Presented at ReCon - Research in the 21st Century: Data, Analytics & Impact, Edinburgh 19 June 2015
How do researchers identify the most relevant papers from roughly 1.8 million articles published in ca. 28,000 scholarly journals each year? And how does discovery lead to “impact”? Established aggregators have traditionally depended on citation counts as the principle measure of relevance. As the Open Access movement sets increasing amounts of data (articles and references) free on the internet, new ways to collect, rate and rank content across publishers are being developed for and by the digital generation. The crux of the Open Access movement may well not be its moral imperative or its new business model, but the myriad of projects which can build on access to structured digital information. How will new Open Access aggregators with novel, open measurements of impact affect the current publishing landscape? Case study: the ScienceOpen platform currently aggregates 1.5 million Open Access articles and is developing tools to showcase excellent research across publishers via editorial selection in Collections.
Microteaching on terms used in filtration .Pharmaceutical Engineering
ScienceOpen "The Big Picture: Open Access content aggregators as drivers of impact" ReCon2015 Edinburgh
1. The Big Picture: Open Access content
aggregators as drivers of impact
ReCon Conference
Edinburgh, 19 June 2015
Image Courtesy SRTM Team
NASA/JPL/NIMA
2. 2
Information overload
Yearly ca. 1.8 million articles published in
around 28,000 scholarly journals.
And more on the way…
Digitalization – new outlets
Economic logic of Open Access
Publication of negative results, all
clinical trials, data sets, micro-
publications
China, India, Brazil and others entering
the research community
Image credit: Tom Magliery_CC-BY NC SA Flickr
3. 3
Discovery
How do researchers find
relevant articles?
Search engines (Google)
Indexing services (pubMed, Scopus,
Web of Science, SciELO)
Networking (Social media,
conferences)
Topical bundling (journals, collections)
Image credit: Ina Müller-Schmoß_CC-BY-NC-SA_Flickr
4. 4
Ranking knowledge
Orientation
Context
Inspiration
Time-saving
But also..
Reputation
Career
Image Credit: Kai Morgener, Flickr, CC-BY-NC-SA
7. 7
Article-based tools
Image credit: Olivier Delaye Fotolia
Usage statistics
Social media mentions
Mentions in news media, blogs,
podcasts
Citations in scientific literature
Open Peer Review reports
Comments
Inclusion in citation management
tools (Mendeley, CiteuLike)
8. 8
The opportunity
Image credit: Boris Mann_flickr_CC BY NC
Open Access making
large numbers of
structured research
articles available across
all publishers.
Let‘s play!
10. 10
What is ScienceOpen?
ScienceOpen is a next generation Open Access
communication platform.
1.5 million aggregated Open Access articles open to Post-
Pub Peer Review and Collection building.
Suite of social-networking and collaboration tools.
ScienceOpen as publisher offers immediate publication
after editorial check with a transparent, network-based
peer-review afterward.
12. 12
Content aggregation on ScienceOpen
Th
Advanced search functionalities
Saved searches with notification when new
content is added
Search for similar content on ScienceOpen
Altmetric information on every paper
Commenting and Post-Publication Peer Review
(with trackable CrossRef DOI for reports) on all
content
What‘s missing? – The ability to rank articles
13. 13
Coming soon…
Th
Image credit: Spottiswoode & Stevens_2011 Proceedings of the Royal
Society B
Citation information within the
ScienceOpen platform
Reference “stubs“ for content not on
the platform (ca. 10 million to start)
Author profiles
Content ranking
Recommendation function from a
range of parameters
14. 14
Future of scholarly communication
What aspects of scholarly journals are
most important to users?
Topic-specific bundling
Editorial selection
Quality assurance
Trust and reliability
ScienceOpen Collections provide
these functions beyond individual
publishers or journals.
20. 20
In summary…
Beyond the Impact Factor:
we need new ways to rate
and rank content across
publishers
New tools for content
owners (publishers,
societies, authors) to
promote their work
Aggregators leading the
way
Image credit: Kay Gaensler, Flickr, CC-BY-NC-SA