Research Impact Challenge 3: Preserve and Share Your Work with a Digital Repository

This challenge will explore how scholarly digital repositories can help you make all kinds of scholarly work—from article pre-prints to slide decks to syllabi—easier to preserve, share, discover, and cite.

Perhaps you’ve shared article pre-prints or other forms of scholarly work with your colleagues over social media or email, or posted them to your personal website. Using a digital repository can make the common activity of exchanging work with colleagues easier and more stable.

Not all repositories behave exactly the same way, but as a general rule, by depositing work in a repository, you’ll get:

  • A stable URL for the work that you can share with others or post to social media, your personal website, etc. This stable URL makes it easier for others to cite your work. You also won’t have to worry about broken links, or about migrating and re-posting your work to a new web page if you move to a new institution, or if your website moves to a new platform.
  • Indexing by Google and Google Scholar, which makes your work more discoverable by others
  • Some form of feedback about how the work has been used: how many views it has received, download counts, shares, etc.

There are many different scholarly repositories. Often they are focused on specific disciplines, such as mathematics or biology; or particular communities.

Today’s challenge:

Choose a repository from the following list (or a different one that you know) and take some time to explore it. Find one item of interest in the repository that you’d like to read, use in your research or teaching, or share with colleagues.

WSU’s Institutional Repository

Managed by WSU Libraries using a platform called Esploro, Research Exchange – Research Exchange – LibGuides at Washington State University is a space designed to preserve and share university scholarship.

  • Who can deposit: WSU faculty, staff, and students.
  • What you can deposit: articles, book chapters, working papers, technical reports, conference presentations, posters, images, media, datasets, and educational resources.
  • Who can access deposited materials: WSU faculty, staff, students and all member of the general public, unless that material has been temporarily embargoed.
  • More information:

Ways to use Research Exchange:

  • Create a faculty profile to showcase research and educational materials. The Libraries can help pre-populate the profile with citations and information collected from Pivot and other sources. Once created, the profile can feature a range of materials, from articles to datasets, presentations, collaborations with students, and more. To get started, contact libraries.research@wsu.edu
  • Archive datasets and articles using Research Exchange. By doing so, you as a researcher can comply with funder open-access mandates while ensuring that others can access and build upon your findings.
  • Build a collection of materials that document the work of a lab or research group.
  • Use Research Exchange as a curricular tool by inviting students to showcase their research.

Other Key Scholarly Repositories

ArXiv.org

bioRxiv.org

Humanities Commons CORE repository

LIS Scholarship Archive

  • No longer accepting new deposits—but still available to find research!
  • What you may find: “a broad range of scholarship, from […] metadata to […] manuscripts. We acknowledge that much of this scholarship happens outside the traditional realms of academia, including work that goes beyond the standard article or book chapter to oral histories, community works, code, data, and more”
  • More information/FAQ
  • Search, browse, and explore

PsycArXiv

SocArXiv

Bonus challenge:

 Create an account and deposit a piece of your work in an appropriate repository!

What next? 

  • Check usage/download statistics for anything you’ve deposited to gather information about its use and impact.
  • Keep an eye out for any alerts from Google Scholar indicating that something you deposited has been indexed and added to your Google Scholar profile.      

Learn more: 

Prepare for the next challenge: 

Congratulations! You’ve completed Challenge 3 of exploring a digital repository for preserving and sharing your scholarly work!

Tired of online platforms yet? Join us for Challenge 4, where we’ll take an inventory of our academic social media use in order to prioritize and make strategic decisions about where to spend time and effort in the coming year.