Mapping open access to e-resources workflows

Open Access workflows are often seen as a separate add-on set of processes. However, libraries already have processes in place to manage the e-resource life cycle. Therefore, as part of work package 8 (Library processes and open access), the HHuLOA team decided to investigate how open access workflows could be embedded into e-resource management. We looked at two established resources, TERMS (Techniques in E-Resource Management) (1,2) and OAWAL (Open Access Workflows for Academic Librarians) (3, 4, 5).

TERMS (Techniques in E-Resource Management)

TERMS began in 2008 and grew out of a discussion between the authors over a lack of consistency in e-resource management practices. TERMS aimed to set out the e-resource life cycle and to define a set of best practice using real world examples gathered from libraries in the UK and US. The 6 TERMS (described below) were crowdsourced for a number of years before a first draft was launched in 2012. During this period a number of very positive and constructive comments were gathered. This version of TERMS was recorded in Library Technology Reports during 2013.

The 6 TERMS are:

  1. Investigating new content for purchase or addition.
  2. Acquiring new content.
  3. Implementation
  4. Ongoing evaluation and access.
  5. Annual review.
  6. Cancellation and replacement review.

OAWAL (Open Access Workflows for Academic Librarians)

Like TERMS, OAWAL was aimed at new staff. OAWAL was aimed at those new to the area of open access, particularly those that were working in other parts of the library to the open access team and therefore may not have an in depth understanding of the processes involved. The 6 areas of OAWAL are:

  1. Advocacy
  2. Workflows
  3. Standards
  4. Library as Publisher
  5. Copyright Issues
  6. Discovery

OAWAL was essentially an answer to a question posed at a TERMS event. Namely, how does open access fit into the e-resources management life cycle? Broadly speaking, OAWAL was developed around the same time that the Jisc OA Pathfinder projects. As such it seeks to explain some of the aspects of the open access life cycle rather than describe the life cycle itself – something that the HHuLOA project went on to do for the UK and US in conjunction with OAWAL (6, 7)

Mapping the OA life cycle

For this reason the HHuLOA team decided try to map the OA life cycle onto TERMS, rather than OAWAL, in order to see where various parts of the workflow fitted with the established e-resources workflow. However, the version of TERMS that the team used was a nuanced version first suggested in 2014 by Liam Earney at Jisc Collections after mapping Jisc Collections library support services to TERMS (Figure 1).

Jisc Collections mindmap

Figure 1. Jisc Collections library support services mapped to TERM (8)

In particular this exercise identified an area that TERMS had not covered, preservation (see Figure 2). TERMS now plans to alter the 6 headings to include a section on the preservation of electronic resource content whilst consolidating two of the existing sections, Ongoing Evaluation and Access with the Annual Review section.

Jisc Collections mindmap crop

Figure 2. Preservation strand of Jisc Collections Library support services

Therefore, the elements that the HHuLOA team looked at were:

  1. Investigating new content for purchase or addition
  2. Acquiring new content
  3. Implementation
  4. Ongoing evaluation and access, and annual review
  5. Cancellation and replacement review
  6. Preservation

What follows are the outcome of a group discussion where the team attempted to map areas of the OA life cycle to TERMS. We decided to split open access into hybrid and full open access as there appeared to be themes unique to one or other for many of the headings. There is also an overlap between them in some cases, where some of the points under open access could also apply to hybrid OA.

1.         Investigating new content for purchase

Hybrid OA

  • Offset agreements / APCs – Offset agreements are intrinsically linked to journal/big deal subscriptions. Therefore if gold OA via hybrid journals is to be used, these journals must be considered as part of the wider costs
  • Total Cost of Ownership – TCO follows on from the above point. If offset agreements are not in place with hybrid OA, then the costs to the library will increase
  • Licences: article licences (CC) / resource licence – Are CC BY licences the default licence? Not all publishers offer this. In the case of the RCUK mandate this is required. This needs to be investigated as part of the initial desk top review
  • Pre-payment for APCs (and other business models) – A one off pre-payment for APCs may be desired, and could be paid as part of the journal subscription. This may be the only way to achieve an offset agreement
  • OA in aggregator/secondary information sources and impact on subscription – A hybrid journal is not always OA – does the publisher licence content to secondary information sources and if so is the article still OA? For those considering subscriptions to aggregated content – how much of the content is born OA?

