The National Institutes of Health has a public access policy that requires researchers who receive NIH funding to submit final peer-reviewed manuscripts to PubMed Central upon acceptance for publication. The policy summary provides details on complying with the policy, including determining if a publication is applicable, addressing copyright, submitting manuscripts to the NIH Manuscript Submission System, and showing compliance in grant applications and progress reports by including PubMed Central IDs or NIH Manuscript Submission IDs in citations.
NIH Public Access Policy at UCLA - Fall 2012lmfederer
Presented at UCLA Library on October 23, 2012 as part of Open Access Week 2012. Discusses NIH Public Access Policy and how to comply, with a focus on resources available at UCLA.
NIH Public Access Policy at UCLA - Fall 2012lmfederer
Presented at UCLA Library on October 23, 2012 as part of Open Access Week 2012. Discusses NIH Public Access Policy and how to comply, with a focus on resources available at UCLA.
Oregon State University and NIH Open Access Policies (2014)mboock
Learn the basic terms and conditions of the NIH public access and OSU open access policies, the deposit requirements for each policy and how to submit your articles.
Outlines librarians\' role in the Public Access Policy for NIH-funded research, benefits of and steps for compliance, authors rights, and working with journal publishers.
Navigating the NIH Public Access PolicySarah Young
This presentation is aimed at grant administrators and NIH funded faculty and researchers, to help in the understanding and navigation of the NIH Public Access Policy and staying compliant.
Publishing Scientific Research and How to Write High-Impact Research Papersjjuhlrich
Presentation on publishing scientific research and how to write high-impact scientific papers by Dr. John Uhlrich as the Editor-in-Chief of Energy Technology, published by Wiley-VCH. Slides were presented on 27 October 2020 virtually for the SFB/TRR 270 Meeting of PhD students from the Technical University Darmstadt and University of Duisburg-Essen.
Publishing Scientific Research & How to Write High-Impact Research Papers jjuhlrich
Presentation on publishing scientific research and how to write high-impact scientific papers by Dr. John Uhlrich as the Editor-in-Chief of Energy Technology, published by Wiley-VCH. Slides were presented on 07 December 2021 virtually for the Institute of Materials Research and Engineering (IMRE) at A*Star, Singapore.
Publishing Scientific Research & How to Write High-Impact Research Papersjjuhlrich
Presentation on publishing scientific research and how to write high-impact scientific papers by Dr. John Uhlrich as the Editor-in-Chief of Energy Technology published by Wiley-VCH, given on 03 October 2018 at the EPFL campus in Sion.
Text Mining - Techniques & Limitations (A Pharmaceutical Industry Viewpoint)Frank Oellien
Presentation given at the 6th and last meeting of the European Commission "Licenses for Europe" Text and Data Mining Working Group (WG4).
The first part of the talk gives a very brief introduction of some basic concepts of text mining techniques used in Pharmaceutical industry using the Accelrys PP text mining collection.
The second part of the talk focuses on existing limitations pharmaceutical companies are facing in the field of Text mining.
http://ec.europa.eu/licences-for-europe-dialogue/en/content/text-and-data-mining-working-group-wg4
Introduction to Open Access and the Open Access to Research Articles Act Facu...H. Stephen McMinn
Presentation on introducing the concept of Open Access and the requirements of the Open Access to Research Articles Act for the faculty at the University of Illinois Springfield. Topic covered include what is open access, myths about open access, open access journals, copyright and creative commons as it relates to open access and information on the recently passed open access to research articles act.
Open Access & Open Access to Research Articles Act for the Academic Senate at UIS. Covering mostly background information on Open Access and Institutional Repository at the Univ of Illinois with some basic information on the Open Access to Information Act in Illinois. (A more complete presentation with additional information on the Act to follow)
Elemental high dynamic _ range_video_white_paperCMR WORLD TECH
FROM SCIENCE TO PRACTICE
The next large challenge facing the video industry is translating the science behind HDR into a system or
systems that can actually perform the required tasks of making HDR a reality for consumers and provide
a return on investment for providers. This adds complexity by bringing the laboratory into the
marketplace.
Oregon State University and NIH Open Access Policies (2014)mboock
Learn the basic terms and conditions of the NIH public access and OSU open access policies, the deposit requirements for each policy and how to submit your articles.
Outlines librarians\' role in the Public Access Policy for NIH-funded research, benefits of and steps for compliance, authors rights, and working with journal publishers.
Navigating the NIH Public Access PolicySarah Young
This presentation is aimed at grant administrators and NIH funded faculty and researchers, to help in the understanding and navigation of the NIH Public Access Policy and staying compliant.
Publishing Scientific Research and How to Write High-Impact Research Papersjjuhlrich
Presentation on publishing scientific research and how to write high-impact scientific papers by Dr. John Uhlrich as the Editor-in-Chief of Energy Technology, published by Wiley-VCH. Slides were presented on 27 October 2020 virtually for the SFB/TRR 270 Meeting of PhD students from the Technical University Darmstadt and University of Duisburg-Essen.
Publishing Scientific Research & How to Write High-Impact Research Papers jjuhlrich
Presentation on publishing scientific research and how to write high-impact scientific papers by Dr. John Uhlrich as the Editor-in-Chief of Energy Technology, published by Wiley-VCH. Slides were presented on 07 December 2021 virtually for the Institute of Materials Research and Engineering (IMRE) at A*Star, Singapore.
