Open Access News

News from the open access movement


Saturday, May 27, 2006

Connecticut's OA repository

The University of Connecticut has officially launched its year-old institutional repository, DigitalCommons@UConn. From the press release:

The University has begun full-scale operation of an electronic institutional repository. Following the successful completion of a year-long pilot program, the University Libraries has opened its digital collection of the University’s scholarly products to all faculty, staff, and graduate students at UConn, including the regional campuses, the Health Center, and the Law School....

The scholarly products that may be posted to the site include journal articles, reports, monographs, papers presented, seminar series, conference materials, and other products, such as sound and video clips and PowerPoint presentations. Contributions from undergraduates will be considered on a case-by-case basis. Documents from University-sponsored conferences and meetings will also be accepted, whether or not the author is from UConn....

Increasing prices in the academic publishing industry have caused libraries to reduce their subscriptions, which has hindered the work of researchers. At the same time, high printing costs have limited the production of monographs, making it harder for researchers to get their work published. Digital Commons provides an alternative to commercial publishers and individual web sites. Many publishers now allow posting of published materials in institutional repositories - sometimes as pre-prints, sometimes as post-prints...

“The establishment of a digital repository at UConn is very exciting for the research community,” says Greg Anderson, interim vice provost for research and graduate education and interim dean of the graduate school. “For the first time, the research output of our scholars will be accessible freely and easily to anyone at any time. This is the wave of the future, and we are well ahead of it.”...

Documents placed in DigitalCommons@UConn are all “open access,” meaning anyone with an Internet connection can view, print, and download them. The only exception is UConn dissertations (available from 1997), the full text of which is available only to UConn-affiliated individuals....

Thomas Meyer, associate professor of natural resources management and engineering [said] “Online article retrieval is clearly the future and I want all my articles available in PDF form on the Internet,” he says, adding that he’s also interested in Digital Commons “as a means of responding to the outrageously high prices publishers are demanding for journal subscriptions.” Xiuchun “Cindy” Tian, an assistant professor of animal science who conducts research in the Center for Regenerative Biology, has begun submitting her peer-reviewed articles to the repository. She says she sees the site as an ideal location for “laboratory techniques and protocols, undergraduates’ honors theses, independent research term papers…and preliminary and supplementary data that are not included in formal publications in research journals.”