The document discusses library services that support researchers at QUT, including open access publishing support through their QUT ePrints repository and financially supporting article processing charges. It provides statistics on the repository and expenditures. Additionally, it outlines research skills workshops, tracking research impact, and data management services available to researchers.
Looking to the Future: What’s the Mindset for a Successful Information Organization? by Keith
Webster, Dean of the Libraries, Carnegie Mellon for the October 16, 2013 NISO Virtual Conference: Revolution or Evolution: The Organizational Impact of Electronic Content.
Open Access policies in Developing and Transition CountriesIryna Kuchma
Presented at the Science and Technology Libraries Section "Open Access to Science and Technology Research Worldwide: Strategies and Best Practices" , 25 August, 75th IFLA World Conference, Milan, Italy
Looking to the Future: What’s the Mindset for a Successful Information Organization? by Keith
Webster, Dean of the Libraries, Carnegie Mellon for the October 16, 2013 NISO Virtual Conference: Revolution or Evolution: The Organizational Impact of Electronic Content.
Open Access policies in Developing and Transition CountriesIryna Kuchma
Presented at the Science and Technology Libraries Section "Open Access to Science and Technology Research Worldwide: Strategies and Best Practices" , 25 August, 75th IFLA World Conference, Milan, Italy
Open Access Policy for Universities in India: A ProposalAnup Kumar Das
"Open Access Policy for Universities in India: A Proposal"; a presentation for the One Day National Seminar on Changing Role of Librarians in Digital Era; organized by JNU, New Delhi, India on 12th August 2014 on the occasion of 122nd Birth Anniversary of Dr S. R Ranganathan.
Going for Gold and Greener Pastures: Open Access Explained
Presentation by Lisa Kruesi, Helen Morgan and Andrew Heath from The University of Queensland Scholarly Publishing and Digititisation Service for Open Access Week, October 2012.
Research 3.0: Libraries, Scholarly Communications, and Research Services
Presented at Coalition for Networked Information (CNI)
April 4, 2016, San Antonio, Texas
Rebecca Bryant
Visiting Project Manager, Researcher Information Systems
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Beth Namachchivaya
Associate University Librarian
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
The landscape of academic research has changed rapidly in the past decade, with access to high-performance networks, and the focus on data-intensive and interdisciplinary scholarship. Research libraries in North America are developing new services and programs aimed at meeting scholars’ needs for data-intensive, and interdisciplinary research support. Examples of some emerging programs include:
• Supporting digital research (graphical information systems, digital humanities, survey research methodologies, working with large datasets)
• Educating users about copyright and author rights
• Supporting content-creation and publishing activities in numerous ways: institutional repository to store and host works, establishing maker spaces, and developing infrastructure and workflows for more formal library-located publishing efforts
• Collaboration with research offices to educate researchers about federal mandates for open access publications and datasets
• Establishment of data management and archival resources
• Partnering with third-party vendors and with consortia to achieve scale-efficiencies and facilitate impact
• Development of researcher information management systems to support collaboration, discovery, and reporting
We present a case study of the development of a suite of new tools and services at the University of Illinois Library at Urbana-Champaign within its newly established Office of Research to support digital scholarship and to provide sustained and broad access to research. We will also discuss the significant challenges and opportunities of library/campus partnerships for cyberinfrastructure and research support.
Support When It Counts - library roles in public access to federally-funded r...Hilary Davis
Charleston Conference 2013
November 8, 2013
Kristine M. Alpi, Director, William Rand Kenan, Jr. Library of Veterinary Medicine, kmalpi@ncsu.edu
William M. Cross, Director, Copyright and Digital Scholarship, NCSU Libraries, wmcross@ncsu.edu
Hilary M. Davis, Interim Head, Collection Management & Director of Research Data Services, NCSU Libraries, hmdavis4@ncsu.edu
In November 2012, the National Institutes of Health (NIH) said it would begin enforcing its earlier April 2008 public access mandate to NIH-funded research by delaying processing of investigators’ grants. In response, the NCSU Libraries offered to assist the university’s sponsored research office in supporting NC State researchers who had publications stemming from NIH funding and had not achieved compliance. Since the 2008 NIH mandate, over 1000 articles based on NIH-funding have been published by NC State across research areas including veterinary medicine, life sciences, physical sciences, social sciences, engineering, textiles, design, math and statistics. Many were published in journals which did not automatically deposit papers to meet NIH requirements. Although familiar with biomedical literature, author agreements and open access, we did not fully grasp the complex web of investigator, author, publisher, institution and funder relations involved in this mandate until we were deeply engaged in the process and gained access to the compliance monitoring data.