Publishing Scientific Research & How to Write High-Impact Research Papersjjuhlrich
Presentation on publishing scientific research and how to write high-impact scientific papers by Dr. John Uhlrich as the Editor-in-Chief of Energy Technology published by Wiley-VCH, given on 03 October 2018 at the EPFL campus in Sion.
Text Mining - Techniques & Limitations (A Pharmaceutical Industry Viewpoint)Frank Oellien
Presentation given at the 6th and last meeting of the European Commission "Licenses for Europe" Text and Data Mining Working Group (WG4).
The first part of the talk gives a very brief introduction of some basic concepts of text mining techniques used in Pharmaceutical industry using the Accelrys PP text mining collection.
The second part of the talk focuses on existing limitations pharmaceutical companies are facing in the field of Text mining.
http://ec.europa.eu/licences-for-europe-dialogue/en/content/text-and-data-mining-working-group-wg4
Introduction to Open Access and the Open Access to Research Articles Act Facu...H. Stephen McMinn
Presentation on introducing the concept of Open Access and the requirements of the Open Access to Research Articles Act for the faculty at the University of Illinois Springfield. Topic covered include what is open access, myths about open access, open access journals, copyright and creative commons as it relates to open access and information on the recently passed open access to research articles act.
Open Access & Open Access to Research Articles Act for the Academic Senate at UIS. Covering mostly background information on Open Access and Institutional Repository at the Univ of Illinois with some basic information on the Open Access to Information Act in Illinois. (A more complete presentation with additional information on the Act to follow)
Elemental high dynamic _ range_video_white_paperCMR WORLD TECH
FROM SCIENCE TO PRACTICE
The next large challenge facing the video industry is translating the science behind HDR into a system or
systems that can actually perform the required tasks of making HDR a reality for consumers and provide
a return on investment for providers. This adds complexity by bringing the laboratory into the
marketplace.
Highlights from the June 2, 2010 forum in which the Community Health Data Initiative was promoted and the Health 2.0 Challenge was announced. Highlights include mashups, mobile, geographic, decision support and much more.
NIH Public Access Policy - Neil Thakur (2007)faflrt
Dr. Neil Thakur, point person for the NIH Public Access policy shared the NIH perspective in the Open Access debate and their progress to date. Sponsored by ALA Federal and Armed Forces Libraries Roundtable (FAFLRT). Presented on June 25, 2007 at ALA Annual Conference in Washington, DC.
Summary of the requirements for compliance with the new public access plans from US federal agencies under the Office of Science and Technology Memo. This talk was presented to the Research Administration & Compliance group at VCU.
Many thanks to Rebecca Reznik-Zellen for the HHS slides that were developed for the eScience Symposium.
Thanks to Amanda Lea Whitmire for her one memo to rule them all slide.
Overview of UKRI Open Access Policy 2022
Covers the Scope, requirements and funding for policy. Outlines the key actions for authors. Focus on Research Articles (April 2022) but also overview of requirements for long-form publications (Monographs, book chapters, edited collections) from January 2024.
Intended audience: Durham University staff and student authors of research articles.
Presentation embedded alongside further information at https://libguides.durham.ac.uk/open_research/policies/ukri
Version 1.1 2022.03.02
The greatest possible impact: The Wellcome Trust and open researchUoLResearchSupport
Research funders are increasingly recognising the importance of open research practices, to increase the reach and impact of their funded research and to ensure the integrity of research results.
The Wellcome Trust have been leading efforts to make research more open for more than 20 years, ever since working to make sure the results of the Human Genome Project were released immediately into the public domain. They were also the first research funder to introduce a mandatory open access policy, with more than 150 global research funders having since followed their lead. More recently, they have developed the Wellcome Open Research platform, which allow their researchers to rapidly publish and share their findings openly and transparently, and encourage researchers to cite preprints in their grant applications.
On Thursday 17th June we welcome Sonya Towers, Grants Adviser - Immunobiology and Infectious Disease at the Wellcome Trust, to discuss Wellcome’s approach to open research including their Output Management Plan pilot on which they are liaising with the University of Leeds.
This presentation was provided by Pamela Shaw of Northwestern University during the NISO Webinar, Compliance with Funder Mandates, held on September 14, 2016
Similar to National Institutes of Health Public Access Policy (20)
Presentation on knowledge synthesis methodologies with a focus on engineering, for University of Michigan, October 25, 2023. Overview of the broader context, then focuses in on systematic reviews and tech mining.
PF Anderson presents for OLLI-UM on February 25, 2021. Graphic Medicine describes the genre of comics and graphic novels around healthcare, as told from personal and professional perspectives. Many think of comics as for children, but that could be risky with some of these! The personal experiences described can be tender or gritty, and touch on topics such as specific conditions, social justice, dying, lived experiences, resilience. Visual aspects of storytelling take advantage of new literacies, offering insights not possible through other mediums.
Brief lightning talk for UofM THL, repeated for MLA Research Caucus on January 27, 2021. On the subject of using systematic review search skills in combination with non-systematic review research methodologies.
