Archive for November, 2006

Open Access From the Publisher’s Viewpoint

ITI Bloggers November 30th, 2006

Much has been said about open access (OA) in the past couple of years, with a large part of the debate from the viewpoint of the author or reader. So I was particularly interested in two presentations discussing OA from the other participants—the publishers. Jan Velterop, formerly at BioMedCentral and now Director of OA at Springer, represented a large publisher, and Paul Peters, Sr. Director of Publishing at Hindawi Publishing Corporation in Egypt, represented a smaller publisher. They both had interesting views on OA.

Velterop addressed three aspects of OA: dogma, ethics, and pragmatism. He noted that no two journals have the same goals, motives, procedures, acceptance and rejection criteria, or ethics. But they do organize the scientific literature and provide a pecking order, which leads to a very anarchic environment. He noted that the value of publishing lies in the content, and the old subscription model of journal publishing (the only reasonable model in a print world) implies selling content. Some publishers think that OA undermines their rights, but publishers only have rights to content if they have been given to them, which is the usual case when an author transfers copyright to a publisher (a requirement for publishing). Velterop thinks that publishers should come to the conclusion that OA is a good thing, and then focus our energy on how to achieve it. He concluded with the following food for thought:

• Most scholarly articles are highly specialized and are therefore understood only by a few people, which leads to low usage figures.

• Copyright is virtually irrelevant in scientific research because the system is built upon “standing on the shoulders of giants”—adding incremental advances to previous research. Velterop call this “a form of organized plagiarism”.

• Peer review is a test to indicate the article is scientifically sound. It has nothing to do with scientific truth because many conventional truths are often overturned as a result of further research.

• Articles are like ads in which a researcher promotes his/her scientific prowess in the ecosystem to further future career and funding prospects.

Peters presented a strong case for OA as a benefit to scientific publishers. In his view, it has three compelling advantages:

1. Launching new journals and expanding existing titles becomes much easier under the OA model. In the subscription world, increasing the size means increasing the price, which will lead to some cancellations. In an OA world, journal prices do not change when sizes are increased. By their nature, subscription barriers limit the distribution of an article, which in today’s Internet environment is a huge disadvantage. For established journals a publisher’s limited page budget can cause lengthy publication delays. OA journals can immediately publish an article as soon as it is ready.

2. OA attracts authors because of its faster publication speeds. Attracting strong authors is the key to creating strong journals.

3. OA increases competition in the market. Smaller publishers cannot compete in the current subscription market because many journals have a monopoly on their content. The lack of competition makes it difficult for smaller publishers to gain an edge. If authors have to pay the publication cost of their articles from a research budget, they are far more likely to consider the subscription price of a journal when deciding where to publish. If they publish in an OA journal, authors can be sure their article will be widely available, even if they submit it to a less prestigious journal.

In the subscription world, size of the publisher makes a big difference in its ability to compete. Promoting a small collection of journals to potential subscribers can be prohibitively expensive. Many small publishers must rely on word of mouth to increase their base of subscribers, but in an OA world, the author becomes the publisher’s sole customer so it can focus on services provided to the author.

I found it encouraging that these two speakers both presented a good case for publisher support of OA. Maybe there is hope yet that OA will become a widely accepted business model in the scholarly publishing world.

Don Hawkins
Columnist, Information Today


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Another Information Pioneer in the Exhibit Hall

ITI Bloggers November 30th, 2006


Eugene Garfield, Chairman Emeritus of ISI, appeared in the Thomson ISI booth and autographed copies of an article describing his pioneering work in developing citation indexing and applying it to the scientific literature. Here, he presents a copy of the article to Barbara Brynko, Editor of Information Today.

Don Hawkins
Columnist, Information Today


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A Picture’s Worth

ITI Bloggers November 30th, 2006


Special thanks to EContent’s sales manager, Walter McQuillan, for getting these shots of more EContent 100 list winners.

What a wonderful opportunity to meet so many of them… and so many other key players in the industry.

Michelle Manafy
Editor, EContent, Intranets, and the Enterprise Search Sourcebook


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Geek Girls and Scoble Show

ITI Bloggers November 30th, 2006

Maryam Scoble asked Hazel Hall for an interview to be shown on Scoble Show since Maryam discovered Hazel was a "geek girl." Hazel decided to bring some other geek girls along with her. That would be Karen Blakeman and me. Robert Scoble tells us it should air in a few weeks. In the meantime, go check out the interview they did with Liz Lawley, a frequent speaker at Information Today conferences.

Marydee Ojala
Editor, ONLINE: The Leading Magazine for Information Professionals

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Online Spotting

ITI Bloggers November 30th, 2006

Dick’s post about spotting Harry Collier from above (the photo is of him and Diane Hoffman) sent me looking for Harry to confirm that he’d actually attended all 30 conferences. I found him in the press room and he has indeed been to all of them.

Chatting later with Charles Oppenheim, I discovered that he, too, has been to all the Online shows. A bit abashed (abashed?? Charles??), he confessed that the first one was so small, he didn’t think it would survive. Must be one of the few times he’s been wrong.

