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<TITLE>AW: [BOAI] Re: Comparing repositories - subject-based, institutional,research and national repository systems</TITLE>
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<P><FONT SIZE=2>Jessica,<BR>
<BR>
I think you will find that a fair number of open access advocates and many a person involved with repository development may share the vision of archiving everything. I did too, initially. After some years of research and experience I no longer do. Some of the reasons are: successful repositories have a clear and coherent collection policy; OA mandates overwhelmingly target research outputs in the form of peer-reviewed publications (not everything); scholars are apprehensive about what other material their own work appears alongside; relying on find and search through portals and search engines is not enough; convincing indexing entities have not emerged (yet); repositories with a clear and coherent collection policy have been able to build strong value-added services.<BR>
<BR>
This is not to say that I fundamentally oppose archiving all kinds of scholarly (and student) output. Rather, it is about strategy. To clarify, let me use an analogy: A lot of repositories look to me like hotels that would like to offer everything from a no-star to a five-star room. They then find that they have very few guests and their only regular ones may be theses and dissertations. By contrast, those repositories that have a clear strategy benefit not only from voluntary deposits but also from acceptance by the scholarly community. Now, one may *fix* deposit through mandates, but you cannot fix acceptance, trust and so on. If you want the later too, I think repositories would be well advised to worry about the value and relevance of their collection. Once they have established rapport with the scholarly community, they may be able to extend the collection policy, though I expect that they may find that they need to demarcate channels (e.g. NARCIS in NL clearly distinguishes between Cream and Promise of Science).<BR>
<BR>
Best, Chris<BR>
<BR>
<BR>
-----Ursprüngliche Nachricht-----<BR>
Von: boai-forum-bounces@ecs.soton.ac.uk im Auftrag von Jessica Perry Hekman<BR>
Gesendet: Di 11/24/2009 15:19<BR>
An: boai-forum@ecs.soton.ac.uk<BR>
Betreff: [BOAI] Re: Comparing repositories - subject-based, institutional,research and national repository systems<BR>
<BR>
On Mon, Nov 23, 2009 at 06:19:50PM +0100, Armbruster, Chris wrote:<BR>
<BR>
> - Armbruster, Chris and Romary, Laurent, Comparing Repositories Types:<BR>
> Challenges and Barriers for Subject-Based Repositories, Research<BR>
> Repositories, National Repository Systems and Institutional<BR>
> Repositories in Serving Scholarly Communication (November 20, 2009).<BR>
> Available at SSRN: <A HREF="http://ssrn.com/abstract=1506905">http://ssrn.com/abstract=1506905</A><BR>
<BR>
Although you are soliciting responses about your proposed distinction, I<BR>
was inspired to respond to this part of your paper:<BR>
<BR>
If the repository is to have any value over the long term, then a<BR>
quality control system must be implemented and the integrity of the<BR>
corpus preserved. One widespread misunderstanding is that repositories<BR>
are there to archive 'everything' when, in fact, users are ever more<BR>
concerned about the value and relevance of research results.<BR>
<BR>
I am new to OA, and a student (though I worked in online publishing for<BR>
15 years before returning to school), so I apologize if any of the<BR>
following is misguided; I hope the members of this list will point out<BR>
where I went wrong, if I did.<BR>
<BR>
When I discovered OA, I envisioned a future world in which value and<BR>
relevance of research results is maintained by entities which provide<BR>
the same services as do journals today: facilitating peer review,<BR>
organizing publications by topic, and providing a statement of<BR>
legitimacy (the difference in how you value a paper that was published<BR>
in a very high quality journal with a high impact factor, vs. a paper<BR>
published in a journal which no one has ever heard of). These indexing<BR>
entities could be what journals become, or they could be something new,<BR>
or there could spring up a mix of both. Because the indexing entities<BR>
would provide this service, repositories wouldn't need to do so, and<BR>
would be free to archive everything. Users wouldn't have trouble<BR>
navigating through this deluge of information, because the indexing<BR>
entities would guide them. A user would follow the list of new articles<BR>
in his chosen indexing entities, just as today he reads Nature or the<BR>
New England Journal of Medicine. For hunting down a specific article,<BR>
he'd use PubMed or Google Scholar. Actually browsing a particular<BR>
repository directly for content would be a painful process that no one<BR>
would waste their time on.<BR>
<BR>
I naively assumed that the OA community was envisioning this as well,<BR>
but given the bit of your paper that I quoted above, I'm now wondering<BR>
if I'm wrong.<BR>
<BR>
You have said in other places in your paper that repositories,<BR>
especially institutional repositories, aren't particularly good at<BR>
providing this kind of indexing service, and I agree with that. What<BR>
repositories *are* good at is providing a place to maintain copies of<BR>
publications (whatever "publications" come to be in the vibrantly open<BR>
access future), and place for indexing engines to hunt for content.<BR>
Isn't there value in maintaining everything? The long tail phenomenon in<BR>
internet retail sales has allowed items of niche interest to be found by<BR>
their audience. Isn't that useful in scholarly publishing as well?<BR>
<BR>
Of course, repositories will have to clearly mark content as peer<BR>
reviewed or not. Perhaps there is already a metadata standard for this<BR>
out there which I have not yet found, as I am very new to OA.<BR>
<BR>
I do think that the role of indexing entities is an extremely important<BR>
one. Repositories are worthless if they can't be navigated. I just don't<BR>
believe that providing sophisticated navigation, indexing, adding<BR>
statements of legitimacy, etc., is the job of the repository. I believe<BR>
a third party can provide those services much more effectively.<BR>
<BR>
Thanks,<BR>
Jessica<BR>
<BR>
<BR>
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