As part of the #GraphicMedLibs panel for the August 5, 2020 NNLM NER webinar on Graphic Medicine, PF Anderson discussed awareness of #OwnVoices issues in both comics creation and collections, along with strategies and tools to utilize the #OwnVoices movement in the creation of community and awareness of social justice themes in #GraphicMedicine. This presentation represents the work of PF Anderson (UM-THL) with collaborators Claire Myers (UMSI), Gina Genova (UMSI), Susan Brown (Ypsilanti District Library), and David Carter (UM-AAEL).
"Research core facilities are centralized shared research resources that provide access to instruments, technologies, services, as well as expert consultation..." That sounds a lot like a library to me. What would look different about libraries if we thought of them as a research core facility?
This was a presentation for a research lab at the University of Michigan, May 28, 2019.
A storytelling workshop collaboration with Melissa Cunningham (Office of Patient Experience), Alex Fox (School of Public Health), and Patricia F. Anderson (Taubman Health Sciences Library). The focus of the workshop was on tools and strategies for telling patient and healthcare stories.
Slide deck for the Dent 610 graduate level course on research methods, 2018 version; collaboratively developed by Mark MacEachern, Patricia F. Anderson, and Tyler Nix.
Presented at Meaningful Play 2018, East Lansing, Michigan. Please note, the website for the game (http://aberrantry.com/) is in development at this time. The game code is in GitHub, & a download link is available at the website.
A design thinking approach to rapidly developing comics concepts. Workshop presentation by PF Anderson, University of Michigan. Developed for the Office of Health Equity and Inclusion.
Using design thinking strategies to help bootstrap developing a comic concept. A workshop presentation by PF Anderson for Enriching Scholarship, 2018, at the University of Michigan.
Tips and tricks for writing abstracts for science research articles to maximise citations and impact. Presented at the University of Michigan in May 2018.
A basic introduction to rapid reviews, created for a graduate student workshop, March 2018, presented by PF Anderson from the University of Michigan. Includes links to more resources, standards and guidelines, tools, software, and more.
A strategic approach to crafting abstracts for life sciences research publications to maximize their discovery in search engines as well as utility and citability for audiences beyond other researchers. This workshop was designed for the University of Michigan North Campus Research Center community.
A session for the Dent 610 course at the University of Michigan, on research methods and processes. Specific focus of this session on systematic review methods and processes, especially through database searching.
A presentation by Dr. David Cheney for the Investing in Abilities 2017 lecture series, on emerging technologies and tech strategies for empowerment, especially focused on using education to crowdsource solutions to interesting problems and develop compassion and a sense of humanity.
A presentation by Dr. Michelle A. Meade for the Investing in Abilities 2017 lecture series, on emerging technologies and tech strategies for empowerment.
Slides for a lightning round talk presented at Comics and Medicine, Seattle, also known as Graphic Medicine Conference, 2017. The project presented was by PF Anderson, Elise Wescom, Kai Donovan, and Ruth Carlos, and originally published in the December 2016 issue of the Journal of the American College of Radiology (JACR).
A poster by Kai Donovan, Elise Wescom, Mark Chaffee, Jean Song, Breanna Hamm, and Chase Masters for the 2017 Annual Meeting of the Medical Library Association.
More from University of Michigan Taubman Health Sciences Library (20)
Flu Vaccine Alert in Bangalore Karnatakaaddon Scans
As flu season approaches, health officials in Bangalore, Karnataka, are urging residents to get their flu vaccinations. The seasonal flu, while common, can lead to severe health complications, particularly for vulnerable populations such as young children, the elderly, and those with underlying health conditions.
Dr. Vidisha Kumari, a leading epidemiologist in Bangalore, emphasizes the importance of getting vaccinated. "The flu vaccine is our best defense against the influenza virus. It not only protects individuals but also helps prevent the spread of the virus in our communities," he says.
This year, the flu season is expected to coincide with a potential increase in other respiratory illnesses. The Karnataka Health Department has launched an awareness campaign highlighting the significance of flu vaccinations. They have set up multiple vaccination centers across Bangalore, making it convenient for residents to receive their shots.
To encourage widespread vaccination, the government is also collaborating with local schools, workplaces, and community centers to facilitate vaccination drives. Special attention is being given to ensuring that the vaccine is accessible to all, including marginalized communities who may have limited access to healthcare.
Residents are reminded that the flu vaccine is safe and effective. Common side effects are mild and may include soreness at the injection site, mild fever, or muscle aches. These side effects are generally short-lived and far less severe than the flu itself.
Healthcare providers are also stressing the importance of continuing COVID-19 precautions. Wearing masks, practicing good hand hygiene, and maintaining social distancing are still crucial, especially in crowded places.
Protect yourself and your loved ones by getting vaccinated. Together, we can help keep Bangalore healthy and safe this flu season. For more information on vaccination centers and schedules, residents can visit the Karnataka Health Department’s official website or follow their social media pages.
Stay informed, stay safe, and get your flu shot today!
ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE IN HEALTHCARE.pdfAnujkumaranit
Artificial intelligence (AI) refers to the simulation of human intelligence processes by machines, especially computer systems. It encompasses tasks such as learning, reasoning, problem-solving, perception, and language understanding. AI technologies are revolutionizing various fields, from healthcare to finance, by enabling machines to perform tasks that typically require human intelligence.
MANAGEMENT OF ATRIOVENTRICULAR CONDUCTION BLOCK.pdfJim Jacob Roy
Cardiac conduction defects can occur due to various causes.
