The Open Access Button: Discovering when and where researchers hit paywalls | Information Culture, Scientific American Blog Network

abernard102@gmail.com 2013-11-26

Summary:

"Last week, an intriguing new tool for researchers was launched, the Open Access Button. The Button has two main goals: Track when and where researchers encounter publisher pay walls (articles unavailable because the user hasn’t paid a subscription or access fee). Provide researchers with additional tools to find available full text articles (such as copies available from open access repositories).  The first goal serves the larger scientific and open access community. By tracking when and where researchers are stymied by publisher paywalls, the scientific community can get a better handle on the complex issues related to accessing scholarly material.  When discussing open access policies and mandates, publishers often argue that the researchers who need access to scholarly material already have the access they need. Their access is paid for by the institutions the researchers work for. But any librarian will tell you that rising costs are placing that access in jeopardy.  This year is the first of the past 5 years in which my library hasn’t been forced to cancel databases or journal subscriptions in order to deal with flat or decreasing budgets. The new Open Access Button has the potential to uncover the barriers to access that affect even university affiliated researchers.  The second goal attempts to quickly and easily point users to freely available copies of the article online (via open access repositories such as PubMedCentral or the arxiv). This is a laudable goal, and for articles in disciplines that are likely to have open access copies available, it works well.  But the Open Access Button fails in this goal by not pointing users to institutional resources they may have access to. For example, if I come across an article from Science from the early 1990s, I will hit a paywall at the Science website, and the article is unlikely to be available freely online. But if I use library resources to find this article, I discover that my library has access to articles in Science all the way back to 1880 via another database, JSTOR. And of course, I won’t go into details about interlibrary loan services that are available (although those cost money, too) ..."

Link:

http://blogs.scientificamerican.com/information-culture/2013/11/25/the-open-access-button-discovering-when-and-where-researchers-hit-paywalls/

From feeds:

Open Access Tracking Project (OATP) » abernard102@gmail.com

Tags:

oa.new oa.comment oa.advocacy oa.tools oa.floss oa.oa_button

Date tagged:

11/26/2013, 08:22

Date published:

11/26/2013, 03:21