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Disciplinary repositories can acquire their content in many ways. Many rely on author or organization submissions, such as [[Social Science Research Network|SSRN]]. Others such as [[CiteSeerX]] crawl the web for scholar and researcher websites and download publicly available [[academic paper]]s from those sites. [[AgEcon]], established in 1995,<ref>{{cite web| url=http://smartech.gatech.edu/handle/1853/28460 | title=AgEcon Search: An International Disciplinary Repository| year=2009 | accessdate=2010-12-01}}</ref> grew as a result of active involvement of academia and societies.
Disciplinary repositories can acquire their content in many ways. Many rely on author or organization submissions, such as [[Social Science Research Network|SSRN]]. Others such as [[CiteSeerX]] crawl the web for scholar and researcher websites and download publicly available [[academic paper]]s from those sites. [[AgEcon]], established in 1995,<ref>{{cite web| url=http://smartech.gatech.edu/handle/1853/28460 | title=AgEcon Search: An International Disciplinary Repository| year=2009 | accessdate=2010-12-01}}</ref> grew as a result of active involvement of academia and societies.


A disciplinary repository generally covers one broad based discipline, with contributors from many different institutions supported by a variety of funders; the repositories themselves are likely to be funded from one or more sources within the subject community.<ref>{{cite web| url=http://ir.inflibnet.ac.in/dxml/handle/1944/987 | title=Development of Disciplinary Repositories: A Case Study of Open DOAR| year=2010 | accessdate=2010-11-20}}</ref> Deposit of material in a disciplinary repository is sometimes [[Open-access mandate|mandated]] by [[Funding of science|research funders]].
A disciplinary repository generally covers one broad based discipline, with contributors from many different institutions supported by a variety of funders; the repositories themselves are likely to be funded from one or more sources within the subject community.<ref>{{cite web | url=http://ir.inflibnet.ac.in/dxml/handle/1944/987 | title=Development of Disciplinary Repositories: A Case Study of Open DOAR | year=2010 | accessdate=2010-11-20 | deadurl=yes | archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20100923212301/http://ir.inflibnet.ac.in/dxml/handle/1944/987 | archivedate=2010-09-23 | df= }}</ref> Deposit of material in a disciplinary repository is sometimes [[Open-access mandate|mandated]] by [[Funding of science|research funders]].


Disciplinary repositories can also act as stores of data related to a particular subject, allowing documents along with data associated with that work to be stored in the repository.
Disciplinary repositories can also act as stores of data related to a particular subject, allowing documents along with data associated with that work to be stored in the repository.
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* [http://www.necobelac.eu/en/index.php/ NECOBELAC (Network of Collaboration Between Europe and Latin America-Caribbean Countries)].
* [http://www.necobelac.eu/en/index.php/ NECOBELAC (Network of Collaboration Between Europe and Latin America-Caribbean Countries)].
* [http://scoar.net/oma_project.html Open Medical Abstracts]. OMA is an Open Access-exclusive abstracting service covering all areas of medical sciences (e.g., Psychiatry, Neurology, Physiology, Dentistry, etc.) only Open Access materials from peer-reviewed journals are included. The service is provided free-of-charge and the database is updated quarterly.
* [http://scoar.net/oma_project.html Open Medical Abstracts]. OMA is an Open Access-exclusive abstracting service covering all areas of medical sciences (e.g., Psychiatry, Neurology, Physiology, Dentistry, etc.) only Open Access materials from peer-reviewed journals are included. The service is provided free-of-charge and the database is updated quarterly.
* [http://openmed.nic.in/ OpenMED@NIC]. All languages (non-English documents must have metadata, abstract and keywords in English). Fields: "Medical and Allied Sciences including Bio-Medical, Medical Informatics, Dental, Nursing and Pharmaceutical Sciences".
* [http://openmed.nic.in/ OpenMED@NIC]{{dead link|date=September 2017 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}. All languages (non-English documents must have metadata, abstract and keywords in English). Fields: "Medical and Allied Sciences including Bio-Medical, Medical Informatics, Dental, Nursing and Pharmaceutical Sciences".
* [http://www.pubmedcentral.gov/ PubMed Central]. From the U.S. [http://www.nih.gov/ National Institutes of Health] (NIH).
* [http://www.pubmedcentral.gov/ PubMed Central]. From the U.S. [http://www.nih.gov/ National Institutes of Health] (NIH).



Revision as of 07:44, 11 September 2017

A disciplinary repository (or subject repository) is an online archive containing works or data associated with these works of scholars in a particular subject area.[1][2] Disciplinary repositories can accept work from scholars from any institution. A disciplinary repository shares the roles of collecting, disseminating, and archiving work with other repositories, but is focused on a particular subject area. These collections can include academic and research papers.

