Why openly available abstracts are important — overview of the current state of affairs | Medium

flavoursofopenscience's bookmarks 2020-06-30

Summary:

Authors: Aaron Tay (SMU Libraries, Singapore Management University), Bianca Kramer (Utrecht University Library), Ludo Waltman (Centre for Science and Technology Studies, Leiden University)


The value of open and interoperable metadata of scientific articles is increasingly being recognized, as demonstrated by the work of organizations such as Crossref, DataCite, and OpenCitations and by initiatives such as Metadata 2020 and the Initiative for Open Citations. At the same time, scientific articles are increasingly being made openly accessible, stimulated for instance by Plan S, AmeliCA, and recent developments in the US, and also by the need for open access to coronavirus literature.

In this post, we focus on a key issue at the interface of these two developments: The open availability of abstracts of scientific articles. Abstracts provide a summary of an article and are part of an article’s metadata. We first discuss the many ways in which abstracts can be used and we then explore the availability of abstracts. The open availability of abstracts is surprisingly limited. This creates important obstacles to scientific literature search, bibliometric analysis, and automatic knowledge extraction.

Link:

https://medium.com/@aarontay/why-openly-available-abstracts-are-important-overview-of-the-current-state-of-affairs-bb7bde1ed751

From feeds:

Open Access Tracking Project (OATP) » flavoursofopenscience's bookmarks

Tags:

oa.new oa.publishing oa.abstracts oa.metadata oa.bibliometrics oa.summaries oa.speed oa.discoverability oa.core

Date tagged:

06/30/2020, 04:36

Date published:

06/30/2020, 00:36