Open Access

The following relate to validation for OA content regarding collection development

  • Predatory publishers – although use of ‘Beall’s list’ is not recommended, checks must still be made: the 3 points below are a good place to start.
    • DOAJ / ISSN ROAD – Inclusion in DOAJ is now peer reviewed and requires a number of checks to be made for each title. A DOAJ seal is also awarded to titles that fulfil all criteria. ISSN ROAD lists DOAJ titles with ISSNs
    • OASPA / COPE membership – Membership of either organisation is another sign that the journal fulfils quality criteria
    • Licensing stated – Again, journals that are open about the licences used are a good starting point

 

  • Other repositories / CORE – In addition, other repositories can be tracked if a knowledge base containing their details is used as part of a library discovery tool. It is hoped that CORE can also become discoverable in this way in the future.

2.         Acquiring new content

Hybrid OA

  • APC workflow – prior to acquisition of new content, it is important to understand the APC workflow with the proposed publisher. This may differ widely from publisher to publisher and often requires training and clear assignment of duties
  • APC fund – essentially who is paying, or from which budget is the APC payment coming from – is it part of the subscription, a separate library fund, or a central/school fund, which may or may not be administered by the library
  • Negotiation on the terms of availability – this point covers the negotiation of the top 3 points in the previous section

Open access

  • Terms of use – Although an article is available on open access, it sometimes comes with specific licence terms that may affect use: hence, there is a need to be aware of any limitations around the access available
  • Institutional OA journals, Library presses, Academic led publications, Data, Books – the rise of new University Presses and library publishing may result in the library itself publishing content

3.         Implementation

Hybrid OA

While this is relevant to publication in hybrid OA regardless of whether a subscription to that title is held, for hybrid titles that do come as part of a package publication in these titles could be seen as part of the implementation of the subscription. Therefore, the following questions and tasks need to be completed:

  • Is the article actually open access (checking)?
  • Is the right licence applied?
  • Record any issues arising
  • Add article to repository (as it is Gold)

Open access

  • Add to discovery tool index – like any title, OA journals need to be added to the library discovery tool – assuming that this has been checked as part of #1
  • Technical testing and checking public discovery – like any new resource, an OA journal needs checking to make sure that access works, e.g. via the library discovery tool
  • Marketing and training – again, an OA journal needs embedding
  • ERM (national or local) and admin information – OA titles should be added to the ERM so that information about them can be tracked
  • Absence of AuthN and AuthZ – whilst open access does not require authentication and authorisation by definition, what options might be available for accounting and IdM to monitor access, plus personalisation of access in keeping with related toll access services

For the next three parts of the TERMS cycle the distinction between hybrid and full open access was less clear, as they deal with how to manage open access materials once they have been acquired.  Hence, the discussions addressed the general issues and are provided as a single list.

4.         Ongoing evaluation and access, and annual review

Hybrid/OA

  • Does the APC workflow work? – Regarding hybrids, part of the review process needs to include an assessment of whether the APC workflow actually works. Was payment always successful, did the correct licences get added, how staff intensive was the workflow?
  • What is the value added by library / institution? – following on from the point above, does the title add value? For hybrids, did the cost of the APC add value? For OA titles, were they actually used?
  • Dealing with user feedback – Were all issues recorded in the ERM or equivalent system? Were they reported to the publisher and will this impact on negotiation – why are you paying an APC if the wrong licence is applied and the title is not always OA throughout the subscription period?
  • Bibliometrics / impact / compliance – while it is possible to measure COUNTER stats for hybrid OA articles – and this needs to be compared with non OA articles in the same journal, OA article usage cannot always be measured. If not, what other measures are there and can these be used to make decisions about further access
  • Usage: Hybrid journals – related to both value added and usage, have the hybrid OA articles proved value for money when comparing costs of APCs and usage. Also, after separation of gold open access statistics, do the remaining subscription titles prove value for money
  • Collection curation – like all titles, OA titles need to be pruned to reflect the needs of the collection