Atrioventricular conduction blocks ( AV blocks ) are classified into 3 types.
This document describes the acute management of AV block.
Ozempic: Preoperative Management of Patients on GLP-1 Receptor Agonists Saeid Safari
Preoperative Management of Patients on GLP-1 Receptor Agonists like Ozempic and Semiglutide
ASA GUIDELINE
NYSORA Guideline
2 Case Reports of Gastric Ultrasound
NVBDCP.pptx Nation vector borne disease control programSapna Thakur
NVBDCP was launched in 2003-2004 . Vector-Borne Disease: Disease that results from an infection transmitted to humans and other animals by blood-feeding arthropods, such as mosquitoes, ticks, and fleas. Examples of vector-borne diseases include Dengue fever, West Nile Virus, Lyme disease, and malaria.
Basavarajeeyam is an important text for ayurvedic physician belonging to andhra pradehs. It is a popular compendium in various parts of our country as well as in andhra pradesh. The content of the text was presented in sanskrit and telugu language (Bilingual). One of the most famous book in ayurvedic pharmaceutics and therapeutics. This book contains 25 chapters called as prakaranas. Many rasaoushadis were explained, pioneer of dhatu druti, nadi pareeksha, mutra pareeksha etc. Belongs to the period of 15-16 century. New diseases like upadamsha, phiranga rogas are explained.
Surat @ℂall @Girls ꧁❤8527049040❤꧂@ℂall @Girls Service Vip Top Model Safe
National Institutes of Health Public Access Policy
1. National Institutes of Health
Public Access Policy*
*Find a Research Guide @ http://bit.ly/umthlNIHPAP
Merle Rosenzweig
oriley@umich.edu
2. WHAT WILL BE COVERED
• About the policy
• Complying
• Submitting to the NIH Manuscript Submission System (NIHMS)
• NIH Public Access Policy & the Grant Process
• The Policy and eRA Commons
4. The NIH Public Access Policy
“The Director of the National Institutes of Health shall require that all
investigators funded by the NIH submit or have submitted for them
to the National Library of Medicine‟s PubMed Central an electronic
version of their final, peer-reviewed manuscripts upon acceptance
for publication, to be made publicly available no later than 12 months
after the official date of publication: Provided, That the NIH shall
implement the public access policy in a manner consistent with
copyright law.”
http://publicaccess.nih.gov/policy.htm
5. PUBMED CENTRAL (PMC)*
What is PMC?
• A free archive of biomedical and life sciences journal literature at the U.S. National Institutes of
Health's National Library of Medicine (NIH/NLM) launched in February 2000.
• Provides permanent access to all of its content.
• All the articles in PMC are free (sometimes on a delayed basis).
• Some journals go beyond free to Open Access. If an article is Open Access it means that it can be freely
accessed by anyone in the world using an internet connection.
• Copyright restrictions - all material available is protected by U.S. and/or foreign copyright laws.
*More information about NIH Public Access and its relationship with PMC
@ http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/about/public-access-info/
6.
7. NATIONAL INSTITUTES OF HEALTH MANUSCRIPT SUBMISSION
(NIHMS) SYSTEM
What is NIHMS?
• Developed by NIH to facilitate the submission process of final, peer-reviewed
manuscripts.
• The final peer-reviewed manuscripts covered by the NIH Public Access Policy are
deposited into NIHMS.
• The files deposited should include the text file (can be .doc, docx, rtf), figures and/or
tables if not within the text document, and any supplemental data if applicable.
• The files that are deposited are converted to a standard PMC format (.pdf) and then
reviewed by the depositor to confirm that the converted final peer-reviewed
manuscript is faithful to the original (all the deposited files are within the appropriate
place).
8. COMPLYING WITH THE POLICY
• All of an NIH grantee's publications that come under the NIH Public Access Policy,
including in press and in print peer-reviewed journal articles, must show evidence of
compliance in NIH competing grant applications, non-competing continuation grant
applications, and progress reports.
• Applications, Proposals and Reports must include evidence of compliance with the NIH
Public Access Policy for all applicable papers that are authored by the Principal
Investigator (PI) or arose from the PI‟s NIH funds.
9. WHO IS RESPONSIBLE?
• The Principle Investigator (P.I.) who’s NIH grant funds were used in the
research that is reported in the publication is responsible for assuring
compliance with the policy even if the grantee is not an author.
• The institution to which the P.I. is affiliated is also responsible to make
sure its researchers comply.
10. Howard Hughes Medical Institute (HHMI) &
Wellcome Trust
• HHMI provides authors with a mechanism for uploading their manuscripts to
PubMed Central .... within six months of publication.1
• Wellcome Trust requires electronic copies of any research papers that have
been accepted for publication in a peer-reviewed journal, and are supported
in whole or in part by Wellcome Trust funding, to be made available through
PubMed Central (PMC) and UK PubMed Central (UKPMC)…within six
months of the journal publisher's official date of final publication.2
1 http://www.hhmi.org/about/research/journals/main?action=search
2http://www.wellcome.ac.uk/About-us/Policy/Spotlight-issues/Open-access/Policy/index.htm
11. STEPS IN COMPLYING
• Determine Applicability
• Address Copyright
• Submit Manuscript
• Include PMCID or NIHMSID in Citations
12. Determine Applicability of Publication
The policy states:
“The Director of the National Institutes of Health shall require that all investigators
funded by the NIH submit or have submitted for them to the National Library of
Medicine‟s PubMed Central an electronic version of their final, peer-reviewed
manuscripts upon acceptance for publication, to be made publicly available
no later than 12 months after the official date of publication: Provided, That
the NIH shall implement the public access policy in a manner consistent with
copyright law.”
http://publicaccess.nih.gov/policy.htm
In other words, depositing needs to be made as soon as the journal informs the
author that the manuscript has been accepted and will be published. The 12
month period relates to the release of the deposited manuscript for the public to
view and/or print.
