter because he has provided a huge amount of intellectual infrastructure, both in terms of diigital resources and also thrpugh crystal-clear discourse in arguments which otherwise would become muddled and argumentative. Anyone wishing ammunition for their OA (or Open Data) quests can find it through Peter’s many daily reports, online metadata and enormous personal knowledge of the subject.
  • Robert Terry. If we are to build effective digital libraries for the future, funders will be a major part of the equation. The Wellcome Trust has pioneered the simple idea that if research is funded then the results must be disseminated. They have been aggressive in this – if you want funding, then publish. Some publishers have bleated that this isn’t fair to them, but it’s simple. No-one has to apply for Wellcome funding. Wellcome is the gold standard for funder-led dissemination and its actions have influence many other charities and governmental research funders. Robert (no longer with Wellcome) an important evangelist and produced much of the material on which I have based my own advocacy.
  • Virtual Observatory. “The International Virtual Observatory Alliance (IVOA) was formed in June 2002 with a mission to facilitate the international coordination and collaboration necessary for the development and deployment of the tools, systems and organizational structures necessary to enable the international utilization of astronomical archives as an integrated and interoperating virtual observatory. The IVOA now comprises 16 VO projects … The work of the IVOA focuses on the development of standards.” The VO is an epitome of rht scientific digital library of the future – if scientists wish to collaborate – as astronomers must – they need standards and resources. This model is mirrored in other domains – the European Geoscience Union publishes an Open Access journal where data is as important – or more important – than fulltext
  • Jimmy Wales Wikipedia needs no explanation, but its development and use is a clear touchstone for whether you understand the digital library of the future. Many scientists – and many ULibrarians – denounce WP as full of errors. This is a short-term, narrow-minded view. Instead WP should be treated as a central information resource for scientific education and research. [I made this point to a senior bioscientist – I showed him an entry for a common protein. “That’s wrong” he said to something which was possibly imprecise. Having asked what it should be, I clarified it in 20 seconds. So WP has yet another unit of improvement. I have an idea for WP which I’ll suggest in a later post.
  • John Wilbanks has pioneered Science Commons – “Science Commons (SC) is a Creative Commons project for designing strategies and tools for faster, more efficient web-enabled scientific research. The organization identifies unnecessary barriers to research, crafts policy guidelines and legal agreements to lower those barriers, and develops technology to make research data and materials easier to find and use. Its goal is to speed the translation of data into discovery and thereby the value of research. Science Commons is located at the MIT Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory. SC is a vital part of what we need in the digital age. Data must be Open. It has been great to see Science Commons and the Open Knowledge Foundation working together to define a livence approach to scientific data.
  • Elias Zerhouni was the 15th director of the National Institutes of Health, and among many accomplishments represented the struggle for Open publication of scientific research (e.g. through PubMedCentral). In the cours eof this he had to defend the NIH’s policy on PubChem, the digital library of chemical compounds which is free to the whole world. “The American Chemical Society tried to get the U.S. Congress to restrict the operation of PubChem, because they claim it competes with their Chemical Abstracts Service.[1].” (WP) and this epitomizes much of the wider antagonism to PubMedCentral from many publishers. Pubchem is for chemists like me (though not yet most of my colleagues) the epitome of a digital library.

That’s it. I’d be grateful for comments and reactions. I am not a ULibrary-basher, but unless ULibraries realise how much library activity now takes place without their involvement or funding they will be left detached from the mainstream of science information. Some of my colleagues ould say that this cause has already been lost.

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librarians of the future – Part III

Continuing the theme of librarians (as creators of the new libraries). Very little feedback on the blog, a bit more on FriendFeed. A general feeling that ULibrarians (I shall use this to mean University Librarians who run ULibraries) were not appreciated by scientists and I thnk this has to be taken as fact. I have just asked a well-known bioscientist what ULibrarians should do in this century and he described them as dinosaurs. Sorry, but that’s what he said – I am just the messenger. ULibraries have to redevelop their market or go out of business (apart from looking after medieval books).
So here is my next five – the penultimate post unless you give me more ideas… Remember, these are people and institutions which affect my life. This is what matters to me. Because I spend more time in trying to systematize and liberate information, there’s an emphasis in digital infrastructure which wouldn’t be there for most experiemental scientists, but I would expect them to appreciate the direction.

