News release – PEER Publishing and the Ecology of European Research

 

6 October 2011

 

PEER Behavioural Research: Final Report on authors and users vis-a-vis journals
and repositories now available at:

http://www.peerproject.eu/reports/

 

The PEER Behavioural Research Team from Loughborough University (Department of
Information Science & LISU) has completed the behavioural research commissioned
by PEER. The research which consisted of two phases adopted a mixed methods
approach consisting of surveys, focus groups and an interdisciplinary workshop
and was carried out between April 2009 and August 2011.

 

The specific aim of the behavioural research was to understand the extent to
which authors and users are aware of Open Access (OA), the different ways of
achieving it, and the (de)motivating factors that influence its uptake.

 

The report integrates findings from the first phase of the research with the
more in depth.

 

focus of phase two of the research, which drilled down into some of the key
findings of the phase 1 results.

 

Key conclusions:

 

*Over the period of Phases 1 and 2 of the behavioural research the increase in
the number of researchers who reported placing a version of their journal
article(s) into an Open Access Repository was negligible.

 

*Researchers who associated Open Access with 'self-archiving'

were in the minority. Open Access is more likely to be associated with
'self-archiving' (Green Road) by researchers in the Physical sciences &
mathematics and the Social sciences, humanities & arts, than those in the Life
sciences and Medical sciences who are more likely to associate Open Access with
Open Access Journals (Gold Road).

 

*There is anecdotal evidence that some researchers consider making journal
articles accessible via Open Access to be beyond their remit.

 

*Authors tend to be favourable to Open Access and receptive to the benefits of
self-archiving in terms of greater readership and wider dissemination of their
research, with the caveat that self-archiving does not compromise the pivotal
role of the published journal article.

 

*Readers have concerns about the authority of article content and the extent to
which it can be cited when the version they have accessed is not the final
published version. These concerns are more prevalent where the purpose of
reading is to produce a published journal article, and are perceived as less of
an issue for other types of reading purpose.

 

*Academic researchers have a conservative set of attitudes, perceptions and
behaviours towards the scholarly communication system and do not desire
fundamental changes in the way research is currently disseminated and published.

 

*Open Access Repositories are perceived by researchers as complementary to,
rather than replacing, current forums for disseminating and publishing research.

 

The full report is available from:

http://www.peerproject.eu/reports/

 

PEER Behavioural Research Team

 

Dr Jenny Fry, Professor Charles Oppenheim, Dr Stephen Probets Department of
Information Science, Loughborough University, Claire Creaser, Helen Greenwood,
Valerie Spezi, Sonya White LISU, Loughborough University.

 

For enquiries relating to Behavioural Research or other research areas within
PEER, please contact Chris Armbruster:

chris.armbrus...@yahoo.com

 

For other enquiries relating to PEER, please e-mail:

p...@stm-assoc.org

 

About PEER:

 

PEER (Publishing and the Ecology of European Research), supported by the EC
eContentplus programme, is investigating the effects of the large-scale,
systematic depositing of authors' final peer-reviewed manuscripts (so called
Green Open Access or stage-two research output) on reader access, author
visibility, and journal viability, as well as on the broader ecology of European
research. The project is a collaboration between publishers, repositories and
researchers and will last from September 2008 to May 2012.

 

For further information on PEER, visit the website:

http://www.peerproject.eu/

 

PEER Partners: International Association of Scientific, Technical and Medical
Publishers (STM), the European Science Foundation, Goettingen State and
University Library, the Max Planck Society, INRIA, SURF Foundation and
University of Bielefeld.

 

STM publishers participating in PEER: BMJ Publishing Group; Cambridge University
Press; EDP Sciences; Elsevier; IOP Publishing; Nature Publishing Group; Oxford
University Press; Portland Press; Sage Publications; Springer; Taylor & Francis
Group; Wiley-Blackwell.

 

PEER repositories: eSciDoc.PubMan.PEER, Max Planck Digital Library (MPDL),
Max-Planck-Gesellschaft zur Foerderung der Wissenschaften e. V. (MPG); HAL, CNRS
& Institut National de Recherche en Informatique et en Automatique (INRIA);
Goettingen State and University Library (UGOE); SSOAR - Social Sciences Open
Access repository (GESIS - Leibniz Institute for the Social Sciences); TARA -
Trinity College Dublin (TCD); University Library of Debrecen (ULD) Long term
preservation archive:

e-depot, Koninklijke Bibliotheek.

 

***

______________________________
Barbara Bayer-Schur M.A.
Georg-August-Universität Göttingen
Niedersächsische Staats- und Universitätsbibliothek Göttingen
PEER - Publishing and the Ecology of European Research

Tel. +49 551 39 5242
bayer-sc...@sub.uni-goettingen.de
www.peerproject.eu

 

 


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