13. DETERMINE APPLICABILITY
The Policy applies to any manuscript that:
• Is peer-reviewed;
• And, is accepted for publication in a journal on or after April 7, 2008;
• And, arises from:
• Any direct funding from an NIH grant or cooperative agreement active in Fiscal Year
2008 or beyond, or;
• Any direct funding from an NIH contract signed on or after April 7, 2008, or;
• Any direct funding from the NIH Intramural Program, or;
• An NIH employee
14. ADDRESS COPYRIGHT
• Ensure your publishing agreement allows the paper to be posted to
PubMed Central in accordance with the NIH Public Access Policy.
• Final, peer-reviewed manuscripts must be posted to the NIHMS upon
acceptance for publication, and be made publicly available on PMC no later
than 12 months after the official date of publication.
• Points to consider:
15. POINTS TO CONSIDER WHEN ADDRESSING COPYRIGHT
• Which submission method will be used?
• What version of the paper will be made available on PMC?
• Who will submit the paper?
• When will it be submitted?
• Who will approve the submission?
• When will the paper be made public on PMC?
17. SUBMISSION METHODS
There are four methods to ensure that an applicable paper is
submitted to PubMed Central (PMC) in compliance with the NIH
Public Access Policy.
19. METHOD A
• Journal deposits final published articles in PubMed Central
without author involvement.
• Some journals automatically deposit all NIH-funded final
published articles in PubMed Central, to be made publicly
available within 12 months of publication, without author
involvement.
20. METHOD A (cont’d)
Start date shown for each of the journals listed is the earliest publication date that
the journal deposits into PMC.
•http://publicaccess.nih.gov/submit_process_journals.htm
21. METHOD B
• Author asks publisher to deposit specific final published article in
PMC.
• Some publishers will deposit the final published article in PubMed
Central upon request, generally for a fee.
22.
23. METHOD C
• Author deposits final peer-reviewed manuscript in PMC via the
NIHMS.
• Deposit the final peer-reviewed manuscript involves four steps.
• NIH awardees are responsible for ensuring that manuscripts are
submitted to the NIHMS upon acceptance for publication and
that all NIHMS tasks are complete within three months of
publication.
24. METHOD D
• A variation of Method C.
• Some publishers deposit the manuscript files in to the NIHMS.
• The publisher provides contact information for a corresponding author.
• The publisher designates the number of months after publication when the paper may be made
publicly available in PMC.
• Though a publisher may make the initial deposit of files under Method D, NIH awardees are
responsible for ensuring that manuscripts are submitted to the NIHMS upon acceptance for
publication and that all NIHMS tasks are complete within three months of publication.
• The NIHMS will notify the author when the manuscript files are received from the publisher.
• In this method the author must complete all of the tasks outlined for Method C, except for the file
deposit part.
Note that the publisher may submit a version that has typos and formatting issues but has gone through peer-review.
25. WHAT TO DEPOSIT
• Journal Articles
* The final, peer-reviewed manuscript, after all reviewer comments have been addressed.
* This can be a .doc, .docx, rtf, or .pdf file.
* Also, tables, images, and supplemental material that is not included embedded in the manuscript.
* Manuscripts that have been accepted for publication after April 7, 2008.
• What Does Not Need To Be Deposited
* Book chapters
* Non-peer reviewed journal articles - i.e. letters to the editor, commentary, conference
proceedings
* Dissertations
The final version of the manuscript that is published by the journal cannot be deposited unless permission is obtained from the publisher.
26. When do I have to deposit?
• According to the letter of the law, deposit must be done
“upon acceptance for publication”.
• Publishers may embargo public release for up to 12
months from the date of publication.
27. THERE ARE FOUR STEPS INVOVLED IN SUBMITTING
A MANUSCRIPT TO THE NIHMS SYSTEM
1. Set up the manuscript - provide bibliographic information and NIH grant
information. At this point a NIHMSID# is assigned.
2. Submit the manuscript files - upload all manuscript files, including
figures, tables and supplementary information.
3. Approve the PMC-formatted (PDF) Manuscript for Public Display.
4. Approve the Web version - review and approve a web version of the
manuscript that will appear in PubMed Central.
28.
29.
30.
31.
32.
33.
34.
35.
36.
37.
38.
39.
40.
41. Approval of Deposit
• After the submitted manuscript has been processed and prepared for
PubMed Central (PMC), an email will be sent to the Reviewing Author.
• The email will include a link that will take the author directly into the
NIHMS System so that he or she can view and approve the Web version
(both HTML and PDF) of the manuscript.
• It is important for the Reviewing Author to view both the HTML and PDF
formats and either approve both for posting on PMC.
42. PDF Approval
• After the submitted manuscript has been processed and prepared for PubMed
Central (PMC), an email will be sent to the Reviewing Author.