5.         Cancellation and replacement review

Hybrid/OA

  • Implication(s) for OA articles / APC paid articles if a deal is cancelled – Hybrid OA gives further implications than those listed in TERMS if the big deal is cancelled. One could be an increase in APC costs
  • Ongoing OA – if hybrid or fully OA titles are cancelled/withdrawn they need to be kept on record to make sure that remain discoverable. This links into ongoing access through preservation (see next section)

6.         Preservation

Hybrid/OA

  • Repositories – An open question – do repositories actually count as preservation?
  • Preservation policy – Have OA titles been added to the collection management and development strategy under preservation?
  • Shared risk – Is there a shared risk in the fact that lots of copies of the OA articles may be held in repositories?
  • LOCKSS / Portico – Has the publisher (possibly University publisher) signed up to one of the various preservation resources? This should be checked as part of the initial investigation.

Looking forward

The HHuLOA team hope that the points above can be used to promote discussion and further development on how to embed open access into e-resource management workflows.

It is also hoped that after the completion of the HHuLOA project that these points will be taken on by the TERMS as part of a planned revision, which is due to start in summer 2016. In keeping with the origins of TERMS, it is proposed that this revision will be crowdsourced to develop and mature it for future use.

For further comment please contact the HHuLOA blog or TERMS

References

  1. TERMS blog: https://library.hud.ac.uk/blogs/terms/
  2. Emery, Jill and Stone, Graham (2013) TERMS: Techniques for electronic resources management. Library Technology Reports, 49 (2). pp. 5-43.
  3. OAWAL: https://library.hud.ac.uk/blogs/oawal/
  4. Emery, Jill and Stone, Graham (2014) The Sound of the Crowd: Using Social Media to develop best practices for Open Access Workflows for Academic Librarians (OAWAL). Collaborative Librarianship, 6 (3). pp. 104-111.
  5. Emery, Jill and Stone, Graham (2014) Introduction to OAWAL: Open Access workflows for Academic Librarians. Serials Review, 40 (2). pp. 83-87.
  6. Stone, Graham, Awre, Chris and Stainthorp, Paul (2015) UK open access life cycle.
  7. Stone, Graham and Emery, Jill (2015) US open access life cycle.
  8. Emery, Jill and Stone, Graham (2014) Techniques for Electronic Resource Management (TERMS): From Coping to Best Practices. In: 2014 AALL Annual Meeting and Conference, 12-15 July 2014, Henry B. Gonzalez Convention Center San Antonio, TX.

New OA life cycles for comment

We have a number of new life cycles which we welcome feedback on:

OA Life cycle for research Managers

ukresman

 

 

OA life cycle for researchers

ukres

 

 

OA life cycle for publishers

ukpub

 

In addition we have two new concepts for discussion:

OA underground map

Updated February 2016 after comments received

Tube-Map-Concept-Feb2016-Web

 

 

 

UK Open Access Life Cycle Diagram Dec2015 withPathfinderOutputs

 

 

Mapping pathfinder projects to the OA life cycle

Mapping open access requirements to Jisc services and OAWAL (2)

Open Access life cycle

During the mapping process, we were particularly influenced by the following slide from Neil Jacobs.

jacobs

So much so, that we have used this as a basis for our open access life cycle, which is an attempt to bring this together with OAWAL, Jisc OA/above campus services, publisher services and the Institutional workflow.

Open-Access-Life-Cycle-Diagram-Mar2015

In the centre circle, we have used the 7 stages of the publishing process as described by Neil, this is followed by institutional processes – of course not all institutions will have all of these processes up and running, e.g. we don’t all have a CRIS. We then included publisher services that directly impact upon the work of the open access team and also Jisc OA services. We then went on to map Jisc OA and above campus services to the life cycle – doing this we immediately found an issue with Publication Router, which is why we have included it twice, once where it currently affects the life cycle and once where we think it should sit – at point of acceptance. Finally, we added the 6 sections of OAWAL showing where we think that fits with the life cycle.

This is very much a first draft of the life cycle and again, we would very much welcome comment on what we have done so far.

OAWAL will also add the life cycle and ask for comment; there will also be a US version, which will not only be useful to the US librarians but also as a comparison between the two countries.

