COAR Annual Report 2020-2021 May 2021 Version for members ...
COAR: AN INTRODUCTION TO SHARE
Transcript of COAR: AN INTRODUCTION TO SHARE
AN INTRODUCTION TO SHARE An Introducation for COAR OAIO
19 December 2014
Eric Celeste, SHARE Technical Director, [email protected]
WHO & WHAT IS SHARE? SHARE is a higher education initiative to maximize research impact.
WHO & WHAT IS SHARE? SHARE envisions an environment where researchers can keep interested parties seamlessly informed of their activities, where funders can easily determine the impact of their investments, and where institutions can readily collect and assess the output of their community members.
MISSION
Maximizing Research Impact
Infrastructure
Workflow Policy
NOTIFICATION SERVICE
Who is producing what?
and
Who wants to know?
USER STORIES As an IR Manager, I would like to know what output of our researchers is deposited in repositories at other institutions so I can approach them about a copy for our collection. I am a sponsor and I want to know what products have resulted from the research I sponsored so I can determine what additional revenue the original grant may have generated. I am the Director of Institutional Research and I’m tasked with notifying campus stakeholders, including University Communications and Office of Contracts and Grants, when our university’s faculty publishes an article (or other output) funded by an awarded grant.
RESEARCH RELEASE EVENTS
Data Sets Articles
Preprints
CONSUMERS OF RESEARCH RELEASE EVENTS
Funders Campus Repositories
Sponsored Research Offices
SHARE Notification
Service
FUNDING $1,000,000 to develop Notification Service and long term SHARE vision March, 2014 through September, 2015
CENTER FOR OPEN SCIENCE
“We foster openness, integrity, and reproducibility of scientific research”
centerforopenscience.org & osf.io
PROTOTYPE PROVIDERS • ArXiv • California Digital Library
eScholarship System • Carnegie Mellon University
Research Showcase • ClinicalTrials.gov • Columbia Adacemic Commons • CrossRef • DataONE: Data Observation
Network for Earth • Department of Energy Pages • Digital Commons at Cal Poly • DigitalCommons@WayneState • DSpace@MIT
• OpenSIUC at the Southern Illinois University Carbondale
• Public Library Of Science • Repository at St. Cloud State • ResearchWorks at the
University of Washington • Scholars Portal Dataverse • SciTech Connect • University of Illinois at Urbana • University of Pennsylvania
Scholarly Commons • University of Texas Digital
Repository • Virginia Tech VTechWorks
RESEARCH RELEASE EVENT REPORTS
Only a dozen sources
Over 40,000 reports
STILL WORKING ON Push protocol Creation of a “push API” to make participation simpler for some sources.
Consumption of notifications Provide subscription methods Recruit trial subscribers
Public release Early 2015 beta release Fall 2015 first full release
SOME EARLY LESSONS Metadata rights issues. Some sites not sure about their right to, for example, share abstracts.
Metadata inclusion and consistency. Most of our sources do not even collect email addresses of authors, much less universal identifiers such as ORCID or ISNI. Most sources make no effort to collect funding information or grant award numbers. This data needs to be collected and distributed to make effective notifications. The need for a Phase II. Some consumers will want the enhanced records it will provide.
SHARE Notification
Service
SHARE Registry
SHARE Discovery
For Systems via Protocol & API For People
timely, structured, comprehensive
organized and related source of linked data
searchable and friendly
CHALLENGES • Adoption of key identifiers just getting
underway, requires international collaboration,
• Inferences prone to error, • Duplicate detection difficult, • Scale quite large, not well understood, • This is a never-ending task requiring
sustainable funding and governance.
SHARE Notification Service including Phase II?
SHARE Discovery
For Systems via Protocol & API For People
timely, structured, comprehensive, reconciling incoming reports with what we already know and can learn from other sources
searchable and friendly
PHASE II BENEFITS • Researchers can keep everyone
informed by keeping anyone informed,
• Institutions can assemble more comprehensive record of impact,
• Open access advocates can hold publishers accountable for promises,
• Other systems can count on consistency of metadata from SHARE.
CONTACT US www.arl.org/share
www.facebook.com/SHARE.research
www.twitter.com/share_research
[email protected] (or [email protected])
bit.ly/sharegithub