• Only the Reviewing Author can approve the submitted manuscript and complete
the submission.
• The Reviewing Author will be notified via email. In the next stage of the NIHMS
process, the Reviewing Author will need to approve or request corrections of the
PMC-ready.
• Review: Click on the highlighted PDF Receipt file and view it before approving it. Be
sure all of the pieces of the manuscript are there, including supplemental files
and/or videos (a mention of these types of files will appear on a mostly blank page
at the end of the PDF receipt).
45. Request Corrections
• If you notice a formatting error or critical textual error submit a request for corrections.
• Only errors or omissions that impact the scientific accuracy of your article are eligible for
correction.
• All corrections at one time.
• If the corrections are minor, the manuscript may be available for your review again in a few
days.
• If the corrections are extensive or complex, the manuscript may need to be reprocessed,
which can take from 1 to 2 weeks, depending on the corrections.
• The Reviewing Author will be notified when the Web version is once again available for his
or her review.
46.
47. AFTER APPROVAL−
• The NIHMS will email the author and the PI who’s grant(s) are
acknowledged in the deposit with the PMCID once it is assigned.
• PMC will automatically make the paper publicly available after the
designated delay period has expired.
52. Include PMCID in Citations
Anyone submitting an application, proposal or progress report to
the NIH must include the PMCID number or the NIHMSID
number when citing applicable papers that they author or that
arise from their NIH-funded research.
53. NIH Instructions
• BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH
When citing articles that fall under the Public Access Policy, were authored or co-authored by the
applicant and arose from NIH support, provide the NIH Manuscript Submission reference number (e.g.,
NIHMS97531) or the PubMed Central (PMC) reference number (e.g., PMCID234567) for each article. If
the PMCID is not yet available because the Journal submits articles directly to PMC on behalf of their
authors, indicate "PMC Journal - In Process." Citations that are not covered by the Public Access
Policy, but are publicly available in a free, online format may include URLs or PMCID numbers along
with the full reference (note that copies of publicly available publications are not accepted as appendix
material.)
• NIH GRANT APPLICATION OR PROGRESS REPORTS
The PMCID/NIHMSID must be included in all papers cited in an NIH grant application and a progress
report that fall under the NIH Public Access Policy. That applies to papers authored by you or that arose
from your NIH funds even if you are not an author.
54. SHOWING COMPLIANCE BY THE NUMBERS
The following three identifiers indicate that the publication is in
compliance with the NIH Public Access Policy:
1.PMCID: PMCID######
2.Or, NIHMSID: NIHMSID######
3.Or if the journal automatically deposits: PMC Journal - In
Process
55. DEFINITIONS OF IDENTIFIERS
1. A PMID is a unique identifier in the Medline/PubMed database and does not indicate compliance with
the NIH Public Access Policy.
Example: PMID: 12748199
2. A PMCID is a Pubmed Central unique identifier and is used to indicate compliance with the NIH Public
Access Policy.
Example: PMCID:PMC2901972
3. A NIHMSID is used for a manuscript which has been submitted to PubMed Central but has not yet
been assigned a PMCID. It demonstrates compliance with the NIH Public Access Policy but can only be
used for 3 months.
Example: NIHMSID:NIHMSID302380
4. PMC Journal - In Process is used for a manuscript which has been submitted to PubMed Central by the
journal but has not yet received a PMCID.
Example: PMCID: PMC Journal - In Process
56. How to Cite
1. Publications with PMCID:
— Sala-Torra O, Gundacker HM, Stirewalt DL, Ladne PA, Pogosova-Agadjanyan EL, Slovak ML, Willman CL,
Heimfeld S, Boldt DH, Radich JP. Connective tissue growth factor (CTGF) expression and outcome in adult
patients with acute lymphoblastic leukemia. Blood. 2007 April 1; 109(7): 3080–3083. PMCID: PMC1852221
2. Publications before the PMCID is available:
— Cerrato A, Parisi M, Santa Anna S, Missirlis F, Guru S, Agarwal S, Sturgill D, Talbot T, Spiegel A, Collins F,
Chandrasekharappa S, Marx S, Oliver B. Genetic interactions between Drosophila melanogaster menin and
Jun/Fos. Dev Biol. In press. NIHMSID: NIHMS44135 OR
— Sala-Torra O, Gundacker HM, Stirewalt DL, Ladne PA, Pogosova-Agadjanyan EL, Slovak ML, Willman CL,
Heimfeld S, Boldt DH, Radich JP. Connective tissue growth factor (CTGF) expression and outcome in adult
patients with acute lymphoblastic leukemia. Blood. [a publication date within 3 months of when the
application, proposal or report was submitted to NIH]. PMCID: PMC Journal - In Process OR PMC - In
Process
57. The Use of an NIHMSID to Indicate Compliance
with the
NIH Public Access Policy*
*Notice Number: NOT-OD-09-136
http://grants.nih.gov/grants/guide/notice-files/NOT-OD-09-136.html
58. An awardee may demonstrate compliance with the
Public Access Policy by:
• Including an NIH Manuscript Submission Reference Number (NIHMSID) in lieu of a
PMCID at the end of a full citation.
• The NIHMSID is a temporary substitute for a PMCID.
• It is intended to be used only in cases where an awardee needs to cite a paper soon
after its acceptance by a journal, when there is not enough time to complete every
step of the NIH manuscript submission process.
