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Self-Archiving and Journal Subscriptions:
co-existence or competition? An international survey of librarians’
preferences
Chris Beckett and Simon Inger, Scholarly Information
Strategies Ltd
Research Paper
News Release
(09/11/06)
Clarification from the authors
A major study of librarian purchasing preferences has shown that
librarians will show a strong inclination towards the acquisition
of Open Access (OA) materials as they discover that more and more
learned material has become available in institutional repositories.
The study, which took the form of conjoint and attitudinal surveys,
shows that librarians are very sensitive to quality, content cost,
the version of the content and how immediately the content is made
available.
Overall the survey shows that a significant number of librarians
are likely to substitute OA materials for subscribed resources,
given certain levels of reliability, peer review and currency of
the information available. This last factor is a critical one –
resources become much less favoured if they are embargoed for a
significant length of time.
One of the key benefits of the conjoint analysis approach used
in this survey was the removal of bias by not referring, when testing
different product configurations, to any named incarnations of content
types, including subscription journals, licensed full-text (or aggregated)
databases1, or articles on OA repositories. The survey tested librarians’
preferences for a series of hypothetical and unnamed products frequently
showing unfamiliar combinations of attributes – such as a
fully priced journal embargoed for 24 months, or content at 25%
of the price but through an unreliable service. By taking this approach,
the survey measured librarians’ preferences for an abstract
set of potential products thus avoiding any pre-conceived preferences
for named products, such as journals, licensed fulltext (aggregated)
databases or content on OA repositories.
The data were abstracted into a ‘Share of Preference’
model (or simulator) which has then been used to model real-life
products and thus create predictions for librarians’ real-life
preferences for these products. It is therefore possible to go beyond
the comparisons, in this work, of journals versus OA and to model
other preferences, such as between OA and licensed full-text databases.
The key attributes identified in this study, apart for the universal
requirement for content quality, were what version of the content
(author’s preprint etc) is made available and how up-to-date
content is (the embargo period) . Specifically:
- There is a strong preference for content that has undergone
peer review. Preference is greatly affected by whether or not
an article has undergone the refereeing process; authors’
unrefereed original manuscripts were seen as a poor substitute
for any postrefereed version of an article. Librarians showed
an insignificant shift in preference between any version of an
article once it had been refereed, irrespective of the inclusion
of editorial changes such as copy editing.
- How soon content is made available is a key determinant of
content model preference in librarian’s acquisition behaviour;
delay in availability reduces the attractiveness of a product
offering. The survey tested the effect of embargoes on OA and
licensed database content set at 6, 12 and 24 months; a significant
impact on librarians’ preference for OA, and licensed database,
content was seen when embargoes were set to 12 and 24 month. A
6-month embargo has little impact.
- Lastly and perhaps unsurprisingly librarians show a strong
preference for content that is made freely available, all other
factors being equal. Even as librarians were asked to trade off
price considerations against other factors such as the version
of the content and the immediacy of its availability, there remained
a significant pull towards free content or content whose cost
had been greatly reduced.
Contents
- About The Authors
- Summary
- Context
- Objectives
- Results
- Explanation Of The Modelling Process
- Share Of Preference Between Journals And Open Access Content
- Share Of Preference In A Three Product Model
- Attitudes To Open Access
- A Segmentation Of Content Buyers
- Method
- Demographics
- Appendices
- References
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