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[InetBib] PEER - upcoming calls for tender: usage, behaviour and economics research
- Date: Wed, 10 Dec 2008 14:32:17 -0000
- From: Sophia Jones <Sophia.Jones@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Subject: [InetBib] PEER - upcoming calls for tender: usage, behaviour and economics research
***Apologies for cross posting***
Sent on behalf of colleagues at Göttingen State and University Library
News release, 10 December 2008
Pre-announcement of upcoming calls for tender
PEER is a pioneering collaboration between publishers, repositories and the
research community, by which at least 16,000 peer reviewed manuscripts destined
to become journal articles in ISI ranked journals will be made available for
archiving every year for three years. The aim is to investigate the effects of
the large-scale deposit (so called Green Open Access) on user access, author
visibility, and journal viability.
At the heart of the project an Observatory will be built to gather evidence
about the impact of systematic archiving of stage-two research outputs. Three
strands of research will be tendered:
Behavioural Research: Authors and Users vis-à-vis Journals and Repositories
(Call mid-December 2008, Deadline mid-February 2009). The objectives will be
to:
* Track trends and explain patterns of author and user behaviour in the
context of so called Green Open Access.
* Understand the role repositories play for authors in the context of
journal publishing.
* Understand the role repositories play for users in context of accessing
journal articles.
Usage Research: Journals and Repositories (Call mid-December 2008, Deadline
mid-February 2009). The objectives will be to:
* Determine usage trends at publishers and repositories;
* Understand source and nature of use of deposited manuscripts in
repositories;
* Track trends, develop indicators and explain patterns of usage for
repositories and journals.
Economic research: The deposit of journal manuscripts in repositories (Summer
2009). The objectives will be to:
* Compare the efficiency and cost effectiveness of methods of deposit,
e.g. publisher-assisted vs. author self-archiving;
* Compare the efficiency and cost effectiveness of access, e.g.
repositories vs. publisher systems.
The International Association of Scientific, Technical and Medical Publishers
(STM), the European Science Foundation, Göttingen State and University Library,
the Max Planck Society and INRIA will collaborate on PEER, supported by the
SURF Foundation and University of Bielefeld, which will contribute the
expertise of the EU-funded DRIVER project. Significant about the PEER project
is the cooperation of the various stakeholders in the scholarly publishing
cycle without prejudice. The PEER project has nominated a Research Oversight
Group:
* Justus Haucap, Professor of Competition Policy, University of Erlangen.
Prof. Haucap chairs the German Monopolies Commission;
* Henk Moed, Senior researcher at the Centre for Science and Technology
Studies, Leiden University. Dr. Moed has been the recipient of the Derek de
Solla Price Award;
* Carol Tenopir, Professor of Information Sciences, University of
Tennessee. Prof. Tenopir has received the International Information Industry
Lifetime Achievement Award.
The set-up of the PEER project offers a number of distinctions that bidders
could utilise in the design of the study:
* PEER is based on the selection of 200 to 300 ISI ranked journals, from
which manuscripts are selected for deposit. Publishers hold a control group of
equivalent journals from which no manuscripts will be deposited.
* From journals selected for deposit, only the manuscripts with European
based (lead) authors are selected for archiving, leaving all other
articles/manuscripts as an alternate group.
* Half of the manuscripts will be deposited directly by the publisher,
but the other half will require action by the author before archiving.
* Authors will be invited to deposit in repositories participating in the
PEER project.
The PEER press release from 14 October 2008 is available at:
http://www.stm-assoc.org/home/stm-partners-in-the-just-launched-pioneering-collaboration-b.html
For enquiries regarding the PEER Observatory, please contact Chris Armbruster,
Max Planck Digital Library, Max Planck Society. Email: armbruster at
mpdl.mpg.de
PEER Partners:
International Association of Scientific, Technical and Medical Publishers
(STM), the European Science Foundation, Göttingen State and University Library,
the Max Planck Society, INRIA, SURF Foundation and University of Bielefeld
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