Ursus (journal of the International Association for Bear Research & Management)
PDFs of the Wild Dolphin Project.
Additional repository full-text from universities in Singapore and Australia.
21 Saturday Jan 2017
Ursus (journal of the International Association for Bear Research & Management)
PDFs of the Wild Dolphin Project.
Additional repository full-text from universities in Singapore and Australia.
21 Saturday Jan 2017
“Availability of digital object identifiers in publications archived by PubMed”, 3rd January 2017. For…
“the period 1966–2015 (50 years). Of the 496,665 articles studied over this period, 201,055 have DOIs (40.48%).”
So just under 60% are without DOIs, and that’s for biomedical in PubMed — albeit when including thirty years of pre-1995 (pre the mass Internet) coverage. More recently, for 2015, the study found that 13.5% of new content was still without a DOI.
The DOI-free figures for the humanities will be far higher, according to “Availability of digital object identifiers (DOIs) in Web of Science and Scopus”, February 2016…
“Many journals related to the Natural Sciences and Medicine with considerable impact have no DOI. Arts & Humanities WoS [Web of Science] categories have the highest percentage of documents without DOI.” … “exceeding 50% only since 2013. The observed values for Books and Proceedings are even lower despite the importance of these document types …”
As for DOI availability within articles in repositories, IRUS-UK provides a “DOI Summary” field giving “the numbers and percentages that have DOIs available” in UK repositories, although the access to their datasets is controlled. IRUS-UK has no summary infographics that I could find, relevant to DOI availability. But it would be interesting to determine what proportion of UK repository free/open journal articles have DOIs.
18 Wednesday Jan 2017
Natural History Magazine (to 2010, American Museum of Natural History)
Mongolian Journal of Biological Sciences (mirrored at Biotaxa)
17 Tuesday Jan 2017
Posted Spotted in the news
inNow updated and available as a Microsoft Office Excel .xls file (750kb)…
“Surfmarket [has] made a list of more than 7,400 journals in which […] Dutch universities and academic hospitals can publish in open access for free or with a substantial discount.”
570 of the titles fit the arts & humanities category, and these are all published by a small handful of establishment publishers.
It’s not possible to separate out the list’s eco/nature titles, since the “Natuur” category is too broad. At one end it ranges from New Zealand Journal of Marine and Freshwater Research through to Potato Research, and at the other end goes spinning off into chemistry, maths and physics titles like Polymer Bulletin, Probability Theory and Related Fields, and Progress in Nuclear Energy.
I thought the list might be a useful source of some new URLs for JURN. But there doesn’t yet seem to be any way to filter journals by their “hybrid OA” / “wholly OA” status. Random sampling of the list of the 570 humanities titles suggests most are hybrid, and that as yet they only have a few OA articles in them. Thought doubtless that will start to change, once mandates start to operate fully.
16 Monday Jan 2017
Ledger : journal of cryptocurrency and blockchain technology research
Klapalekiana (Czech Entomological Society, substantially in English)
14 Saturday Jan 2017
11 Wednesday Jan 2017
Posted My general observations
inThe Grand Comics Database is the comic-book equivalent of the IMDb for movies. It has a 2016 descriptive assessment for librarians by Mike Monaco of The University of Akron.
11 Wednesday Jan 2017
Posted Spotted in the news
in“Are Open Access Monographs Discoverable in Library Catalogs?”, Libraries and the Academy, Volume 17, No. 1, January 2017…
The analysis indicates that only a small percentage of college and university library catalogs in the United States and Canada consistently enable discovery and access for the test sample.
“The open access aggregators challenge: how well do they identify free full text?”, Medium article-post, 7th January 2017. Looks at BASE and CORE…
when OAI-PMH (which is the standard way of harvesting open access repositories [was established,] no provision was made to have a standard way or a mandatory field to indicate if the item is free to access.” [But today] “many have in fact more metadata-only records than full-text records.
[BASE] “is only able to see 75 free records in National University of Singapore’s IR, 654 free records in Nanyang Technology University’s IR, 143 free records in Singapore Management University’s IR. I did not do a check to see if there were false positives in BASE’s identification of full text but [assuming] they are 100% correct, we see only a full text identification ratio of 0.6%, 3.8% and 2.7% respectively!” […] “the results for CORE are as dismal as BASE.
See also: “From open access metadata to open access content: two principles for increased visibility of open access content”, conference paper presented at Open Repositories 2013, 8th-12th July 2013, Charlottetown, Canada.
… only 27.6% of research outputs in repositories are linked to content that can be downloaded by automatic means and analysed (e.g. indexed). […] the median repository will only provide machine readable content for 13% of its deposited resources. [but] it is likely that these statistics are in fact rather optimistic …
10 Tuesday Jan 2017
Posted My general observations
inVisit Britain provides nearly 15,000 selected copyright-free images, with a search box. The selection is obviously highly curated and high-quality, and no registration is required to download. If you have a pop-up blocker, you’ll need to whitelist media.visitbritain.com to get at the hi-res magazine-quality image download link. There are a few noticeable gaps in coverage, such as the major ceramics tourism hub which is the city of Stoke-on-Trent (one picture, on a search for “Stoke-on-Trent”).
10 Tuesday Jan 2017