Springer Nature and ResearchGate are Moving Forward with Long-Term Content-Sharing Partnership, Scope of 2019 Pilot Project Expanded
From Springer Nature:
Springer Nature and ResearchGate have agreed to move forward with a long-term content syndication partnership starting in Q4 of 2020. This cooperation expands the scope of a two-phase pilot, which began in 2019 and has been evaluated in a white paper published today.
The partnership will enable content delivery of the version-of-record (VoR) articles directly to ResearchGate publication pages. Entitled users will be able to download and read the VoR of articles published in Springer journals from the past five years, and all Nature-branded research journals from the past three years, on ResearchGate; new articles will be made available on a daily basis as they are published. Non-entitled users will be able to access an enhanced abstract of the article on ResearchGate, which includes metadata, abstract, figures and captions and the full first page. By combining Springer Nature’s expertise in publishing high-quality research with ResearchGate’s online platform for millions of scientists, both organisations aim to deliver an enhanced and seamless experience for the communities they serve.
Springer Nature and ResearchGate began the content-sharing pilot in response to a number of challenges, such as how to streamline multi-step authentication processes; the need to enable seamless remote access to content; and ways to support researchers in finding the most relevant and reliable research in context.
The white paper, Researchers at the Centre, released today indicates that the partnership brought multiple benefits that led to an enhanced user experience for authors, researchers and librarians.
Key findings from the pilot phases of the partnership show:
- Augmented entitlement recognition: user entitlements were more easily identified; readers benefited from seamless, remote authentication.
- Institution recognition: entitled users could clearly see which library enabled access through a subscription.
- Improved discoverability: version of record (VoR) articles could be read and discussed with peers in context, and alongside author versions of papers.
- Positive author feedback: 90% of authors were positive or very positive about the partnership between ResearchGate and Springer Nature.
- Increased usage: content syndicated to ResearchGate was downloaded between 0.6% and 19.5% more across different journal titles.
Direct to Announcement and Links to White Paper: Nature/ResearchGate: “Researchers at the Centre: Content Discoverability, Visibility and Access”
Filed under: Journal Articles, Libraries, News, Patrons and Users, Publishing, Springer Nature
About Gary Price
Gary Price (gprice@gmail.com) is a librarian, writer, consultant, and frequent conference speaker based in the Washington D.C. metro area. He earned his MLIS degree from Wayne State University in Detroit. Price has won several awards including the SLA Innovations in Technology Award and Alumnus of the Year from the Wayne St. University Library and Information Science Program. From 2006-2009 he was Director of Online Information Services at Ask.com.