Disciplinary repositories can acquire their content in many ways. Many rely on author or organization submissions, such as SSRN. Others such as CiteSeerX crawl the web for scholar and researcher websites and download publicly available academic papers from those sites. AgEcon, established in 1995,[3] grew as a result of active involvement of academia and societies.

A disciplinary repository generally covers one broad based discipline, with contributors from many different institutions supported by a variety of funders; the repositories themselves are likely to be funded from one or more sources within the subject community.[4] Deposit of material in a disciplinary repository is sometimes mandated by research funders.

Disciplinary repositories can also act as stores of data related to a particular subject, allowing documents along with data associated with that work to be stored in the repository.

What was believed to be the first public Workshop on Disciplinary Repositories[5] was held on June 16 and 17, 2011, at the ACM Joint Conference on Digital Libraries in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada.

Examples

  • This is a list of OA disciplinary respositories (also called central or subject repositories) taken from the Open Access Directory [1]. Unless otherwise noted, they accept relevant deposits regardless of the author's institutional affiliation.
  • For a bibliography of works on disciplinary repositories, see the section on Disciplinary Archives in the OAD Bibliography of open access.
  • Related lists in OAD: Data repositories.
  • For news about disciplinary repositories, including some newly launched repositories not yet listed here, follow the oa.repositories.disciplinary tag of the Open Access Tracking Project.
  • Alphabetical by field.

Agriculture

Anthropology

Architecture and Civil Engineering

Arts

Art history

  • ART-Dok. German, English, French etc.

Astrophysics

Biology / Life sciences

Business

Classics

Cognitive science

Computer science

Cryptology

Development

Digital preservation

Earth science

Economics

  • AgEcon Search. Research in agriculture and applied economics. From the University of Minnesota. (Also listed under Agriculture.)
  • Economists Online. From the Nereus consortium. Info July 2013: Economists Online will close its service by the end of this year.
  • EconStor. The repository focuses on Publications from Germany, mainly from institutions, but also from single authors.
  • Munich RePEc Personal Archive. All languages. "The topic should relate to economics, including the contiguous historical, social, and behavioral sciences and statistical as well as mathematical methods related to economics."

Education 1 (Research)

(This is a list of repositories for research in the field of education. For repositories of open educational resources, see Education 2, below.)

Education 2 (OER)

(This is a list of repositories for open educational resources. Also see the OAD list of OER lists, in our section of Lists maintained by others. For repositories for research in the field of education, see Education 1, above.)

Energy

Engineering

Environmental science

German Literature and Language

Humanitarian aid

Humanities in general

Law

Library and information science

  • E-LIS. International in scope. All languages. Abstracts in English.
  • LDL: Librarians' Digital Library. English and Indic Scripts. Based at DRTC, Bangalore, India
  • DList. English. As of 2013, DLIST is temporarily closed to new submissions.
  • ALPS Link Community Portal. Shareable library instructional materials / learning objects. Based in British Columbia, Canada.

Linguistics

Literature

Marine science

Mathematics

  • Also see computer science.
  • Arxiv. Fields: Physics, mathematics, computer science, quantitative biology, and statistics.
  • The Logic Forum.
  • Real Algebraic and Analytic Geometry (RAAG). Preprint server for recent developments in real algebraic and analytic geometry theory. Hosted by the University of Manchester School of Mathematics.
  • Vixra - Physics, mathematics, computational science, biology, chemistry, humanities, academics. Policy in English.

Medicine

Meteorology

Multidisciplinary repositories

Nuclear Sciences

Philanthropy

Philosophy

Physics

Political science

  • eDoc.ViFaPol. An OA section within ViFaPol (Virtuelle Fachbibliothek Politikwissenschaft). Mostly German. Mostly only for institutions not for single scholars.

Psychology

Public policy research

Regional studies

Sciences in general

Social sciences in general

Technology in general

References

  1. ^ "The Internet and Unrefereed Scholarly Publishing". 2003. Retrieved 2010-12-01.
  2. ^ "Institutional Repositories: Essential Infrastructure for Scholarship in the Digital Age". 2003. Retrieved 2010-12-14.
  3. ^ "AgEcon Search: An International Disciplinary Repository". 2009. Retrieved 2010-12-01.
  4. ^ "Development of Disciplinary Repositories: A Case Study of Open DOAR". 2010. Archived from the original on 2010-09-23. Retrieved 2010-11-20. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |deadurl= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help)
  5. ^ "Digital Repositories and Field-Specific Digital Libraries: Opportunities and Challenges". 2011. Retrieved 2011-06-22.