In this paper, we will discuss the costs and benefits of library support for authors needing to attain compliance with an eye toward how this support may be scaled up if other federal funding agencies follow suit. We will share practical strategies for supporting compliance efforts for individual researchers and at the campus-wide level, as well as training newly-funded researchers to facilitate future compliance. We discuss the advantages of leveraging existing relationships with publishers to help their researchers, strategies for getting involved in compliance support, and insights on how to skill-up and scale-up when engaging in this part of the research process.
Understanding how two University Libraries (Edinburgh and St Andrews) have responded to requests for supporting a journal hosting service for the institution – why, how and future sustainability. We will cover progression of the service and the levels of support we can provide, with examples of the range of journals and flexibility of our approach. We will also describe how it fits in with our Open Access support services.
University Librarianship in the Open Access World and the Changing Rolesİlkay Holt
Keten B, Gurdal G, Holt İ.(2013) University Librarianship in the Open Access World and the Changing Roles. BOBCATSSS Conference 23-25 January 2013 , Hacettepe University.
Librarians and research impact - Download and share the new infographicLibrary_Connect
More and more librarians are being called upon to help track and report on the outputs and impact of research. From a landscape of article and book citations, the vista has broadened to a range of research outputs, measures and applications.
Download and share the new infographic from Elsevier's Library Connect and Jenny Delasalle, a freelance consultant and librarian. It tells the story of how librarians are working with researchers and the research office to measure research impact and to explore the application of these measurements. See more at: http://libraryconnect.elsevier.com/articles/2014-06/librarians-and-research-impact-download-and-share-new-infographic-0
Skills and competences of research librarians. The UOC experience #Liasa2013liblabs
Skills and competences of research librarians. The UOC experience. A presentation for LIASA 15th Annual Conference 2013 by Rosa Padrós Cuxart, Clara Riera Quintero & Anna Zuñiga Ruiz.
Model Attribute Check Company Auto PropertyCeline George
In Odoo, the multi-company feature allows you to manage multiple companies within a single Odoo database instance. Each company can have its own configurations while still sharing common resources such as products, customers, and suppliers.
Open Access Policy for Universities in India: A ProposalAnup Kumar Das
"Open Access Policy for Universities in India: A Proposal"; a presentation for the One Day National Seminar on Changing Role of Librarians in Digital Era; organized by JNU, New Delhi, India on 12th August 2014 on the occasion of 122nd Birth Anniversary of Dr S. R Ranganathan.
Going for Gold and Greener Pastures: Open Access Explained
Presentation by Lisa Kruesi, Helen Morgan and Andrew Heath from The University of Queensland Scholarly Publishing and Digititisation Service for Open Access Week, October 2012.
Research 3.0: Libraries, Scholarly Communications, and Research Services
Presented at Coalition for Networked Information (CNI)
April 4, 2016, San Antonio, Texas
Rebecca Bryant
Visiting Project Manager, Researcher Information Systems
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Beth Namachchivaya
Associate University Librarian
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
The landscape of academic research has changed rapidly in the past decade, with access to high-performance networks, and the focus on data-intensive and interdisciplinary scholarship. Research libraries in North America are developing new services and programs aimed at meeting scholars’ needs for data-intensive, and interdisciplinary research support. Examples of some emerging programs include:
• Supporting digital research (graphical information systems, digital humanities, survey research methodologies, working with large datasets)
• Educating users about copyright and author rights
• Supporting content-creation and publishing activities in numerous ways: institutional repository to store and host works, establishing maker spaces, and developing infrastructure and workflows for more formal library-located publishing efforts
• Collaboration with research offices to educate researchers about federal mandates for open access publications and datasets
• Establishment of data management and archival resources
• Partnering with third-party vendors and with consortia to achieve scale-efficiencies and facilitate impact
• Development of researcher information management systems to support collaboration, discovery, and reporting
We present a case study of the development of a suite of new tools and services at the University of Illinois Library at Urbana-Champaign within its newly established Office of Research to support digital scholarship and to provide sustained and broad access to research. We will also discuss the significant challenges and opportunities of library/campus partnerships for cyberinfrastructure and research support.
