Delving deeper into preprints in institutional and generalist repositories – COAR

peter.suber's bookmarks 2022-01-21

Summary:

"As open scholarship practices grow, dedicated preprint servers are springing up in many disciplines. However, researchers are also depositing preprints in other platforms, including institutional and generalist repositories. These destinations can be familiar to researchers and well-integrated into the scholarly communications infrastructure, but many do not presently offer the same preprint-related features found in purpose-built servers. In late summer 2021, COAR and ASAPbio ran a survey of institutional and generalists repositories (IRs) to understand their practices and plans regarding the collection of preprints. Our preliminary results revealed that approximately two thirds of the responding repositories currently host preprints. After delving deeper into the data, we’re excited to share some more detailed findings.... Several repositories (12) indicated that they don’t know how many preprints they have in their collections. This is likely because they do not distinguish between preprints and other article versions in their metadata records. For those repositories who do tag preprints uniquely (53), the mean number of preprints in their collections was 704. Notably, this number is significantly larger than the collections of some existing dedicated preprint servers.... Respondents were asked whether their repositories support some of the common functionalities provided by dedicated preprint services. Among the 71 repositories that host preprints, the majority (62%) link to the published version. DOI assignment (40%) and support for versioning (32%) are also common features. On the other hand, screening (16%), linking to external peer reviews (10%), commenting tools (7%), and banners or disclaimers explaining what a preprint is (5%) were less often supported.... It is not yet clear how the unique requirements for managing preprints can be best supported in repositories with a broader remit and with access to diverse resource types. Yet, as preprint sharing becomes more widespread, it is clear that these generalist repositories have a role to play in supporting open and early sharing of research manuscripts, particularly in cases where researchers would prefer to post their preprint in a local or national infrastructure or in which institutions seek to archive a more complete collection of scholarly outputs. To help the community better support preprint sharing, COAR and ASAPbio will be jointly convening a working group to better understand the challenges for repositories, develop good practice recommendations, and define a strategy for advancing the collection of preprints in  institutional and generalist repositories...."

Link:

https://www.coar-repositories.org/news-updates/delving-deeper-into-preprints-in-institutional-and-generalist-repositories/

From feeds:

[IOI] Open Infrastructure Tracking Project » Items tagged with oa.coar in Open Access Tracking Project (OATP)
Open Access Tracking Project (OATP) » peter.suber's bookmarks

Tags:

oa.new oa.repositories oa.ir oa.preprints oa.asapbio oa.surveys oa.best_practices oa.versions oa.surveys oa.repositories.preprints oa.repositories oa.preprints oa.new oa.ir oa.coar oa.best_practices oa.asapbio

Date tagged:

01/21/2022, 08:41

Date published:

01/21/2022, 03:42