Reviewing our conveyance of academic outputs in GALA

As part of our ongoing review of processes around GALA, we have decided to try and make better use of some of the features of the software. We hope that a minor change to our existing review practices will improve the university’s management of compliance with internal and external policies, and help to increase the turnaround of items under review. 

With REF 2021’s submission date only six months away, there has been a not insignificant increase in the number of deposits to GALA. This has been experienced at other institutions, so we are certainly not alone in this. Indeed, we are excited that GALA is being used by a broad range of users, including many who have been recruited throughout 2020. 

However, with the increased volume of deposits comes and increased management of processes. As part of our review of all deposits into GALA, we perform a range of checks to ensure that the university is not breaching any copyright restrictions (e.g. the sharing of published Versions of Record which publishers have been given copyright of) and to try and support compliance with the university’s Publications Policy, the REF 2021 open access policy, and various research funder policies as applicable. 

This disparate range of criteria often require us to contact individual academics via email to clarify that certain aspects of metadata are accurate, or to ensure that the correct document version has been attached to the record. This has been an incredibly effective method and helped us to build and foster excellent working relationships, and to better understand experiences with GALA and research repositories more generally. 

However, at scale, moving communications outside of the software can become cumbersome and add delays to the processing of deposits. As such, we are instituting a minor change to our extant processes, and wanted to clearly explain what we are doing and why, hence this blog post. 

In specific and limited circumstances, we are going to use some functionality in the repository software to return records’ to a user’s work area. We will accompany return of records with a detailed message to explain what needs amending on a given record. For example, if a Version of Record that is under the copyright of the publisher and thus cannot be shared via GALA has been attached to the record, we may explain that you will need to attach your author’s accepted manuscript (AAM,) and where you may be able to obtain your AAM from if you do not have a copy to hand, before you re-deposit your record. 

Using this function of the software should better enable those depositing records to clarify or amend anything as appropriate in situ, expediting the process and resolving queries in a more effective way. 

Of course, we are always here to support you and ensure that your experiences with open access repositories are positive, so we need to be clear that you can contact us by any means necessary to help resolve any outstanding issues. However, by returning the output to the user’s work area, it will improve efficiency and enable depositors to better understand the requirements of depositing within GALA.  

New for 2019: Term-time Tuesdays!

Just a short post today – don’t forget help and support is available on all of the above here on the blog, on Twitter, in person and also by email and on Skype.

I’m normally based in various places around the Greenwich campus but starting this week, during term time, alternate Tuesdays I will now be spending at Avery Hill and Medway.

  • First and Third Tuesday (Medway Campus)
  • Second and Fourth Tuesday (Avery Hill)

I’ll be based in the Research and Enterprise Hub at Medway or the Avery Hill Library on those days so please drop by if you are in the area.

Obviously if you are at Avery Hill or Medway but aren’t available on a Tuesday, that isnt the end! Any other days, drop me a line, poke me on Skype, send a carrier pigeon, anything you want and we can chat, and I’ll come by if I can!

Contact the Research Outputs Manager (Kirsty Wallis: k.r.wallis@gre.ac.uk) or use gala@gre.ac.uk for specific compliance and GALA questions.

 

Universities, Publishers, Journals and now Funders all back ORCID

Nine funders, including UKRI, Royal Society and Wellcome Trust have all signed an open letter pledging their commitment to implementing ORCID IDs: Full article on Research Professional

This is a very welcome move that follows increasing use of ORCID in publishing processes, and journals, as well as its inclusion as an optional field in exercises such as the annual HESA return and the upcoming REF2021.

This also relevant locally with the recent decision to mandate ORCID for those on the research career pathway here at Greenwich, and its integration into GALA to allow you to populate your ORCID page from GALA, and vice versa. Find out more about adding your ORCID to GALA on the LibGuide.

Don’t know what ORCID is? Take a look below at a short film from ORCID:

Open Access Week – OA is good for you!

Did you know that open access articles attract more citations than those published in subscription journals?

Between 2004 and 2015 SPARC collected a body of research evidence demonstrating the Open Access Citation Advantage. A study in the open access journal PLoS ONE found that advantage to be as high as 19% — even when articles had been embargoed (made open access after a certain period). This is especially interesting since making things Open Access after an embargo period is so common, especially for making things REF compliant in GALA.

If you think about it, it is quite logical, Open Access makes it easier for simply anyone to access your work – meaning that academics anywhere can cite it without needing an expensive journal subscription, or to pay to access the article themselves.

You can also use Open Access for more – for data, for non-traditional outputs, for whatever you do… Using GALA, it is possible to make a record and share any work you have been doing, not just books and journal articles!

and Open Access is great for sharing!

If you were to click on a link on twitter, and only reach a paywall, a request for money, you aren’t very likely to continue down the path to reading this paper, unless it is extremely relevant to you. If you click on a link and can immediately read the paper, there is no problem!

You can use social media tools like Twitter to share your work and there are even tools to track the activity – you don’t have to take my word for it!

Altmetricaltmetric.com

Social media interactions can be tracked and interrogated using tools like Altmetric, which gives you access to the attention people are giving your work. Altmetric can track anything with a DOI, be it an article, a book or chapter, a report or a dataset. Altmetric is accessible from their website, as well as in GALA.

Click the doughnut in any record to see who has been talking about your work. You can also use the Altmetric bookmarklet to look for Altmetrics on a specific item.

You will soon be able to search a Greenwich instance of the Altmetric database – watch this space!

Kudosgrowkudos.com

Kudos is a website that allows you to claim your papers, create additional content such as a lay-summary, and then facilitates your use of social media to promote and share your work. It also tracks who interacts with your posts, who retweets and talks about your work, integrating fully with Altmetric.

Open Access Week – How are we doing?

GALA vital statistics: how do your papers rate?

Nearly 1,200 papers have already been uploaded this year, adding to over 14,000 records that have been created since GALA was launched in 2009!

Since 2009, items in GALA have been downloaded over a million times! This just goes to show that people really are looking at GALA, and uploading your work can really help get your work out there!

Top 10 downloaded papers in 2018

1. Sampling in interview-based qualitative research: A theoretical and practical guide
2. Methods for design of hoppers. Silos, bins and bunkers for reliable gravity flow, for pharmaceutical, food, mineral and other applications
3. The small-scale manufacture of compound animal feed (ODNRI Bulletin No. 9)
4. The vibro-acoustic modelling and analysis of damage mechanisms in paper
5. Once Upon Four Robbers: the magic of subversion (introduction)
6. Small scale vegetable oil extraction
7. Bringing water into public ownership: costs and benefits
8. Reward systems and organisation culture: an analysis drawing on three perspectives of culture
9. A systematic review of controlled trials of the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of brief psychological treatments for depression.
10. Modeling growth: exogenous, endogenous and Schumpeterian growth models

Top 10 most popular authors in 2018 (by number of downloads)

1. Onaran, Özlem
6,675
2. Robinson, Oliver
5,781
3. Bradley, M.S.A.
4,078
4. Hall, David (NRI)
4,013
5. Berry, R.J.
3,861
6. Ugur, Mehmet
3,748
7. Farnish, R.J.
3,592
8. Guschanski, Alexander
3,160
9. Lobina, Emanuele
2,897
10. Marter, A.D.
2,865