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He who pays the piper… Open Access: a funders perspective Robert Kiley Head of e-strategy Wellcome Library [email protected] Conference: First Bloomsbury Conference of e-publishing and e-publications UCL, 28-29 June 2007
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He who pays the piper… Open Access: a funders perspective Robert Kiley Head of e-strategy Wellcome Library [email protected] Conference: First Bloomsbury.

Mar 28, 2015

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Page 1: He who pays the piper… Open Access: a funders perspective Robert Kiley Head of e-strategy Wellcome Library r.kiley@wellcome.ac.uk Conference: First Bloomsbury.

He who pays the piper…Open Access: a funders perspective

Robert Kiley

Head of e-strategyWellcome Library

[email protected]

Conference:

First Bloomsbury Conference of e-publishing and e-publications

UCL, 28-29 June 2007

Page 2: He who pays the piper… Open Access: a funders perspective Robert Kiley Head of e-strategy Wellcome Library r.kiley@wellcome.ac.uk Conference: First Bloomsbury.

Overview About the Wellcome Trust Look at the current model for scholarly publishing – and

show why this does not work in the interests of the research community

Look at an alternative model – open access Discuss what it might cost and who pays Look at major players – funders, publishers, and authors –

and highlight their current attitudes to OA Conclusions

Page 3: He who pays the piper… Open Access: a funders perspective Robert Kiley Head of e-strategy Wellcome Library r.kiley@wellcome.ac.uk Conference: First Bloomsbury.

The Wellcome Trust Largest charity in UK; second largest

medical charity in the world Funds innovative biomedical research

in the UK and internationally Currently spends around £500 million

per annum – supporting the brightest scientists with the best ideas

Supports public debate about biomedical research and its impact on health and well-being

Home of the Wellcome Library and Wellcome Collection

More information at: http://www.wellcome.ac.uk

Page 4: He who pays the piper… Open Access: a funders perspective Robert Kiley Head of e-strategy Wellcome Library r.kiley@wellcome.ac.uk Conference: First Bloomsbury.

Web has transformed awareness of research results…..

Page 5: He who pays the piper… Open Access: a funders perspective Robert Kiley Head of e-strategy Wellcome Library r.kiley@wellcome.ac.uk Conference: First Bloomsbury.

Free

Publishers

LibrariesResearchers

Shareholders & Societies

Public funders & HEFCE

£ Profit

Free

£

£ £

..but the traditional publishing model

..does not always work in the interests of the research community

Page 6: He who pays the piper… Open Access: a funders perspective Robert Kiley Head of e-strategy Wellcome Library r.kiley@wellcome.ac.uk Conference: First Bloomsbury.

Funded by the Wellcome Trust and MRC

Issue 1 – Access problems

Research by BMC shows that:

90% of NHS-funded research available online full text

40% immediately available to NHS staff

30% immediately available to publicSee: http://www.biomedcentral.com/openaccess/inquiry/refersubmission.pdf

Page 7: He who pays the piper… Open Access: a funders perspective Robert Kiley Head of e-strategy Wellcome Library r.kiley@wellcome.ac.uk Conference: First Bloomsbury.

Issue 2 – Research potential not fully realised

Internet provides new opportunities for text and data to be fully integrated

The web – and web 2.0 developments – provides the ability for researchers to data-mine and mash-up data to generate new knowledge

The “read-only” access rights favoured by many publishers, limits these developments

Page 8: He who pays the piper… Open Access: a funders perspective Robert Kiley Head of e-strategy Wellcome Library r.kiley@wellcome.ac.uk Conference: First Bloomsbury.

Integrating text and data

Page 9: He who pays the piper… Open Access: a funders perspective Robert Kiley Head of e-strategy Wellcome Library r.kiley@wellcome.ac.uk Conference: First Bloomsbury.

Integrating text and data

Page 10: He who pays the piper… Open Access: a funders perspective Robert Kiley Head of e-strategy Wellcome Library r.kiley@wellcome.ac.uk Conference: First Bloomsbury.

Developing new resources from mining the literature: textpresso

Ability to computationally mine the text and data to enable new facts to be discovered The abstract is just not good enough.  TextPresso developers found that

"full text access increases recall of biological data types from 45% to 95%.  Some specific types of data (e.g., antibody data, mapping data, transgene data) are very unlikely to appear in abstracts ( 10% recall) but can be found in full text (70% recall)

Page 11: He who pays the piper… Open Access: a funders perspective Robert Kiley Head of e-strategy Wellcome Library r.kiley@wellcome.ac.uk Conference: First Bloomsbury.

