Librarians play a critical role in supporting their institutional researchers. A critical area of support is with open science mandates, or practices that prioritize openness, transparency, and collaboration throughout the research cycle. Research that follows open science practices carries many benefits, including:
Researchers who follow open science practices typically see increased citation rates, improved community engagement, as well as greater visibility of their work. Publishing accessible research helps democratize information, which also helps build trust in research findings.
Librarians have become known as active advocates for open science within their institutions, helping promote collaborative research that benefits both science and society1. However, ever-shifting policies and stricter requirements are presenting researchers with new challenges, such as knowing how and when to implement open science practices at different research stages, time and financial constraints, technology barriers, and more accountability.
This post will explore three ways librarians can directly support researchers in the shifting area of open science, including:
Sharing Preprints as a Tool
To help distribute and iterate on their work faster, many researchers are using preprints to make their work openly accessible online before peer review.
Jay Bhatt is a librarian for engineering and biomedical engineering at Drexel University, a private research university in Philadelphia2. Bhatt and his colleagues in the Drexel Libraries have developed a series of tips for posting preprints:
Bhatt believes more education is necessary to improve the quality of preprints. “As librarians and universities, we need to teach graduate research students and researchers about integrity and ethics so that they make ethical choices. We also need to increase their awareness of preprints.”
Understanding Core Open Science Publishing Protocols
Librarians can help guide researchers through knowing when, where, and how to publish, helping them comply with funding mandates for open access. A deep understanding of the publishing protocols enables librarians to manage repositories, curate open access resources, and negotiate agreements with publishers. The librarian's role has evolved from content acquisition to educating users about how to manage and distribute local research to the world.
Making research data transparent and available
Librarians act as facilitators for helping make research data transparent and available through transparent and collaborative research by offering their guidance in data management, using FAIR (Findable, Accessible, Interoperable, Reusable) principles; and promoting the effective use of research tools. The scope of open science is broadening beyond research papers to include data, software, protocols, and other research products. Librarians can create open science awareness for their faculty by managing institutional repositories and archives for open access publications and data, making all research outputs more discoverable. They can also create platforms for data sharing, offering support for tools, like the OpenScience Framework and DMPTool to help researchers with project management and data sharing plans.
Librarians play a pivotal role in facilitating and advocating for faculty research. To accomplish these tasks, they must first understand the barriers researchers face and then take steps to directly support them as they navigate these challenges. By understanding and promoting the open science practices, librarians can promote transparent, accessible, and collaborative research that benefits the institution, as well as science and society more broadly.
Partnering with an independent, mission-driven publisher like JMIR can help your institution support a sustainable OA infrastructure.
Contact our Institutional Partnership Team today to discuss a JMIR Institutional Partnership.
References:
1. Bertram et al., “Open science,”Current Biology 33, no. 15 (August 2023): https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0960982223006681?via%3Dihub
2. Bhatt, Willems, “Preprints: Best Practices Tips Librarians can Share with Researchers.” Connect (Dec, 2021) https://www.elsevier.com/connect/preprints-best-practice-tips-librarians-can-share-with-researchers