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D-Lib article about Cornell's Institutional Repository
Worth a detour:
<http://www.dlib.org/dlib/march07/davis/03davis.html>
D-Lib Magazine
March/April 2007
Volume 13 Number 3/4
ISSN 1082-9873
Institutional Repositories
Evaluating the Reasons for Non-use of Cornell University's Installation of
DSpace, by
Philip M. Davis
Cornell University
<pmd8@cornell.edu> (corresponding author)
Matthew J. L. Connolly
Cornell University
<mjc12@cornell.edu>
Abstract
Problem: While there has been considerable attention dedicated to the
development and implementation of institutional repositories, there has
been little done to evaluate them, especially with regards to faculty
participation.
Purpose: This article reports on a three-part evaluative study of
institutional repositories. We describe the contents and
participation in Cornell's DSpace and compare these results with
seven university DSpace installations. Through in-depth
interviews with eleven faculty members in the sciences, social
sciences and humanities, we explore their attitudes, motivations,
and behaviors for non-participation in institutional
repositories.
Results: Cornell's DSpace is largely underpopulated and underused
by its faculty. Many of its collections are empty, and most
collections contain few items. Those collections that experience
steady growth are collections in which the university has made an
administrative investment, such are requiring deposits of theses
and dissertations into DSpace. Cornell faculty have little
knowledge of and little motivation to use DSpace. Many faculty
use alternatives to institutional repositories, such as their
personal Web pages and disciplinary repositories, which are
perceived to have higher community salience than one's affiliate
institution. Faculty gave many reasons for not using
repositories: redundancy with other modes of disseminating
information, the learning curve, confusion with copyright, fear
of plagiarism and having one's work scooped, associating one's
work with inconsistent quality, and concerns about whether
posting a manuscript constitutes "publishing".
Conclusion: While some librarians perceive a crisis in scholarly
communication as a crisis in access to the literature, Cornell
faculty perceive this essentially as a non-issue. Each discipline
has a normative culture, largely defined by their reward system
and traditions. If the goal of institutional repositories is to
capture and preserve the scholarship of one's faculty,
institutional repositories will need to address this cultural
diversity.
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