Marydee Ojala
Editor, ONLINE: The Leading Magazine for Information Professionals

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FIZ and TIB

ITI Bloggers November 30th, 2006

FIZ Chemie Berlin’s Rene Deplanque was a busy guy yesterday. In addition to his talk in the morning, he signed a cooperative deal with TIB Hannover in the afternoon. They will cooperate in the archiving and providing of multimedia elements. "Digital media have become the most important carriers for current scientific knowledge," he said. Uwe Rosemann, Director of TIB Hannover, added that the task for librarians has expanded well beyond the traditional archiving of printed materials into digital image, video, 3-D, audio and simulation data. FIZ Chemie will be responsible for developing concepts and standards for the central archiving and verification system, while TIB will collect the digital materials, register them by DOI code, verify them in catalogs and databases, and provide them via the TIB portal.

Marydee Ojala
Editor, ONLINE: The Leading Magazine for Information Professionals

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HighWire’s 1000th Journal

ITI Bloggers November 30th, 2006

HighWire celebrated the addition of its 1000th journal at the show. It’s the Proceedings of the London Mathematical Society, published by Oxford University Press. I had a most interesting discussion with them about metrics. How do you determine exactly what is a journal title? You have to distinguish between Web sites and journal titles, for one thing, according to HighWire. Then there’s the matter of title changes. When Journal X becomes Journal Y but doesn’t really change much else, is it one title or two? Would it depend on whether or not the ISSN changes? Ok, for many of you blog readers out there, this perhaps isn’t the most fascinating of discussions. In fact, it’s probably only a discussion an ex-periodicals librarian (which is where I started) could love!

Marydee Ojala
Editor, ONLINE: The Leading Magazine for Information Professionals

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Winning Opportunities

ITI Bloggers November 30th, 2006

In a crowded session called Winning Opportunities for Information Professionals, Rene (yes, I know there should be an accent over the final e in Rene, but even the conference’s badge printer couldn’t handle it; his badge read Ren??) Deplanque from Fiz Chemie Berlin told us about the European Laser Labs project and its reliance on collaborative technologies like wikis and discussion forums. His words of advice included some real gems, including how to get people to accept open access: "Keelhaul them." He also warned that scientists shouldn’t rely on Google because science is too complex and stressed the importance of flexibility. The exchange of information within the Laser Labs project demonstrates a new form of production, publication and distribution.

SLA’s CEO, Janice LaChance, had her own words of wisdom. She said, "You must adapt to the pace of change, not just change itself." Information professionals, according to her, sit at the hub of the organization, at the intersection of information gathering, analysis and decision making. Above all, your values should align with those of your organization. She then advised us to "think like the CEO." What would you do if you were in charge?

Marydee Ojala
Editor, ONLINE: The Leading Magazine for Information Professionals

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Info-Dudes

ITI Bloggers November 30th, 2006

Here they come to save the day . . . VNU selected these two icons of information management as the show mascots and symbolic symbols of the gist of what’s going on here. Appearing on exhibit signs, but also emblazoned on the official show guides and conference programs, these Info-Dudes clearly demonstrate why we’re here and what it’s all about. No wonder they say a picture’s worth a thousand words.

Dick Kaser
ITI, V.P., Content


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Applause, Applause

ITI Bloggers November 30th, 2006

London’s Royal Lancaster Hotel rolled out the red carpet last night for the fourth annual International Information Industry awards, hosted by Online Information 2006 and Information World Review. Congratulations to the winners:

PROJECT AWARDS
Innovation in Knowledge Management: Knowledge Management Programme, ARUP
Innovation in Content Management: Highlands and Islands Enterprise Portal, SiteKit Solutions
Best Intranet/Extranet Project:
Addenbrooks NHS eMR, Addenbrooks NHS Trust and OITUK

PRODUCT/VENDOR AWARDS
Best User Experience: TNA Global Search, The National Archives & Autonomy
FreePint Award for Best Customer Service Team: PreNax
Best Business Information Product: ISI Emerging Markets
Best STM Information Product: Springer eBooks Collection
Best Specialist Search Product: Trexy.com
Best Product for Libraries: Scholarly Stats, MPS Technologies

BEST INFORMATION/KNOWLEDGE TEAM AWARDS
Best Team in Academic/Public Sectors: Business & IP Centre Team, The British Library
Best Team in a Business Environment: IoD Information & Advisory Services Team

INDIVIDUAL AWARDS
CILIP/Online Information Personal Development Award: Stella Wisdom, The British Library, Boston Spa
IWR Information Professional of the Year: Rachel Kolsky, AIG
Lifetime Achievement: Dr. Eugene Garfield, Chairman Emeritus of Thomson Scientific

The awards were sponsored by IET/Inspec, American Psychological Association, Swets, ICC, Bureau van Dijk, and VeriSign. Thanks to Emma Harris for her assistance.

Barbara Brynko
Editor in Chief
Information Today


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