THYROID HORMONE.pptx by Subham Panja,Asst. Professor, Department of B.Sc MLT,...
NISO SUSHI update, ALA Midwinter 2015
1. SUSHI Update
Oliver Pesch
SUSHI Standing Committee co-chair
Chief Product Strategist
EBSCO Information Services
opesch@ebsco.com
2. Overview
• What is SUSHI
• Who is on the committee
• What’s new
• What we are working on
• Future
3. SUSHI…
WHAT IT IS ...
• An ANSI/NISO Standard (Z39.93)
• Defines automated request and response model for
harvesting e-resource usage data
• Designed to work with COUNTER, the most frequently
retrieved usage reports
WHY YOU SHOULD USE IT …
• It replaces the time-consuming user-mediated
collection of usage data reports
• The protocol is generalized and extensible, meaning it
can be used to retrieve a variety of usage reports
4. Committee Roster
• Marie Kennedy (co-chair)
Loyola Marymount University
• Oliver Pesch (co-chair)
EBSCO Information Services
• Dave Harrell
ScholarlyIQ
• Chan Li
California Digital Library (CDL)
• Paul Needham
Cranfield University
• James Van Mil
University of Cincinnati Libraries
7. SUSHI standard updated
New Filters and Report Attributes
• Allows for more precise specification of report
requests, e.g.
– Filter results to return usage only for a specific department
– Ask to have zero usage excluded from the report
• Backwards compatible
• The new elements are optional
• Current implementations of SUSHI for COUNTER R4
should NOT be affected
8. COUNTER schema updated
COUNTER schema 4.1…
• Expanded to support new COUNTER “Article” reports
• Backward compatible
– New elements are options
– Standard COUNTER reports (JR1, BR1, BR2, etc.) did not
change since they do not use the new elements
9. COUNTER SUSHI Implementation Profile
Updated
Minor update to address some issues
• PubYr attribute value to represent “unknown” should
be “0001” and not “0000”
• Fixed COUNTER report names in tables for
consistency
• Updated schema versions as necessary to match
current standard
11. SUSHI-Lite
A technical report – not a new standard
• A Light-weight approach to delivering SUSHI reports
• Using up-to-date web service approaches that uses
HTTP/REST for communication and JSON for the
contents
• Ideal for delivering snippets of usage but also useful
for full reports
12. SUSHI-Lite
Sample use cases…
• Serials management system pulling use for a
particular journal for in-workflow usage display
13. SUSHI-Lite
Sample use cases…
• Serials management system pulling use for a
particular journal for in-workflow usage display
14. SUSHI-Lite
Sample use cases…
• Institutional repository exchanging article-level usage
with publisher
• Usage Factor: Journal processing pulling article level
usage from institutional repositories and other
content sites
15. SUSHI-Lite
Sample use cases…
• Alternative metrics system retrieving article-level
usage from publishers, institutional repositories and
other content sites for…
– Presenting overall impact numbers
– Offering real-time access to stats
20. SUSHI-Lite
Proof-of-concept implementations…
• Open Journal System (OJS)
– Supply COUNTER JR1 reports
– Exchange article-level usage with alternative
metrics organizations
– Contributed by: Clinton Graham & Brian Gregg,
University of Pittsburg
21. SUSHI-Lite Working Group Roster
• Paul Needham (co-chair)
– Cranfield University
• Oliver Pesch (co-chair)
– EBSCO Information Services
• Clinton Graham
– University of Pittsburg
• Brian Gregg
– University of Pittsburg
• Miriam Lorenz
– Cologne University of Applied
Science
• Guy Marjew
– Reed Elsevier
• Mike Showalter
– Plum Analytics
• Alan Stiles
– Open University
• James van Mil
– University of Cincinnati Libraries
23. Areas of focus going forward…
• Publish SUSHI-Lite Technical Report – Summer 2015
Coming… Summer 2015
24. Areas of focus going forward…
• Promote the SUSHI Server Registry with a goal of all
SUSHI servers being registered
25. Areas of focus going forward…
• Continued collaboration with COUNTER to manage
COUNTER schemas and provide input
26. Areas of focus going forward…
• Participation with USUS, a new community web site
on usage, to get the message out and to learn
27. Areas of focus going forward…
• Support developers through tools, FAQs and
sushideveloper listserv
28. Areas of focus going forward…
…. and consider and implement changes to
SUSHI standard and related schemas and
registries as needed