[Dspace-general] Newly enhanced Registry of Open Access Repositories (ROAR)

Stevan Harnad harnad at ecs.soton.ac.uk
Thu Jan 26 23:26:19 EST 2006


For researchers or OA advocates (or detractors!) who are interested in the
current state, growth rate and distribution of Open Access Repositories
(or Archives) worldwide, ROAR

    http://archives.eprints.org/

the Registry of Open Access Repositories (created by Southampton doctoral
student Tim Brody) allows anyone to generate growth charts by archive
type, or by individual archive. It can also rank-order archives by the
number of OAI records they currently contain (i.e., their size)

ROAR is a gold-mine of current, cumulating data, ripe for anyone
enterprising enough to want to report an up-to-date quantitative analysis
of how OA IRs are progressing today, and where.

I also take this opportunity to remind all OA Archives and OA IRs to
please *register* with ROAR so you too can be counted, and your content
growth tracked. (If your archive is registered, but is not being picked
up by celestial, please add your OAI Base URL.)

    http://archives.eprints.org/index.php?action=add

The size and growth data are classified by the type of Archive:

     (i) Distributed Institutional/Departmental Pre-/Postprint Archives (284),
     (ii) Central Cross- Discipline Research Archives (69)
     (iii) Dissertation Archives (e-theses) (62)

 as well as

     (iv) database Archives (e.g. research data) (10)
     (v) e-journal/e-publishing Archives (56)
     (vi) demonstration Archives (not yet operational) (25)
     (vii) "other" Archives (non-OA content of various kinds) (81)

The archives can also be classified by country, and by the software
they use (BePress/ProQuest 25, Dspace 124, Eprints 196, etc.)

One caveat: The number of OAI records does not necessarily correspond to
the actual number of full-text articles or dissertations in the IR!
For many archives the records are still only the metadata (author,
title, etc.), not the full-texts themselves. ROAR will soon have a way
of counting only full-texts, separately (for Eprints it already does
so.)

Meanwhile, contents will have to be sampled to estimate what percentage
of the records are just metadata and what percentage are full-texts.
(Some of the central archives are full-text only, and many of the advanced
institutional archives, especially the ones with self-archiving mandates,
are also mostly full-text.)

Even among full-texts, not all may be OA's target contents (journal
article postprints and preprints plus dissertations). They may be documents
of other kinds (teaching materials, multimedia, "gray literature,"
even administrative records). ROAR does not register archives that
*only* contain metadata; among archive types (i)-(iii), ROAR also does
not register archives that do not target OA content -- preprints, postprints,
theses -- at all.

    Prior Amsci Topic Thread:

    Newly enhanced Registry of Open Access Repositories (ROAR) (June, 2005)
    http://www.ecs.soton.ac.uk/~harnad/Hypermail/Amsci/4586.html

Stevan Harnad





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