Open data, [open] access: linking data sharing and article sharing in the Earth Sciences
Abstract
INTRODUCTION The norms of a research community influence practice, and norms of openness and sharing can be shaped to encourage researchers who share in one aspect of their research cycle to share in another. Different sets of mandates have evolved to require that research data be made public, but not necessarily articles resulting from that collected data. In this paper, I ask to what extent publications in the Earth Sciences are more likely to be open access (in all of its definitions) when researchers open their data through the Pangaea repository. METHODS Citations from Pangaea data sets were studied to determine the level of open access for each article. RESULTS This study finds that the proportion of gold open access articles linked to the repository increased 25% from 2010 to 2015 and 75% of articles were available from multiple open sources. DISCUSSION The context for increased preference for gold open access is considered and future work linking researchers’ decisions to open their work to the adoption of open access mandates is proposed.
How to Cite:
Teplitzky, S., (2017) “Open data, [open] access: linking data sharing and article sharing in the Earth Sciences”, Journal of Librarianship and Scholarly Communication 5(1), eP2150. doi: https://doi.org/10.7710/2162-3309.2150
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