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We hope you have enjoyed this free, full length talk
- Introduction
- Management Issues
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3. Convergence
- Ms. Anne Poulson
- Mr. Gary Horrocks
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4. Supporting research: new opportunities for 'subject librarians' and other staff
- Mr. Antony Brewerton
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5. Library as place?
- Mr. Les Watson
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6. Customer value discovery
- Dr. Sue McKnight
- Content
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7. The future of university medical librarianship
- Ms. Beverly Murphy
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8. From here to there: library content in the digital age
- Mrs. Wendy Evans
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9. Institutional repositories
- Dr. Alma Swan
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10. Ensuring continuity of access to resources for scholarship
- Mr. Peter Burnhill
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11. Social web and libraries
- Mr. Brian Kelly
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12. Vendor supplied MARC records for online collections
- Ms. Catelynne Sahadath
- Services
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13. E-learning and the digital library
- Prof. Andrew McDonald
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14. Research services
- Ms. Liz Chapman
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15. Introduction to systematic reviews for librarians
- Ms. Lindsey Sikora
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16. Libraries in a digital age: access
- Dr. Simon Ball
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17. What color is your paratext? trust metrics
- Mr. Geoffrey W. Bilder
- Case Studies
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18. Transforming a mediaeval university
- Mr. John A. MacColl
- Archived Lectures *These may not cover the latest advances in the field
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19. Scenario planning for libraries
- Mr. Steve O'Connor
Printable Handouts
Navigable Slide Index
- Introduction
- What are institutional repositories?
- Repositories chart
- A network of repositories
- Repository types
- Technical notes (1)
- Technical notes (2)
- Repository models (1)
- Repository models (2)
- Repository models (3)
- Institutional repositories
- Institutional roles of repositories
- What they contain
- Levels of OA in repositories by subject
- Benefits to institutions
- Benefits to authors
- Visibility and usage through repositories
- Author testimony (1)
- Author testimony (2)
- Impact
- Personal profiling (1)
- Personal profiling (2)
- Benefits to research
- Benefits to wider society
- Open access repositories and SME's
- Author testimony (3)
- Author testimony (4)
- Business issues (1)
- The business case
- Business issues (2)
- Business issues (3)
- The future I: supporting openness
- The future II: research data
- Thank you
Topics Covered
- Open access
- Research literature
- Journal articles
- Open data
- Citation impact
- Research impact
- Research visibility
- EPrints
- DSpace
- University profile
- Author profile
- Digital repositories
- Business planning for repositories
- Open licensing
- SMEs
Talk Citation
Swan, A. (2012, March 29). Institutional repositories [Video file]. In The Biomedical & Life Sciences Collection, Henry Stewart Talks. Retrieved December 22, 2024, from https://doi.org/10.69645/UFID5192.Export Citation (RIS)
Publication History
Financial Disclosures
- Dr. Alma Swan has not informed HSTalks of any commercial/financial relationship that it is appropriate to disclose.
Transcript
Please wait while the transcript is being prepared...
0:00
Hello, I'm Alma Swan,
I'm the Convener for
Enabling Open Scholarship,
which is an organization
of university managers
interested in
promoting open access
and I'm the Director
of Key Perspectives Ltd,
a small consultancy specializing
in scholarly communication.
And my talk is about
institutional repositories.
0:22
What are digital
repositories then?
They're collections
of research material
in digital form
and they're usually
institutionally-based,
that is in research universities
and research institutions.
Though, we do have
some subject-based
or discipline-based
repositories too,
which have a more
centralized role of course.
They're interoperable
and I will be
talking a little bit more about
interoperability later
in this talk.
But because
they are interoperable,
they form a network
across the world
and by doing that,
they create a global database
of research that is accessible
to all, its open access.
Currently, there are over
2,000 of these repositories
and they have been growing
in number very rapidly
over the last few years.
1:12
This chart shows
the growth of repositories
over the last few years.
It's taken from
the OpenDOAR service
which monitors
and records repositories,
where they are,
which software they use,
and so forth.
You'll see that the growth
curve has been quite steep.
And if you do the math,
you'll find that
between one and
one and a half repositories
has been built every working
day over the last few years.
This is because research-based
institutions see the value
in having a repository
for all sorts of reasons.
And I shall be recounting
those reasons later in the talk.
Quiz
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