(Sorry for the cross-posting)
I am pleased to share with you a draft model for peer review services on
distributed resources contained in repositories, archives, preprint servers and
other data providers.
Modelling Overlay Peer Review Processes with Linked Data Notifications
<https://comments.coar-repositories.org/> was prepared by Paul Walk
(COAR/Antleaf), Martin Klein (Los Alamos National Laboratory), Herbert Van de
Sompel (DANS) and myself, with input from a group of Use Case contributors.
It presents a simple model using widely adopted technologies and protocols for
exchange between services, and builds on previous work undertaken through the
COAR Next Generation Repository Initiative
<https://www.coar-repositories.org/news-updates/what-we-do/next-generation-repositories/>
and the Pubfair Framework
<https://www.coar-repositories.org/news-updates/pubfair-version-2-now-available/>
to define new roles, technologies, and behaviours for repositories.
Scholarly knowledge comes in a variety of formats beyond the article or
monograph (e.g. datasets, software, protocols, “grey literature”) and all these
formats hold the potential to spark new discoveries. As knowledge is
continuously evolving (and at an unprecedented rate) and in an age where
immediate dissemination via the Web is possible, the concept of a “publication”
as a discrete output that follows the completion of research work can be
challenged. At the same time, much potential remains to innovate around the
traditional article itself; to think beyond the PDF-paradigm and leverage, for
example, incremental publishing, live data and interactive figures.
The model we are proposing could greatly accelerate innovation in scholarly
communications, and it is especially timely as we are more aware of the need
for rapid sharing of research outputs during the pandemic. It is highly
scalable, it can support diversity in users, research products, and
communities, and it is also a sustainable solution, because the costs of
managing the system are distributed across many institutions.
We are currently inviting public comments on this model via the COAR Comments
Press website <https://comments.coar-repositories.org/> until September 11,
2020.
Once we have community consensus about the technologies, protocols and
vocabularies, we will start working on prototypes with interested organizations
and initiatives.
All the best,
Kathleen
Kathleen Shearer
Executive Director
Confederation of Open Access Repositories (COAR)
www.coar-repositories.org <http://www.coar-repositories.org/>
_______________________________________________
GOAL mailing list
GOAL@eprints.org
http://mailman.ecs.soton.ac.uk/mailman/listinfo/goal