New! Improved! UO libraries and what they can do for you.

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Transcript of New! Improved! UO libraries and what they can do for you.

New! Improved!

UO libraries and what they can do for you

Notice Number: NOT-OD-08-033Much more helpful information found here:http://publicaccess.nih.gov/

When?

Who will do it?

Reporting?

Beware!

There are rumors of hidden costs (i.e. Springer deposits a copy in PubMed Central, but

charges for posting other copies).

Beware!

http://www.earlham.edu/~peters/fos/2008/02/nih-funded-authors-and-fee-based-oa.html

• Bottom line: Under the new NIH policy, grantees must reserve the right to comply with the policy whenever they publish a journal article based on their research. Hence, they never need to pay a publisher for permission to comply with the NIH policy. • On the other hand, some publishers may well refuse to publish work by NIH-funded authors unless the authors pay a fee. The fee wouldn't pay for permission to comply with the NIH policy, which is already assured, but for publication in the journal….

Beware!

Understand the fine print. SPARC, and the author’s addendum, is a good resource:

http://www.arl.org/sparc/author/addendum.html

This is an author’s amendment you can use

A short educational film

https://umconnect.umn.edu/umauthorsrights/

Open Access:

everyone's doing it:

coming to a college campus near you!

AT a college campus near you!

http://www.earlham.edu/~peters/fos/2008/02/oregon-faculty-senate-recommends-oa.html

What the UO resolution means for you…it's not so much a response to Harvard as the

fruit of an independent, simultaneous consideration of the same underlying policy issues. But the Harvard vote, along with the Oregon vote and the dozen or so preceding university-level OA mandates, will undoubtedly inspire similar actions in time. Kudos to all at Oregon who made this happen.

…What's missing is a policy to encourage or require them to make the deposits or a policy (such as Harvard's) for the university to make the deposits on its own. Permission for OA archiving is far from OA archiving itself. I hope the new working committee (under C.b) will supply the crucial, missing piece of the policy.

Open Access:

What about the Journal of Physiology?

http://www.sherpa.ac.uk/romeo.php?jtitle=Journal+of+Physiology+-London+then+Cambridge-&issn=0022-3751&pub=Blackwell+Publishing+Ltd&sherpapub=Blackwell+Publishing

AT a college campus near you!

What SB can do for you:• Browse Use Statistics• Indexed (and trusted by) Google• Citation Advantage of Open Access Articles

http://biology.plosjournals.org/perlserv/?request=get-document&doi=10.1371/journal.pbio.0040157&ct=1

• What can (would) you want to put there?Dissertations, thesis, datasets, invited talks, powerpoint presentations, posters, oh my!

• More about posting: http://libweb.uoregon.edu/catdept/irg/Student_Resources.html

Bibliographic software

• EndNote Web - now included with WoS and Biosis• In WoS & Biosis, sign in & send• In EN web, use Collect like Connection File, Cite while you write plug in, format bibliographies, file folders to organize can also share resources,and more.

• Only 10,000 references, limited formats, must be online, can’t customize much

Bibliographic software: EndNote Web

Bibliographic software

• Zotero.org - entirely free resource• Installation is easy.• Allows you to capture files and export them to MS Word and EndNote and others.

• Able to work offline, working on expanding ability to share.

Bibliographic software: Zotero

LibX

http://libweb.uoregon.edu/systems/libx.html#firefox

• cool toolbar - free and easy to install• search from toolbar • search Amazon.com or Powells.com (careful of editions) and click on the “O”

• Check UO catalog, other catalogs, GS

database URLs

• http://libweb.uoregon.edu/systems/databaseURLS.html

• Use this for linking to SMART, PubMed, etc. (and any other database)

• new look for Biosis and Web of Science

Play video games!

Search Wii (or PS3 or Xbox) in the online catalog