  • Peter Morgan This is my first and only ULibrarian. “Peter Morgan is an arts graduate with degrees from Leeds and Sheffield universities in the UK. He has 30 years’ experience as an academic librarian in Manchester and, for the greater part of his career, at Cambridge University Library. He has held office in a variety of UK and European professional library organizations, and has also undertaken consultancies for the British Council in the Middle East and Pakistan. In Cambridge he combines the role of Medical Librarian with liaison responsibilities for digital library activities, and is currently seconded for three years to serve as director of the DSpace@Cambridge project.” That was 5 years ago, roughly when Peter made contact with us (and I emphasize the direction – he sought us out. It is quite possible for ULibrarians to get out of ULibrraies and visit scientists. It will not happen the other way round). We’d been involved in eScience things and Peter had become engaged in DSpace. With great energy and knowledge of The JISC he led a bid in which Imperial College and Cambridge developed a system for archiving data in DSPace (SPECTRa). This was followed by SPECTRa-T where we adapted the approach to textming chemistry in theses, so combining or skills with the needs of the digital library.Much of what we now do can be directly traced to Peter. He brought Jim Downing into the project, and as you know Jim has now become the centre of our information design and approach to digital libraries (in the sense of this blog). Peter showed us how to work with The JISC (the goals are different from explaoraory science) – the role of project manages, or reports, of liaison, of working out what the calls are for (i.e. reading the call, not subverting it to one’s own desires).
    Peter was not quite an “embedded” librarian – more a “peripatetic” in that he would spend long hours in our cybercafe in Chemistry working with the team. If UL’s wish to reinevtn themselves then the PeterMorgan is one role to espouse.
  • Rufus Pollock and the Open Knowledge Foundation. Rufus typifies the new generation of extremely active, multidisciplinary and multifaceted librarians of the future. He’s an econmist, until recently a student and now a research fellow and has an amazing vision of how knowledge should and can be Open. When he first found me (about 6 years ago ) I thought his ideas of KnowledgeForge were well-intentioned but wouldn’t work. Now I regard him as managing to create a huge number of valuable initiatiatives from Open Shakespeare to the digital licences which are required for this century. If he (or we) have an idea he’ll hack it up in hours and demonstrate web pages. He organizes meetings of the OKF and gets a wide range of of participants (see the one at the end of March – I can’t be there). he has co-opted me onto OKFN and this has been of enormous practical value to me work in scientific information as he and his collaborators has built the information and legal infrastructure for Open Data. That’s yet another thing that UL’s should be actively involved in
  • Protocol Online – your lab’s reference book . A community resource for collecting recipes and annotating what works and what doesn’t. I’m pointing to this particular one because a bioscience postdoc responded to my question of what digital resources he actually used. There are many examples of this in many disciplines – the community has decided to manage its own needs. In chemistry we have the Blue Obelisk, Open Notebook Science, Chemspider, WWMM/CrystalEye, etc. sets of community tools which increasingly will allow annotation to add quality and value.
  • Sourceforge. No librarian of the future can be ignorant of this. Simply one of the best digital libraries on the planet. It hosts computer program source code – free and Open – and manages an incredibly powerful versioning system (Subversion). Again, digital librarians MUST use versioning. SF allows me to do everything I want when developing code – author it, test it, compile it cross platform, revert, share, etc. etc. I know my code is safe. I know anyone in the world can see any version they want. I know they can correct bugs, … It has indirectly been the inspiration for many other systems such as Wikis (at least that’s my guess) …
  • SPARC. directed by Heather Joseph. “The Scholarly Publishing and Academic Resources Coalition is an international alliance of academic and research libraries developed by the Association of Research Libraries in 1998 which promotes open access to scholarship. They currently have over 800 institutions in North America, Europe, Japan, China and Australia. SPARC Europe was established with the Ligue des Bibliothèques Européennes de Recherch in 2001.”. SPARC has a distinguished record of freeing scholarly information, new methods of publication, etc. A typical example is their author addendum. When I first became involved in Open Data I approached Heather to see if they could provide a mailing list for promoting the concept, and they have run this for some years. SPARC ()  is sponsored by the ARL so is an example of ULs seeking to develop the new digital libraries.

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