News from Iowa Research Online

The August 2012 theses and dissertations are now available in Iowa Research Online (IRO), which is the repository of the research and scholarly output selected and deposited by the faculty, researchers and students of the University of Iowa. IRO is part of the larger Open Access movement to transform scholarly communication.

The sciences departments in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences are well represented in IRO with the following departments contributing new disserations and theses.

  • Chemistry – 3 contributions
  • Geoscience – 3 contributions
  • Mathematics – 9 contributions
  • Physics – 5 contributions
  • Statistics – 1 contributions

The UI Libraries are also happy to announce some improved functionality in Iowa Research Online.

  • The internal search options are dramatically improved with facets included in the search results.
  • There is a new follow option. You can now follow a series, person, discipline, etc. All you have to do is sign up for a free bepress account and then click follow. You will receive an email when new content is added.
  • The disciplines are now more connected to other sites. The page listing them has been reorganized so that you can see the subdisciplines, authors and the works in the discipline. If an item is in a subdiscipline, it should also appear in the parent discipline. Each page includes a link to the “commons” which links all the bepress participating institutions together.

If you have any questions about the IRO or if you would like to deposit your research there, please contact the Sciences Library.

Workshop: PubMed & NCBI

Do you use PubMed or other NCBI databases in your research? Would you like to learn some expert tips and tricks? Shane Wallace and Chris Childs from the Hardin Library for the Health Sciences will be coming to the Sciences Library to demonstrate the advanced features of PubMed and other NCBI databases and answer your questions. Please join us.

Lunch @ the Sciences Library: PubMed & NCBI
12:30-1:20 pm, Wednesday, November 14th
102 SL (Sciences Library classroom)

In this workshop you will learn:

  • What kinds of resources are available from the National Center for Biotechnology Information?
  • Expert search tips for PubMed and other NCBI resources.
  • How to find the full-text of articles cited in NCBI resources?
  • How to export citations from NCBI resources to citation management tools like RefWorks?

The workshop is open to all UI students, faculty and staff. There is no need to register. You may bring your lunch if desired. If you have any questions or concerns, please contact Sara Scheib at (319) 335-3024 or sara-scheib@uiowa.edu.

Open Access Week

This week (October 22-26), education and research institutions all over the world are celebrating Open Access Week. Open-access (OA) literature is digital, online, free of charge, and free of most copyright and licensing restrictions. If you are interested in learning more, the UI Libraries has created a guide to open access for UI researchers.

Many researchers at the University of Iowa have already embraced the open access movement and are making an effort to publish to open access journals when possible. Some faculty members, such as James J. Amos, M.D., Michael S. Lewis-Beck, and Kembrew McLeod are acting as open access advocates to get the word out to their colleagues.

How can you help support the open access movement?

  • Join us on Monday, October 29 at 3pm to hear Don Share, Senior Editor of Poetry Magazine talk about how one of the leading poetry magazines in the country went Open Access.
  • Take a few minutes to learn more about copyright and the importance of retaining rights to your published work.  What does the last publication agreement you signed allow you to do with your work?
  • Deposit pre-prints, post-prints and associated data files in Iowa’s institutional repository: Iowa Research Online (ir.uiowa.edu).

Please contact the Sciences Library if you have any questions or if you’re interested in learning more about open access.