Thanks a lot Tim. Very important to know the differences as we move forward
into the best integration we can have with all search tools, in special Scholar.
Rodrigo
From: Tim Donohue [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Tuesday, November 05, 2013 10:50 AM
To: Calloni, Rodrigo; [email protected]
Subject: Re: [Dspace-tech] DSpace and Google Scholar
Hi Rodrigo,
DuraSpace has been in contact with the Google Scholar team frequently over the
past few years with regards to DSpace and Google Scholar. We have been
providing feedback/requests back to DSpace developers directly from the Google
Scholar team.
So, we've been in ongoing discussions with Google Scholar around making DSpace
more easily indexed/searched by Google Scholar. Nearly every new version of
DSpace includes some search engine improvements (more are coming in the
upcoming 4.0). Google Scholar has changed its own "best practices" over time
(as they improve their system), and as such DSpace has been changing its
functionality to better support these new best practices.
Because of that, it is very important to stay up-to-date with DSpace in order
to get all of these Google Scholar enhancements. This is another difference
between DSpace and EPrints & bepress. Although it's not always the case,
EPrints and bepress often are "hosted" solutions -- meaning that the hosting
provider keeps the software up-to-date on your behalf. Therefore, as EPrints
and bepress make GS improvements, you'd get them "automatically" in your hosted
system. There are also some DSpace hosting options (e.g. DSpaceDirect via
DuraSpace, Open Repository via BioMed Central, others), but most institutions
run DSpace on their own servers. This means that, in order to see all the GS
improvements in DSpace, you need to be sure you are upgrading the software at a
relatively regular pace (or hiring someone to do it on your behalf)
Currently, DSpace supports embedded Google Scholar metadata (in their
recommended Highwire Press format), it's also editable so that you can enhance
the metadata even more based on any local metadata fields you may add. As
Richard mentioned, another difference here is that DSpace is built to store
*any* content you want to put into it (it need not even be "scholarly" in
nature), which is why we have configurable Google Scholar metadata to support
multiple use cases. Finally, DSpace also provides "sitemaps" which let search
engines (in general) more easily locate content in DSpace.
Google Scholar Metadata tags:
https://wiki.duraspace.org/display/DSDOC4x/Google+Scholar+Metadata+Mappings
SiteMaps / SEO: https://wiki.duraspace.org/pages/viewpage.action?pageId=34642415
I hope this gives you a good overview of how DSpace attempts to stay up to date
with Google Scholar and other search engine best practices.
Feel free to let us know if you have other questions,
- Tim
--
Tim Donohue
Technical Lead for DSpace & DSpaceDirect
DuraSpace.org | DSpace.org | DSpaceDirect.org
On 11/4/2013 4:23 PM, Calloni, Rodrigo wrote:
Hello
We are using DSpace 1.8 XMLUI.
I am in contact with someone at Google Scholar who mentioned that EPrints and
BEPRess's Digital Commons are better integrated with Scholar than DSpace.
I wonder if you are aware of this and what these 2 other IR solutions are doing
to bet better acceptable platforms for Scholar. Is it the UI?
Thanks in advance
Rodrigo
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