Listado de repositorios de acceso abierto, especializados en Bibliotecología y Ciencia de la Información. Estos "archivo abiertos", que facilitan el acceso a los documentos a texto completo, son creados y mantenidos por instituciones u organizaciones cuyo esfuerzo se enmarca en la denominada "open access initiative", y que, en muchos casos, va a la par del uso de programas de código abierto. Más información: Open Access Initiative, Budapest Open Access Initiative , IFLA Statement on Open Access to Scholarly Literature and Research Documentation, OECD Declaration on Access to Research Data From Public Funding. Mapa de Repositorios Institucionales de Acceso Abierto [http://maps.repository66.org/] Maintained by Stuart Lewis (
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) at the Aberystwyth University .
E-Prints in LIbrary and Information Science (E-LIS) [http://eprints.rclis.org/] An international open access archive for eprints on Library, Information Science and related disciplines. Its purpose is to make the full text of scientific documents visible, accesible, harvestable, searchable and useable by any potential user with access to the Internet. Furthermore this service aims to support individuals who wish to publish or otherwise make their papers (published or not) available world-wide. Searching and archiving in E-LIS are totally free for any user. (Volumen de información disponible: 4285 documents, septiembre de 2006) Digital Library of Information Science and Technology (DLIST) [http://dlist.sir.arizona.edu/] An open access archive for the Information Sciences, is supported by the School of Information Resources and Library Science and Learning Technologies Center, University of Arizona. Established in 2002, dLIST has a global Advisory Board and is a part of the Information Technology & Society Research Lab. (Volumen de información disponible: ??, septiembre 2006) Documents in Information Science (DoIS ) [http://wotan.liu.edu/dois/] A service for finding and downloading the latest research results in Information Science. DoIS is a database of articles and conference proceedings published in electronic format in the area of Library and Information Science.DoIS is a volunteer effort to create a free bibliographic resource of scientific texts specialized in Information Science. (Volumen de información disponible: 13963 articles and 4493 conference proceedings, 13041 of them are downloable from the site, septiembre de 2006).
Repositorio Digital del Departamento de Biblioteconomía y Documentación Universidad Carlos III de Madrid. [http://hipatia.uc3m.es:8080/dspace/] Archivo abierto en pruebas de este departamento con posibilidad de búsquedas por comunidades, colecciones, títulos, autores y fechas.
BUSCADORES (en repositorios de acceso abierto)
DL-Harvest [http://dlharvest.sir.arizona.edu] A federated archive, an open aggregator service of DLIST. It brings together full-text, scholarly materials in the Information Sciences from many different OAI-PMH compliant repositories. Besides DLIST, the current list includes selective harvesting from ArXiV, E-LIS, and OCLC Research and others). DL-Harvest is using PKP Harvester with software improvements for flow control and sets that have been developed by DLIST Graduate Research Assistant Joseph Roback. DL-Harvest currently has 17709 papers from 14 archives indexed. (Septiembre de 2006) CiteSeer [http://citeseer.ist.psu.edu/] A scientific literature digital library and search engine that focuses primarily on the literature in computer and information science. CiteSeer aims to improve the dissemination and feedback of the scientific literature and to provide improvements in functionality, usability, availability, cost, comprehensiveness, efficiency, and timeliness in the access of scientific and scholarly knowledge. CiteSeer was developed at the NEC Research Institute by Steve Lawrence, Lee Giles and Kurt Bollacker. It is currently hosted at Penn State's School of Information Sciences and Technology under the direction of Professor Lee Giles. Isaac Councill is the CiteSeer adminstrator. The CiteSeer model is portable with a very similar search engine, SmealSearch, created for academic business documents. OAIster [http://oaister.umdl.umich.edu/o/oaister/] A project of the University of Michigan Digital Library Production Service. Our goal is to create a collection of previously difficult-to-access, academically-oriented digital resources (what are digital resources? why is the "freely-available" designation gone?) that are easily searchable by anyone. 9,417,772 records from 680 institutions (updated 27 September 2006)
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