• A NIHMSID may be used to indicate compliance with the Public Access Policy for up to
three months after a paper is published.
• After three months, a PMCID must be provided in order to indicate compliance.
59. B IO G RA PH IC AL SK ET CH
Provide t he follow ing informat ion for the S enior/ key per sonnel and o her s ignific ant contributor s.
t
Follow this format for each person. DO NOT EX CE ED FOUR P AGE S.
C. Select ed Peer - review ed P u blicat io n s (Sele cted from 42 pe er - reviewed pu b lica tions)
Mo st relevan t to t he curren t ap p lica tion
1. Me rry le, R.J. & H unt, V.L. ( 2004). Independe nt living, physical disability an d substance
abuse am ong the elder ly. Psychology and Aging , 23( 4), 10 -22.
2. Hunt, V.L, Jens en, J.L. & Cr ensh aw, W . (2 007). Su bsta nce ab use and m ental health am ong
com munity -dwe lling elder ly. Inte rnational J ourn al of G er iatric Ps ychiatry , 2 4(9), 1124 - 1135.
3. Hunt, V.L, Wiech elt, S.A. & Mer ryle, R . ( 2008). Predic ting the substance - abu se treatm ent
needs of an agin g p opulation. Am erican Jour nal of Public He alth, 45( 2), 236 - 245. PMCID:
PMC9 162292
4. Hunt, V.L. & Sher, K.A. (2009) . Successful inter vention m odels fo r older dr ug - abusers:
Researc h acr oss the life - sp an. Ame rican Psycholog ist, in pres s. NIHMSID: N IH MS99 135
Ad ditio n al rece nt p u b lica tio n s o f imp o rtan ce to th e field (in chro n o log ical ord er)
1. Gr yc zyns ki, J., Sha ft, B.M., Mer ryle, R ., & H unt, V.L. ( 2002) . Comm unity ba sed par ticipa tor y
researc h with late - life addic ts. Am erican Jou rnal of Alcohol a nd Drug Abus e, 15 (3), 222 - 238.
2. Sha ft, B.M., Hunt, V.L., Merryle, R., & Ve ntu ri, R. ( 2003) . Polic y im plications o f gene tic
tr ansm is sion of alcohol and dr ug abus e in fem ale nonu ser s. Inter national J ourna l o f Dr ug
Policy , 30 (5), 46 - 58.
3. Hunt, V. L., Marks, A.E., Shaft, B.M., Merr yle, R., & Jensen, J.L. (2004) . Early -life family and
com munity char acter istic s and la te -life substanc e abuse. J our nal of Applied G erontolog y,
28(2) ,2 6 - 37.
4. Hunt, V.L., Mer ryle, R . & Jensen, J.L. (2005) . T he effect of social su pport networ ks o n
mor bidity am ong elder ly s ubs tan ce a busers . Journa l o f the Amer ican G er iatrics Society ,
57(4) , 15 - 23.
5. Hunt, V.L., Pour , B., Marks, A.E., Me rryle, R. & Je nsen, J.L. (200 5). Aging out of me tha done
tr eatment. Am erican Journal of Alco hol and Dru g Abuse, 15(6) , 134 -149.
6. Hunt, V.L, Ma rks, A.E., V enturi, R., Cren shaw , W. & Ra ton ian, A. (2006 ). C omm unity - ba sed
intervention stra teg ies for r educing alco hol and drug ab use in the elder ly. Ad diction , 104( 9),
1436 -1606. PMCID: PMC90 00292
7. Me rry le, R. & Hunt, V.L. (200 6). Random ized clin ical trial of co tin ine in older n icotine ad dicts.
Age an d Ageing, 38 (2), 9 - 23. PMCID : PMC90023 64
8. Hunt, V.L. (2009) . C ontrastin g e thn icity with rac e in the older alc oholic. The Jour nals of
Ge rontology Se ries B: Psycholo gica l Sciences and Social Sc iences , in pr ess. PMCID: PMC
Jour nal – In Pr oce ss.
63. NIH Public NIH Manuscript
Access Policy Submission
(NIHPAP) System(NIHMS)
PubMed
Central(PMC)
My Bibliography
eRA Commons
in My NCBI
64. • eRA Commons is an online interface where grant applicants, grantees and federal staff at
NIH and grantor agencies can access and share administrative information relating to
research grants.
• The functions available to a user in Commons are based on the „role‟ associated with
their eRA Commons account
65. eRA Commons users, based on their role, can conduct
a variety of activities in Commons, including:
• Track the status of their grant applications through the submission process, view errors and/or warnings
and check the assembled grant image.
• View summary statements and score letters following the initial review of their applications.
• View notice of award and other key documents.
• Submit Just-in-Time information (SO only) requested by the grantor agency prior to a final award decision.
• Submit the required documentation, including the Financial Status Report/Federal Financial Report and
final progress report, to close out the grant.
• Submit a No-Cost Extension notification (SO only) that the grantee has exercised its one-time authority to
extend without funds the final budget period of a project period of a grant.
• Submit a streamlined annual progress report electronically, provided the grantee institution is eligible to
submit one under the Electronic Streamlined Non-competing Award (eSNAP) process.