Developing new resources from mining the literature: Malaria Atlas Map

Data mined from the research literature

“Mashed-up” with Google earth

Page 12: He who pays the piper… Open Access: a funders perspective Robert Kiley Head of e-strategy Wellcome Library r.kiley@wellcome.ac.uk Conference: First Bloomsbury.

Solution – open access

Open access: a definition (Bethesda definition) The author(s) and copyright holder(s) grant(s) to all users a free,

irrevocable, worldwide, perpetual right of access to, and a license to copy, use, distribute, transmit and display the work publicly and to make and distribute derivative works, in any digital medium for any responsible purpose, subject to proper attribution of authorship

Under an open access model, publishers move from “content ownership” model to a “service” model

Page 13: He who pays the piper… Open Access: a funders perspective Robert Kiley Head of e-strategy Wellcome Library r.kiley@wellcome.ac.uk Conference: First Bloomsbury.

OA at the Wellcome Trust: policy

All research papers – funded in whole or in part by the Wellcome Trust – must be made freely accessible from the PubMed Central and UKPMC repositories as soon as possible, and in any event within six months of the journal publisher’s official date of final publication

Page 14: He who pays the piper… Open Access: a funders perspective Robert Kiley Head of e-strategy Wellcome Library r.kiley@wellcome.ac.uk Conference: First Bloomsbury.

How do Wellcome Trust grantees comply? Compliance can be achieved by following one of two routes: Route 1 – open access publishing [preferred route]

Publish in OA/hybrid journal Typically incurs cost - met by Trust

Route 2 – author self-archiving Publish anywhere - but self-archive a version of the author manuscript

(must include all changes that arise from the peer-review process) and make that available from PMC/UKPMC within 6 months

No fee

If a publisher offers neither route: Author can make revision to the journals copyright statement –

boilerplate language provided – and see if the publisher will accept this Look for an alternative publisher

Page 15: He who pays the piper… Open Access: a funders perspective Robert Kiley Head of e-strategy Wellcome Library r.kiley@wellcome.ac.uk Conference: First Bloomsbury.

Publishers response to the Wellcome grant conditions Significant number of commercial and not-for-profit publishers

now offer an OA-publishing option that is compliant with the Trust’s requirements (e.g. PLoS, BMC, Springer, Elsevier, OUP, CUP, BMJPG, Sage etc)

Other publishers allow the author to self archive a version of the final article and make that available within 6 months (e.g. Nature, AAAS, AMA, Am. Physiological Assoc)

However, some publishers have policies that do not allow Wellcome-funded authors to publish in these titles High profile publishers that do not offer a WT-compliant policy include

the American Association of Immunologists, and the American Association for Cancer Research

Page 16: He who pays the piper… Open Access: a funders perspective Robert Kiley Head of e-strategy Wellcome Library r.kiley@wellcome.ac.uk Conference: First Bloomsbury.

Open access publishing – who pays?

Open access publishing still incurs costs Management of peer review process Copy & language edits

But rather than charging readers – and creating artificial access barriers – the OA model looks to shift these costs

“Author pays” model (more accurately “funder pays”) is gaining in popularity All UKPMC funders recognise that OA fees are a legitimate research

expense RCUK have indicated that publication fees for open access journals would

be a legitimate use of indirect research expenses See: http://www.biomedcentral.com/info/authors/funderpolicies/ for further

information

Page 17: He who pays the piper… Open Access: a funders perspective Robert Kiley Head of e-strategy Wellcome Library r.kiley@wellcome.ac.uk Conference: First Bloomsbury.

What will it cost? Costs and business models in scientific research publishing

http://www.wellcome.ac.uk/publications

Page 18: He who pays the piper… Open Access: a funders perspective Robert Kiley Head of e-strategy Wellcome Library r.kiley@wellcome.ac.uk Conference: First Bloomsbury.

Total cost of paying for OA? Trust estimates that providing OA to all the research

papers it helps fund will cost between 1%-2% of its annual research budget Approx 4000 original research papers published every year. If

every single one of those papers was published as an open access article, with an average cost of £1650 per article, the total cost to the Trust would be £6.64 million; just over 1% of our annual research budget.

Trust is rarely the sole funder of a research team, and more than 80% of papers that acknowledge our support also acknowledge the support of one or more other funders. In time these costs will be spread throughout the research budget and fall below the figure estimated here.

