October 2015

This month’s faculty bulletin celebrates Open Access Week with information on scholarly communication and publishing.  Questions about scholarly communication?  Contact Peter Fernandez at pfernand@utk.edu.


 

Register for ORCID to Distinguish your Research

Why researcher identifiers, and why ORCID?

There are over 40 researchers with the name “S. Smith” at the University of Tennessee alone.  A researcher’s name isn’t enough to reliably identify the author of an article published in a journal or a data set uploaded to a digital archive like TRACE at UTK.

Why ORCID? It is an open source, community driven solution to reliably connect researchers with their work.

ORCID stands for Open Researcher and Contributor ID.

The ORCID initiative focuses on solving the name ambiguity problem by creating persistent unique identifiers and linking mechanisms between different ID schemes and research objects.

See these guides for more information on ORCID and ORCID research support at UT.

Distinguish yourself in 3 easy steps:

1. Register your unique ORCID identifier at orcid.org.

2. Add your information to ORCID and include your ORCID identifier on your webpage, when you submit publications, apply for grants, and in any research workflow to ensure you get credit for your work.

3. Use your ORCID ID.  Enhance your ORCID record with your professional information and link to your other identifiers (such as Scopus or ResearcherID or LinkedIn).

ORCID supports many different research outputs:

When you publish information or data online, link these to your ORCID ID to receive credit for your work.  ORCID supports a wide range of work types beyond the traditional academic journal article.

ORCID at UTK: As of August 2015, 598 ORCID registrants have @utk.edu email addresses.

ORCID is quickly becoming the community standard among researchers across all disciplines. Since ORCID began in 2012, over 1.2 million researchers have registered for over 7 million works. Click here to see more ORCID statistics.  UT researchers will easily recoup the time spent registering for an ORCID and adding their works to the ORCID record.

See this blog for directions for getting an ORCID and using SCOPUS Wizard to import your citations.

For more information please see Peter Fernandez (pfernand@utk.edu) 865-974-2886 or Ann Viera (annviera@utk.edu) 865-974-9015.

 

Publish in PeerJ: An Award-Winning, Innovative, Affordable Journal

PeerJ is an award-winning, innovative, affordable, and high-integrity journal publishing articles in bioscience and computer science.  There are many benefits to publishing in PeerJ:

PeerJ supports researchers.  The journal’s mission is to help the world efficiently publish its knowledge.  PeerJ keeps authors at the center of its business model (see PeerJ’s beliefs).  Researchers can read and download your articles for free.  PeerJ is widely read, with over 2.5 million views and 700,000 downloads, so your research will have the greatest impact.  See article-level metrics such as how many times an article has been cited or shared on social media.

PeerJ is free to publish.  Pendergrass Library has an Institutional Arrangement with PeerJ to cover the cost ($99) of a basic publishing plan when an article is submitted.  The membership entitles researchers to publish one article per year without any additional cost.  As of August 2015, 17 authors at UT Knoxville have memberships with PeerJ paid for by Pendergrass.

PeerJ is reliable.  PeerJ has over 800 Editorial Board members including 5 Nobel Prize winners.  Prestigious editors come from Harvard, Cambridge, Oxford, and MIT.

PeerJ is fast.  PeerJ allows you to get your research out quickly and openly to the world.  The journal is currently getting first decisions back to authors with a median time of 24 days.  You can also publish a PeerJ PrePrint, or a draft of an article that has not yet been peer reviewed for publication, within 24 hours.  PrePrints let you establish precedent when you are the first to make a new discovery.

PeerJ is collaborative.  After publishing in PeerJ, authors are asked to contribute to the PeerJ community by commenting on articles or serving as a reviewer.  Comments can be displayed on a profile so others can see the conversation.  Reviews on PrePrints can help you revise your work before final publication.  “Open peer review,” where reviewers provide their names and authors can reproduce their peer-review history on a final article, is also an option.

PeerJ can advance your career.  PeerJ boosts your credit and visibility by helping others find your work using social media, compelling figures and images, and news media.  PeerJ indexes your work in PubMed, Google Scholar, Scopus, CAB Abstracts, the Directory of Open Access Journals (DOAJ), and more.

To submit your research:

1. Fill out the Pendergrass Library Form to receive approval for your free membership.  We will send you a code that will entitle you to a basic publishing plan.

2. Follow PeerJ’s “How it Works” instructions to sign up for a free account and submit your article to PeerJ or PeerJ PrePrints.

Questions about PeerJ or the Institutional Plan?  Contact Peter Fernandez or visit UT Libraries’ PeerJ Guide.

Questions about scholarly communication and publishing your work?  Contact the UT Libraries Scholars’ Collaborative.

 

Working with Data? Statistical Consultants can Help

Research Computing Support is a UT service available to help with project planning, data sampling, data analysis, testing, and presentation.  Consultants offer support for a variety of data software.

Statistical consultations are available during Pendergrass Library’s renovations in early fall 2015.  During this time, consultations will take place in Brehm Animal Science Room 363 (conference room) Mondays and Thursdays, 1-5 p.m.  Extended hours will be available after the library reopens.  Schedule your appointment by contacting a statistician below:

Ann Reed, annreed@utk.edu, Thursdays

Xiaocun Sun, xsun@utk.edu, Mondays

Please call the OIT Helpdesk at 865-974-9900 for an appointment with either statistician.

Need help managing and maintaining your data for publication?  Contact Chris Eaker, data management librarian at Hodges Library, for assistance with all aspects of data management.  Also check out the data management guide and information on data management in agriculture.

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