We’ve started with the library view – where should we go from here? There are a few things that the life cycle doesn’t show, and again we welcome comment.

  • It doesn’t show the relationship between the different circle – we didn’t want to over complicate things
  • In addition it doesn’t show things from the researchers point of view, e.g. the research dissemination workflow
  • Or the OA policy workflow
  • And finally, we mention the publishing workflow, but we only mention what is relevant to open access workflows, for example, we deliberately omit the peer review process

We hope to blog something about the OA policy side very soon and we hope to link this up with PASTEUR4OA. Something else we would really like to do is to map the researcher life cycle in relation to OA so that we can understand how we can embed OA to support researcher’s dissemination.

What we would really like are some guest bloggers on the subject above to help us make a start. We may end up with lots of interesting life cycles!

Mapping open access requirements to Jisc services and OAWAL (1)

One of the work packages we set out to complete as part of the HHuLOA project was to look at open access service development. We did this by matching Jisc OA services alongside our current institutional workflows and the 6 sections in OAWAL (Open Access Workflows for Academic Librarians) winner of the 2015 Ingram Coutts Award for Innovation in Electronic Resources Management

We started matching the Jisc services based on two presentations from Neil Jacobs:

http://openaccess.jiscinvolve.org/wp/files/2014/10/Jisc-REF-OA-workflows-workshop1.pptx

http://www.slideshare.net/ARLGSW/darts-nj-june-2014

Matching Jisc services to Institutional workflows and OAWAL

Jisc Services Institutional workflows OAWAL 
SHERPA Romeo Green/Gold workflow 

 

Funder compliance/reporting

HEFCE compliance/reporting

2.1 Workflows. Traditional green model; 2.2 Workflows. Gold open access2.3 Funder mandates

 

2.3 Funder mandates

 

SHERPA Juliet Green/Gold workflow 

 

Funder compliance/reporting

HEFCE compliance/reporting

2.1 Workflows. Traditional green model; 2.2 Workflows. Gold open access2.3 Workflows. Funder mandates

2.3 Workflows. Funder mandates

 

Sherpa Fact Green/Gold workflow 

 

Funder compliance/reporting

HEFCE compliance/reporting

2.1 Workflows. Traditional green model; 2.2 Workflows. Gold open access2.3 Workflows. Funder mandates

2.3 Workflows. Funder mandates

 

Publication Router 

(SWORD)

Green/Gold workflow 

 

(Metadata Standards)

2.1, Workflows. Traditional green model; 2.2 Workflows. Gold open access(3.1 Standards. OA metadata and indicators)

 

Total cost of ownership 

 

 

 

(Jisc Collections NESLi2 negotiations)

APC payments 

 

Funder compliance/reporting

(Subscription renewals)

 

1.5 Advocacy. Budgeting for open access publishing; 2.6 Workflows. APC processing charges2.3 Workflows. Funder mandates

(1.5 Advocacy. Budgeting for open access publishing; 2.5 Workflows. Pure vs. hybrid journals; TERMS ->)

 

Jisc Monitor 

 

 

 

(APC collection template)

APC payments 

Funder compliance/reporting

HEFCE compliance/reporting

(APC payments

 

Funder compliance/reporting

Internal reporting, e.g. non funded GOA)

 

2.6 Workflows. APC processing charges2.3 Workflows. Funder mandates

2.3 Workflows. Funder mandates

 

(2.6 Workflows. APC processing charges

2.3 Workflows. Funder mandates

2.6 Workflows. APC processing charges)

 

JISC-OU CORE Discovery 6.0 Discovery
IRUS-UK Funder compliance/reportingDiscovery 2.3 Workflows. Funder mandates6.6 Discovery. Usage data

 

 

Matching standards to Institutional workflows and OAWAL

Standards Institutional workflows OAWAL 
RIOXX Funder compliance/reporting 

 

 

Discovery

2.3 Funder mandates; 3.1 Standards. OA metadata and indicators; 6.3 Discovery. Necessary metadata6.1 Discovery. Addition of global content to discovery systems; 6.3 Discovery. Necessary metadata ; 6.4 Discovery. Exposure of local repository on Google

 

CASRAI/ISNI/Ringgold Funder compliance/reporting 

 

