https://scholarlykitchen.sspnet.org/2019/12/10/why-are-librarians-concerned-about-getftr/
Year: 2019
Director of the Library at Amherst College
Senior Digital Scholarship Developer at Northeastern University
"A Discussion of Value Metrics for Data Repositories in Earth and Environmental Sciences"
"The Library Of Congress Terms and Conditions for License of Electronic Resources"
"Jisc and IOP Publishing Secure New Transitional Open Access Agreement for UK Universities"
DIY AI Tools: "Cloudy with a Chance of Neurons: The Tools That Make Neural Networks Work"
"Digging into Data Management in Public-Funded, International Research in Digital Humanities"
OCLC Research: Responsible Operations: Data Science, Machine Learning, and AI in Libraries
Librarian—Metadata Projects at University of Texas at Arlington [Scholarly Communications Division]
"The Open-Factor: Toward Impact-Aligned Measures of Open-Access eBook Usage"
Publishing and Scholarly Communications Coordinator—Library at Pacific University
"Determinants of Article Processing Charges for Medical Open Access Journals"
DigitalKoans Posts Resume on 12/10/2019
DigitalKoans posts will resume on 12/10/2019.
Academic Library as Scholarly Publisher Bibliography | Digital Curation and Digital Preservation Works | Open Access Works | Digital Scholarship | Digital Scholarship Sitemap
"Publishers’ Responsibilities in Promoting Data Quality and Reproducibility"
"Historians Respond to Plan S: Open Access vs OA Policies Redux"
"Playing Well on the Data FAIRground: Initiatives and Infrastructure in Research Data Management"
Utrecht University Library Report for cOAlition S: "Gaps Report Highlights Why Plan S Is Needed"
"The FAIR Funding Model: Providing a Framework for Research Funders to Drive the Transition toward FAIR Data Management and Stewardship Practices"
CMU and Elsevier: "Carnegie Mellon Publishing Agreement Marks Open Access Milestone"
Scholarly Communications Librarian at Touro College
"Talking Datasets: Understanding Data Sensemaking Behaviours"
Laura Koesten et al. have self-archived "Talking Datasets: Understanding Data Sensemaking Behaviours."
Here's an excerpt:
The sharing and reuse of data are seen as critical to solving the most complex problems of today. Despite this potential, relatively little is known about a key step in data reuse: people's behaviours involved in data-centric sensemaking. We aim to address this gap by presenting a mixed-methods study combining in-depth interviews, a think-aloud task and a screen recording analysis with 31 researchers as they summarised and interacted with both familiar and unfamiliar data. We use our findings to identify and detail common activity patterns and necessary data attributes across three clusters of sensemaking activities: inspecting data, engaging with content, and placing data within broader contexts. We conclude by proposing design recommendations for tools and documentation practices which can be used to facilitate sensemaking and subsequent data reuse.
Research Data Curation Bibliography, Version 10 | Digital Curation and Digital Preservation Works | Open Access Works | Digital Scholarship | Digital Scholarship Sitemap
Ransom Center Manager for Digital Archives at University of Texas at Austin
"The Fundamental Problem Blocking Open Access and How to Overcome It: The Bitviews Project"
Camillo Lamanna and Manfredi La Mannahave published "The Fundamental Problem Blocking Open Access and How to Overcome It: The Bitviews Project" in Insights.
Here's an excerpt:
In our view the fundamental obstacle to open access (OA) is the lack of any incentive-based mechanism that unbundles authors' accepted manuscripts (AMs) from articles (VoRs). The former can be seen as the public good that ought to be openly accessible, whereas the latter is owned by publishers and rightly paywall-restricted. We propose one such mechanism to overcome this obstacle: BitViews. BitViews is a blockchain-based application that aims to revolutionize the OA publishing ecosystem. Currently, the main academic currency of value is the citation. There have been attempts in the past to create a second currency whose measure is the online usage of research materials (e.g. PIRUS). However, these have failed due to two problems. Firstly, it has been impossible to find a single agency willing to co-ordinate and fund the validation and collation of global online usage data. Secondly, online usage metrics have lacked transparency in how they filter non-human online activity. BitViews is a novel solution which uses blockchain technology to bypass both problems: online AMS usage will be recorded on a public, distributed ledger, obviating the need for a central responsible agency, and the rules governing activity-filtering will be part of the open-source BitViews blockchain application, creating complete transparency. Once online AMS usage has measurable value, researchers will be incentivized to promote and disseminate AMs. This will fundamentally re-orient the academic publishing ecosystem. A key feature of BitViews is that its success (or failure) is wholly and exclusively in the hands of the worldwide community of university and research libraries, as we suggest that it ought to be financed by conditional crowdfunding, whereby the actual financial commitment of each contributing library depends on the total amount raised. If the financing target is not reached, then all contributions are returned in full and if the target is over-fulfilled, then the surplus is returned pro rata.
Research Data Curation Bibliography, Version 10 | Digital Curation and Digital Preservation Works | Open Access Works | Digital Scholarship | Digital Scholarship Sitemap