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Newsletter n°19 January 2014

 
 
 
 
 

The ISSN International Centre is pleased to introduce ROAD, the Directory of Open Access scholarly Resources

ROAD has been developed with the support of the Communication and Information Sector of UNESCO, it provides a free access to a subset of the ISSN Register. This subset comprises bibliographic records which describe scholarly resources in Open Access identified by an ISSN : journals, monographic series, conference proceedings and academic repositories. ROAD records are enriched by metadata about the coverage of the resources by indexing and abstracting databases, registries and journals indicators. They are downloadable as a MARC XML dump and will be available as RDF triples in 2014.

ROAD is available as a beta version at: http://road.issn.org/

It will be developed all along 2014 (extension of the coverage, additional features…).

We hope you will enjoy it.

 
   
     
 

Standards

 
 

NISO Releases Draft Open Access and Metadata Indicators Recommended Practice for Comments

The National Information Standards Organization (NISO, United States) is seeking comments on the draft recommended practice Open Access Metadata and Indicators (NISO RP-22-201x). Launched in January 2013, the NISO Open Access Metadata and Indicators Working Group was chartered to develop protocols and mechanisms for machine-processing metadata and identifying the accessibility or rights status.

 
  >> NISO, 2014-01-06  
     
 

Publishing Industry

 
 

Estimating the Adverse Economic Impact of Imposed Embargoes

In the green open access environment, the embargo’s length is the key for a good balance between vital incomes for the publisher and free access for the scientific community.

 
  >> Scholarly Kitchen, 2013-12-18  
     
 

List of Predatory Publishers 2014

Jeffrey Bealls’ updated list of predatory publishers.

 
  >> Scholarly Open Access, 2014-01-02  
     
 

New Study Identifies Half-Life of Journal Articles

How do you judge how much a scientific study or academic article has been used?  Researcher Philip Davis is trying to provide some new answers to that question by taking a look at ‘usage half-life,’ in an effort to learn more about the academic publishing life cycle.

Complete study

 
  >> Library Journal, 2014-01-06  
     
 

Principles of Transparency

Several publishing associations are banding together over a new set of principles to tell the legitimate journals from the crowd of questionable editorial practices.

 
  >> Inside Higher Ed, 2013-12-20  
     
 

What the Open Access Button Means for the Future of Research and Publishing

The button, an easy-to-use browser bookmarklet, searches for alternative access to the article, identifying open access versions of articles/research on the internet while mapping where obstacles are inhibiting research advances around the world.

 
  >> Information Today, 2013-12-17  
     
 

Women’s presence in science is not reflected in peer-review authorship or citations

Women are seriously under-represented within the academic publishing system: this is the conclusion of two teams of scientists after reviewing the authorship of 5.4 million peer-reviewed articles.

 
  >> Phys.org, 2013-12-11  
     
 

Peer reviewers urged to speak their minds

Presentation of a new peer reviewing model based on the reviewers’ private thoughts. In a common process, peer reviewers may be asked to stick to an objective assessment of whether a paper’s methods look sound. And this, the author thinks, can be damaging especially in some contentious fields.

 
  >> Nature, 2013-12-04  
     
 

Scientists Ambivalent About Open Access

Scientists overwhelmingly support the notion of making research papers freely available, but fewer publish their work in so-called open-access journals that make papers free immediately upon publication.

 
  >> Science, 2013-11-29  
     
 

Libraries

 
 

Library Technology Forecast for 2014 and Beyond

Trends and challenges for the libraries in 2014: ebooks lending, new technologies, services platforms, etc.

 
  >> Computers in Libraries, December 2013  
     
 

2014: what’s on the horizon?

Challenges and perspectives for 2014 by the UKSG commitee members (metadata, open access, universities’ initiatives,etc)

 
  >> UKSG, 2014-01-10  
     
 

Preservation: the construction of our digital continuity

The main challenges of the digital preservation: research data management, digital preservation policies, financial resources.

 
  >> SciELO in Perspective, 2014-01-02  
     
 

1 million digitised tables of contents in the catalogue of the German National Library – 5 years of catalogue enrichment

2.7 million pages have recently been made available via the catalogue of the German National Library for free re-use and research and information purposes. Full-text searches can be performed in these documents.

 
  >> DNB, 2013-12-05  
     
 

IFLA publishes Statement on Libraries and Text and Data Mining

Vast amounts of information and data are being generated every day through government, academic, economic and social activities. Text and data mining has emerged as a significant tool to assist individuals and institutions identify patterns, trends and anomalies in data, and to develop new efficiencies and forms of knowledge.

The document itself is available at this link.

 
  >> IFLA, 2013-12-12  
     
 

Descriptive metadata of the « Bibliothèque nationale de France » (BnF) now under open licence

Since 1st January 2014, all the metadata issued from the BnF catalogues (more than 12 million bibliographic records) are freely available, even for a commercial use.

 
  >> BnF, 2013-12-13  
     
   
     
 

Events

 
 

ALA Midwinter Meeting

 
 
  >> January 24-28, 2014 - Philadelphia  
     
 

NFAIS 2014 Annual Conference

 
 
  >> February 23-25, 2014 - Philadelphia  
     
 

22nd International BOBCATSSS Conference 2014: Library (R) Evolution: Promoting Sustainable Information Practices

 
 
  >> January 29-31 - Barcelona  
     
 

NISO Webinar: We Know it When We See It: Managing « Works » Metadata

 
 
  >> February 12 - Online  
     
 
 
 

For any comment or suggestion about the ISSN newsletter please send a message to : newsletter@issn.org
For further information about the ISSN International Centre please check www.issn.org

ISSN 2221-8009

 
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