 

Discovery

2.3 Funder mandates; 3.1 Standards. OA metadata and indicators; 6.3 Discovery. Necessary metadata6.1 Discovery. Addition of global content to discovery systems; 6.3 Discovery. Necessary metadata ; 6.4 Discovery. Exposure of local repository on Google

 

CROSSREF/DOI Funder compliance/reporting 

 

 

Discovery

2.3 Funder mandates; 3.1 Standards. OA metadata and indicators; 6.3 Discovery. Necessary metadata6.1 Discovery. Addition of global content to discovery systems; 6.3 Discovery. Necessary metadata ; 6.4 Discovery. Exposure of local repository on Google

 

ORCID Funder compliance/reporting 

 

 

Discovery

2.3 Funder mandates; 3.1 Standards. OA metadata and indicators; 6.3 Discovery. Necessary metadata6.1 Discovery. Addition of global content to discovery systems; 6.3 Discovery. Necessary metadata ; 6.4 Discovery. Exposure of local repository on Google

 

FUNDREF Funder compliance/reporting 

 

 

Discovery

2.3 Funder mandates; 3.1 Standards. OA metadata and indicators; 6.3 Discovery. Necessary metadata6.1 Discovery. Addition of global content to discovery systems; 6.3 Discovery. Necessary metadata ; 6.4 Discovery. Exposure of local repository on Google

 

CROSSMARK Funder compliance/reporting 

 

 

Discovery

2.3 Funder mandates; 3.1 Standards. OA metadata and indicators; 6.3 Discovery. Necessary metadata6.1 Discovery. Addition of global content to discovery systems; 6.3 Discovery. Necessary metadata ; 6.4 Discovery. Exposure of local repository on Google

Identifying the gaps

Looking at the two tables above, we identified the following gaps in Jisc Services that would need to be filled for institutional workflows to better connect.

  • SHERPA Romeo/Juliet/Fact. Common definitions are terms are required for SHERPA, funders and institutions to overlap
  • SHERPA Romeo. The is nothing on Romeo regarding HEFCE compliance
  • SHERPA Fact. Auto prompting is required at the submission stage on the manuscript platform for Fact to be embedded
  • Publications router. De-duplication has to be done at the local level, which can increase the amount of staff time spent on each item (this is because router gets a lot of its information at the time of publication, rather than acceptance – often repository items are deposited after acceptance and before publication causing duplications
  • Publications Router. There is an issue for Repositories that get their information from a CRIS/WoS/Scopus and not through the SWORD protocol
  • Total cost of ownership (Jisc Collections NESLi2 negotiations). Metadata standards from publisher should be part of the NESLi2 model licence negotiation
  • Jisc Monitor. A single point of payment would be more efficient as individual APCs increase
  • JISC-OU CORE. There is a missing link here to other discovery systems, e.g. Primo, Summon, OCLC WordCat, EDS, Google Scholar
  • IRUS-UK. There is no link between the IR usage and the publisher usage e.g. AR1 report (as defined by PIRUS)
  • IRUS-UK. Altmetrics, these are available on some Repositories for items and for individual researchers but things are not linked with IRUS-UK etc.
  • There is a missing link here with Research Fish.

Since we started looking at this some of the gaps are already being filled, but we would welcome more comment.

In addition, OAWAL has been conducting an open peer review process for the last 12 months, which will end with a session at the 2015 UKSG conference in Glasgow. Early findings from this process have been documented in the following open access article:

Emery, Jill and Stone, Graham (2014) The Sound of the Crowd: Using Social Media to develop best practices for Open Access Workflows for Academic Librarians (OAWAL). Collaborative Librarianship, 6 (3). pp. 104-111.

OAWAL will now go through a period of re-writing and restructuring, indeed sections 1. Advocacy and 5. Copyright Issues are being re-written right now!