Support When It Counts - library roles in public access to federally-funded r...Hilary Davis
Charleston Conference 2013
November 8, 2013
Kristine M. Alpi, Director, William Rand Kenan, Jr. Library of Veterinary Medicine, kmalpi@ncsu.edu
William M. Cross, Director, Copyright and Digital Scholarship, NCSU Libraries, wmcross@ncsu.edu
Hilary M. Davis, Interim Head, Collection Management & Director of Research Data Services, NCSU Libraries, hmdavis4@ncsu.edu
In November 2012, the National Institutes of Health (NIH) said it would begin enforcing its earlier April 2008 public access mandate to NIH-funded research by delaying processing of investigators’ grants. In response, the NCSU Libraries offered to assist the university’s sponsored research office in supporting NC State researchers who had publications stemming from NIH funding and had not achieved compliance. Since the 2008 NIH mandate, over 1000 articles based on NIH-funding have been published by NC State across research areas including veterinary medicine, life sciences, physical sciences, social sciences, engineering, textiles, design, math and statistics. Many were published in journals which did not automatically deposit papers to meet NIH requirements. Although familiar with biomedical literature, author agreements and open access, we did not fully grasp the complex web of investigator, author, publisher, institution and funder relations involved in this mandate until we were deeply engaged in the process and gained access to the compliance monitoring data.
In this paper, we will discuss the costs and benefits of library support for authors needing to attain compliance with an eye toward how this support may be scaled up if other federal funding agencies follow suit. We will share practical strategies for supporting compliance efforts for individual researchers and at the campus-wide level, as well as training newly-funded researchers to facilitate future compliance. We discuss the advantages of leveraging existing relationships with publishers to help their researchers, strategies for getting involved in compliance support, and insights on how to skill-up and scale-up when engaging in this part of the research process.
Understanding how two University Libraries (Edinburgh and St Andrews) have responded to requests for supporting a journal hosting service for the institution – why, how and future sustainability. We will cover progression of the service and the levels of support we can provide, with examples of the range of journals and flexibility of our approach. We will also describe how it fits in with our Open Access support services.
University Librarianship in the Open Access World and the Changing Rolesİlkay Holt
Keten B, Gurdal G, Holt İ.(2013) University Librarianship in the Open Access World and the Changing Roles. BOBCATSSS Conference 23-25 January 2013 , Hacettepe University.
Librarians and research impact - Download and share the new infographicLibrary_Connect
More and more librarians are being called upon to help track and report on the outputs and impact of research. From a landscape of article and book citations, the vista has broadened to a range of research outputs, measures and applications.
Download and share the new infographic from Elsevier's Library Connect and Jenny Delasalle, a freelance consultant and librarian. It tells the story of how librarians are working with researchers and the research office to measure research impact and to explore the application of these measurements. See more at: http://libraryconnect.elsevier.com/articles/2014-06/librarians-and-research-impact-download-and-share-new-infographic-0
Skills and competences of research librarians. The UOC experience #Liasa2013liblabs
Skills and competences of research librarians. The UOC experience. A presentation for LIASA 15th Annual Conference 2013 by Rosa Padrós Cuxart, Clara Riera Quintero & Anna Zuñiga Ruiz.
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Artificial Intelligence (AI) technologies such as Generative AI, Image Generators and Large Language Models have had a dramatic impact on teaching, learning and assessment over the past 18 months. The most immediate threat AI posed was to Academic Integrity with Higher Education Institutes (HEIs) focusing their efforts on combating the use of GenAI in assessment. Guidelines were developed for staff and students, policies put in place too. Innovative educators have forged paths in the use of Generative AI for teaching, learning and assessments leading to pockets of transformation springing up across HEIs, often with little or no top-down guidance, support or direction.
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1. LIBRARY SERVICES
www.library.qut.edu.au
D I V I S I O N O F T E C H N O L O G Y , I N F O R M A T I O N A IN D A R Y A R R V IN G S S U P P O R T
L BR L E SE N I CE
www.library.qut.edu.au
Supporting researchers in
Getting Published
Stephanie Bradbury
Research Support Librarian
s.bradbury@qut.edu.au
CRICOS No. 00213J
2. LIBRARY SERVICES
www.library.qut.edu.au
Services for Researchers
GREEN
GOLD
• Open Access
– QUT ePrints
– Financially supported Article Processing Charges
• Tracking Research Impact
• Research Skills Workshops
• Integrated research data management service
• External Data Service
3. LIBRARY SERVICES
www.library.qut.edu.au
Launched in 2003
QUT ePrints Repository
• 41,792 records
• 24,315 with full-text attached
QUT ePrints is backed by three University wide policies • 9,025,440 downloads
F/1.3 QUT ePrints repository for research output
F/1.10 Library treatment of theses
4. LIBRARY SERVICES
www.library.qut.edu.au
Increases visibility
Having open access papers in QUT ePrints
increases visibility online
5. LIBRARY SERVICES
www.library.qut.edu.au
QUT ePrints
provides a
dashboard of
statistics where
researchers can
get a snapshot
of the impact
made by their
research
outputs.