66. Notice Number: NOT-OD-10-103
• Issued on June 10, 2010 by NIH
• My Bibliography in My NCBI is to be used by eRA Commons users
to manage their professional bibliographies, associate
publications with their grant awards, and ensure compliance with
the NIH Public Access Policy.
67. Assigning Delegates to Manage My Bibliography
P.I.s may assign delegates to populate & maintain their publication lists. This person should already have a My NCBI
account; if not, they should create one before the P.I. gives permission.
• Sign in to My NCBI.
• Before the process of assigning a delegate can proceed there must be at least one publication from
PubMed listed.
• Click Edit My Bibliography Settings.
• Click Add a Delegate.
• Enter the delegate‟s email address.
• Click Add Delegate
• The delegate will receive an email in which the delegate must confirm by clicking on a link in the email.
68.
69. What is My NCBI?
• A tool that retains user information and database preferences to
provide customized services.
• Users can save their Pubmed searches, set email alerts as well as
store citations (journal articles, books, meetings, patents and
presentations) in My NCBI.
• My Bibliography is one of the services provided in My NCBI.
• Through My Bibliography researchers can manage peer review
article compliance with the NIH Public Access Policy.
70. What does this integration mean?
• It allows Commons users to benefit from My Bibliography‟s ability to
populate citation data from PubMed , PubMed Central , and the NIH
Manuscript Submission System.
• It allows users to maintain accurate, structured and up-to-date
bibliographic information.
• The benefit of this integration is the ability for grantees to easily track
compliance with the NIH Public Access Policy using a simple color-coded
key in My Bibliography.
75. More on the integration
Commons users can:
• propose, confirm, or reject grant-paper associations;
• associate their My Bibliography citations with an eSNAP
(electronic Streamlined Non-competing Award Process) progress
report in Commons;
• designate delegates to maintain their professional bibliographies
in My Bibliography.
76. Publications in eRA Commons
In eRA Commons, you need to link your My NCBI account to your
eRA Commons account.
77. How is My Bibliography accessed?
1. Log in to My NCBI and access My Bibliography from eRA
Commons.
2. As a delegate of an eRA Commons user, log in to My NCBI
directly and access the My Bibliography.
3. Log in directly to My NCBI using the Commons username
and password.
78. Adding New Publications to My NCBI
My Bibliography
• Click Add citation.
• Choose the type of citation from the drop-down list. In many cases, you will choose Citation from PubMed.
• Click Go to PubMed.
• Search for the publication in PubMed (e.g., search by article title or author name).
• Click the checkbox next to the citation you wish to add. Note: Multiple citations can be added at one time
by clicking multiple checkboxes.
• Click Send to: in the upper right.
• Choose My Bibliography.
• Click Add to My Bibliography.
• Choose a Bibliography to save to−−−
• Click Save.
79. Signing into a My NCBI Account
• Go to the My NCBI home page,
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/sites/myncbi/
• To sign in using your My NCBI username and password, use the
sign in box on the left
• To sign in via a partner organization, such as NIH & eRA Commons,
use the appropriate link on the right
80.
81.
82.
83.
84.
85.
86.
87.
88.
89.
90.
91.
92.
93.
94. My NCBI – New Features for My Bibliography for
eRA Commons Users
2012 July 12 [posted]
95. The new version of My Bibliography Assign Awards
window consists of two tabs: Awards and Search/Add
Other Awards/.
96. Awards Tab
• The "My awards" provides the list of awards associated with
the P.I.s eRA Commons profile.
• The "Other awards" section displays those awards that are not
associated with the P.I.s eRA Commons profile, but have been
linked to citations in the My Bibliography collection.
97.
98. Search/Add Other Awards Tab
• In the "Search/Add other awards" tab, you can search for
awards using a grant number, award title or grantee name.
• The search box includes an auto-complete feature which
provides a list of possible grant number or name matches that
are displayed as hyperlinks.
99.
100. List of Grantee Names & Their Awards
• Select an award from the list provided and click the "Search" button.
• A list of grantee names affiliated with the award will be provided.
• Check the award you wish to associate to a citation in your My
Bibliography collection and click the "Save" button.
• The award will be listed under the citation selected in My Bibliography,
and it will be listed in the "Other Awards" section of the Award tab of
the Assign Awards window readily available to be added to other
citations.
101.
102. • My NCBI will notify award owners when citations have been associated to their
awards and added to their My Bibliography collection.
• Once a citation is associated to a grant in My Bibliography or the association is made
via the NIH Manuscript Submission system, the paper-grant association will be
included in the PubMed record of that citation, and it will be linked to the grant in
the NIH research activities database as well.
• My NCBI will automatically add citations to your My Bibliography collection based on
new associations made to grants awarded to you.
• A message will be displayed which will provide you with a link to review the new
citations added.
• The alert message will remain until it is dismissed by clicking on the red X to the
right.
106. The New Filters Added to My Bibliography Award View
• If needed, the newly added citations can be deleted in the Award View display by
selecting them and clicking the 'Delete' button.
• This action will also remove the associations made to your grants.
• The new filters added to My Bibliography Award View will facilitate viewing data
more clearly by limiting citation results to those added through grant linking by
other principal investigators (PIs) and the NIH Manuscript Submission system.
• Select "Added by other PIs" to limit citation results to those added by other principal
investigators.
• Select "Added by NIHMS" to limit citation results to those added by the NIH
Manuscript Submission system.