The HHuLOA would welcome comment on the above – please either comment below or get in touch with the team

Improving rights declarations for e-theses

I’m delighted to be asked by the HHuLOA team to write a little about open access, research data management and licensing from my institution’s perspective, the British Library. The project was formed in recognition that through collaboration we can meet funder requirements in a more efficient and coordinated way. The British Library is in many respects an outlier, we do not publish OA articles or receive research council funding however we do license the use of journal content and metadata for use in our products and services. Recently we’ve had to give careful consideration to how we manage funded articles so that publicly funded material can be fully exploited and to ensure that we do not contravene the terms of use for Gold OA content. We’re working with publishers to standardise Open Access metadata and, internally, we’ve had to develop flags to identify OA content to ensure it is used in accordance with Open Access principles, for example not applying a fee or DRM to an OA funded article. Finally we need to inform our users of what they can and cannot do with articles – and that depends on which licence the article comes under. We are conscious that we could/should be doing a lot more to get EThOS to reflect existing rights information where its available. Institutions are generally leading the way in terms of managing rights and permissions for theses, so we are keen to reflect this into the EThOS e-theses service and work with institutions to share licensing experience around OA content, including metadata to maximise the discovery and reuse of publicly funded content.

In support of this we carried out a horizon scan of current practice and HEIs’ theses policies in autumn – and thank you to those of you who responded, your feedback was extremely useful. We were particularly interested in institutional policies around e-theses where they deal with rights or author permissions as where there is clarity on rights issues, that is to say where publication policies or author agreements permit, we would like to include rights information alongside the thesis. This rights information would include links to licences, e.g. Creative Commons licences where applicable accompanied by a “machine readable” version of each licence, ideally in the CC Rights Expression Language (CC REL).

We’re looking forward to working with HHuLOA partners to investigate how the ingest and display of rights information for open access materials can be improved. For those institutions that follow a risk based approach toward making theses available in lieu of formal author permissions,  the project would like to support institutions in their move to having greater clarity on licence terms and we’d like to propose the following package of work to support this:

 

  • Model permissions letters and take down policies
  • FAQs on the permissions letters including guidance around what constitutes publication, e.g. whether adding DOIs to a thesis makes it a publication.
  • Guidance on rights clearance and due diligence search for rightsholders.
  • Template online form for retrospective rights clearance for IR content.
  • Briefing on the management and communication of rights for senior managers
  • A model publication policy around the submission of theses in an institutional repository
  • BL/ HHuLLOA to work with repository software suppliers such as DSpace and EPrints to investigate ways of automating and streamlining the accurate communication of usage rights for research content.

Finally the project will host a series of forums for institutions to discuss and test recommendations from the HHuLOA project, including an event focussing on doctoral theses held at the British Library.

Posted on behalf of Anna Vernon, Licensing Manager at the British Library

 

About the project

The HHuLOA project is a two year Jisc supported project from the Universities of Hull, Huddersfield and Lincoln that will examine the role of open access in furthering the development of research at the partner institutions. The project will focus on good practice in identifying and implementing a range of open access initiatives across the partners with the specific remit of furthering the research interests of the partner institutions, and will work with a number of external partners and projects including Jisc Monitor, IRUS-UK and the British Library in the areas of APC management, statistics and open access rights management.The use of in-house open access publication will also be explored. Work to enhance the established EPrints and Fedora repositories at the partner sites will be undertaken and fed back accordingly. All work will be undertaken within the context of an emerging and shifting open access policy context, which will be monitored to show the relationship with the good practice identified.

The Universities of Hull, Huddersfield and Lincoln have been active in supporting open access for many years, both internally and through a variety of external projects. Each has played an active role in the development of their local repository, looking to exploit technology to further institutional open access services. All are institutions seeking to develop their research capability and reputation. Open access has a key role to play in supporting this mutual strategic direction.

The aim of this good practice project is thus to identify how open access support mechanisms can be used to assist with this development of research, working towards a more effective and rewarding submission to the post-2014 REF. Working together, the three institutions will bring a wealth of experience and innovative thinking to capturing existing and novel good practice and sharing this, with the aim of supporting other institutions developing their research capacity and looking to understand how open access can be used as a means of supporting this.

In fulfilling these aims, the project will address the following areas:

  • Compliance with funders’ and institutional mandates
  • Monitoring and managing publication charges and licences
  • Gathering information around block grant publication fund distribution
  • Identifying, facilitating and managing interoperability across relevant IT services
  • Improving awareness and clarity of research funders’ OA policy