7. LIBRARY SERVICES
www.library.qut.edu.au
Financial Support for Open Access Publishing
• QUT Library has supported QUT
researchers publishing in GOLD
Open Access journals since 2006.
• The Library pays the article
processing charges for QUT
researchers who are the
corresponding author of articles
published in approved open access
journals.
9. LIBRARY SERVICES
www.library.qut.edu.au
Financial Support for Open Access Publishing
• QUT Library will consider payment of article processing charges for articles accepted for
publication in an open access journal where a QUT researcher is the corresponding author
based on the following criteria:
• ACCESS: The full content of the journal is publicly available online (OA) immediately on publication.
• QUALITY: Publication in the journal must confer a reasonable level of quality on accepted articles
based on the journal having a rigorous pre-publication peer review process. This could be in the form of
one of the following:
– the journal is indexed by Scopus | Sciverse or Thomson Reuters | Web of Science
– the journal is included on the ERA 2012 Journal list
– the journal holds a refereed status in Ulrichsweb
– the journal has a high status editorial board or providing significant value-adding in the copy-editing
and formatting
• If you are seeking financial support to cover article processing charges in an open access journal,
please contact the Research Support Librarian or your Liaison Librarian before submitting your
manuscript to check the journal meets the criteria. In addition to the above criteria, please note:
– QUT Library will not cover excess page charges
– payment of invoices is not retrospective.
10. LIBRARY SERVICES
www.library.qut.edu.au
Number of Publications with Library Supported Author Publishing Charges
by Faculty
140
120 130
100
80
84
60
40
20
1 5
0
Creative Industries Education Health Science and Engineering
QUT Faculties
PLoS ONE: Research Article, published 23 Jun 2010
10.1371/journal.pone.0011273
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0011273
11. LIBRARY SERVICES
www.library.qut.edu.au
Expenditure on Author Publishing Fees
12. LIBRARY SERVICES
www.library.qut.edu.au
Tracking Research Impact
• Liaison Librarians advise on:
– Discipline specific metrics and data sources.
– Author identifies (ORCID and ResearcherID)
• Tracking Research Impact Workshops inform and provide opportunity to
explore a range of tools that demonstrate the impact of work.
• Measuring Research Impact Guide gives information on metrics, tools and
strategies to enable tracking and monitoring of research impact and increase
visibility and reach of publications.
• A Research Impact Report can be requested by Assistant Deans
Research, Research or Institute Directors for the purpose of supporting large
grants (e.g. NHMRC Centres of Research Excellence; ARC Centres of
Excellence), external reviews (e.g. professional accreditations of research
groups) and establishment of research centres. Six weeks is required to
complete reports.
14. LIBRARY SERVICES
www.library.qut.edu.au
Workshops
• Getting Published: The science and the art of writing and revising for
publications
• Writing the Track Record – NHMRC and DECRA grants
• Managing Research Data
• Technologies for collaboration
• Uploading to QUT ePrints
• External Research Datasets
• Research Strategies for Effective Time Management
• Visualisation tools for research impact
• Alt-metrics
• Census/Cdata
• Social media to promote research
• Where to publish and what to consider
15. LIBRARY SERVICES
www.library.qut.edu.au
Support for Open Access Publishing
The Library has
provided the
technical support
which has enabled
a group of senior
QUT academics to
launch a new, peer
reviewed
international open
access journal
[Open Journal
Systems]
16. LIBRARY SERVICES
www.library.qut.edu.au
QUT’s new repository for research datasets
17. LIBRARY SERVICES
www.library.qut.edu.au
External Datasets
• External Dataset service
– HILDA
– LSAC/LSIC
– CURFs
• Financial Datasets
– Since 2010, QUT Library has been liaising with faculties to identify
demand for large scale commercially available research datasets
which, by their nature, are unaffordable for individual researchers or
schools and faculties. The QUT Business School is where most
unmet demand was identified in the first instance, and the School of
Accounting and the School of Economics and Finance in particular.