Page 19: He who pays the piper… Open Access: a funders perspective Robert Kiley Head of e-strategy Wellcome Library r.kiley@wellcome.ac.uk Conference: First Bloomsbury.

Will OA lead to lower costs?

Although the OA “funder pays” model incurs costs around administration and collection of these payments ….

…in the longer term, the move to OA should lead to lower costs Dispense with print – offer print on demand at cost (e.g. PLoS) Eliminate subscription management Eliminate DRM systems Reduce legal overheads (drafting, monitoring, & enforcing licences) Reduce marketing fees

Page 20: He who pays the piper… Open Access: a funders perspective Robert Kiley Head of e-strategy Wellcome Library r.kiley@wellcome.ac.uk Conference: First Bloomsbury.

Is OA sustainable? NAR and OUP - a case study

Nucleic Acids Research moved from a subscription, to hybrid and then to full OA journal

In 2005 92% of authors paid the OA fee (8% waived) Income per article has fallen:

2003 $4224 income per article 2004 $4647 income per article 2005 $3622 income per article

..but OA costs increased to offset this fall: 2005 - Member £300; Non-member £900 2006 - Member £500; Non-member £1000 2007 - Member £625; Non-member £1250

Additional titles are joining the Oxford Open programme 2005 – 21 titles 2006 – 49 titles 2007 – 60 titles

Page 21: He who pays the piper… Open Access: a funders perspective Robert Kiley Head of e-strategy Wellcome Library r.kiley@wellcome.ac.uk Conference: First Bloomsbury.

OA and the future: funders

Increasing number of funders recognise that full OA ensures that that the fruits of their investment can be accessed and built upon No rowing back - OA is here to stay

Increasing numbers of funders are making funds available to cover OA costs…

…but will only pay these costs when: a publisher agrees to undertake a number of services (e.g. deposit in

PMC, in XML format) on behalf of the author Allows these articles to be fully re-used for research purposes

Page 22: He who pays the piper… Open Access: a funders perspective Robert Kiley Head of e-strategy Wellcome Library r.kiley@wellcome.ac.uk Conference: First Bloomsbury.

OA and the future: publishers Increasing number of publishers are offering a form of “OA” –

but the OA “flavour” may not always be sufficient to meet funders’ demands ACS Author Choice Programme:

“The ACS version of the article must not be changed, modified or enhanced ….prohibited examples include adding of Internet links..

http://pubs.acs.org/pressrelease/author_choice/authorchoice_form.pdf

Publishers increasingly demanding full recognition for their services Recent ALPSP, AAP/PSP, and STM paper agues that publishers should

be able to derive the revenue benefit from the publication ….. and its further distribution and access in recognition of the value of the services they provide

Wiley/Batts spat is clear evidence that the commercial publishers are  increasingly concerned about re-use of content. http://scienceblogs.com/retrospectacle/2007/04/victory_a_happy_resolution.php

Page 23: He who pays the piper… Open Access: a funders perspective Robert Kiley Head of e-strategy Wellcome Library r.kiley@wellcome.ac.uk Conference: First Bloomsbury.

OA and the future: authors

Awareness of the issues around OA still relatively low In 2005-06 only 32% of the funding the Trust made available for OA

publishing was claimed More concerned with the impact factor of a particular journal –

rather than its OA policy OUP study showed that 78% of authors agreed or strongly

agreed that “unrestricted re-use of their article after publication is important”

http://www.oxfordjournals.org/news/oa_report.pdf

Expectation that authors will comply with funder mandates Funders need to develop author-friendly services so the

benefits of OA become manifest

Page 24: He who pays the piper… Open Access: a funders perspective Robert Kiley Head of e-strategy Wellcome Library r.kiley@wellcome.ac.uk Conference: First Bloomsbury.

Conclusion Providing unrestricted access to research outputs is good for

science and society Allows research to be freely accessed and built upon Helps funders evaluate impact of their funding portfolio In time, overall publication costs should fall

Funding is available for authors to meet OA costs This should allow publishers to begin moving to an OA model Dissemination costs are research cost

Still in a period of transition Publishers and funders trying to define their positions and (hopefully) reach

a common understanding Authors slowly beginning to recognise benefits of OA

OA will prevail Scholarly publishers will evolve and develop business models based on

providing services, rather than perpetuate the model which is based on access barriers and artificial scarcity