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Working Group Connection, April 2024: Projects via Information Policy & Analysis Topic Committee

Working Group Connection, April 2024: Projects via Information Policy & Analysis Topic Committee

April 2024

Co-chairs of the IPA topic committee are: Todd Digby (University of Florida) and Jessica Thibodeau (Copyright Clearance Center).

Accessibility Remediation Metadata (ARM)

Co-chairs: Bill Kasdorf (Kasdorf and Associates, LLC.), J. Stephen Downie (University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign), Jacob Jett (Association of State Floodplain Managers)
Accessibility Remediation Metadata (ARM) Webpage
Work Item Approved by NISO Voting Members

Many books, articles, videos, and other resources are often inaccessible or not sufficiently accessible to people with perceptual, cognitive, physical, or other disabilities. Schools, colleges, and universities are typically required by law to provide accessible versions of resources that students need. Similarly, government documents and other resources in the United States and elsewhere are required to be accessible. Unfortunately, most published resources are not yet provided by their publishers in fully accessible forms. This requires what is known as remediation: acquiring a publication in some available format and altering it to make it accessible, typically to a single individual needing a particular type of remediation. 

The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation-funded project, "FRAME: Federating Repositories of Accessible Materials for Education," was formed to eliminate redundant work and facilitate the sharing of remediated resources. As no standard metadata describing the process and results of remediation for accessibility in sufficient detail existed, the FRAME metadata model was developed to enable both discovery and deposit functions. 

The Accessibility Remediation Metadata (ARM) Working Group will extend and refine the FRAME metadata model to meet the needs of the broader accessibility community, focused on individuals and organizations involved in the remediation of content for accessibility and the consumption of remediated content.  This work will include writing documentation that clearly defines and describes the properties in the model, the values they can use, and the relationships between them, and developing a schema that enables validation of content conformance to the model. 

The working group had its first meeting in January 2024. The group has developed a work plan and started the information gathering phase with the creation of two initial subgroups: Resource Sharing and Non-print Disabilities. The Resource Sharing subgroup will focus on the exchange of materials between libraries and other organizations, while the Non-print Disabilities subgroup will concentrate on issues relating to neurodiversity, motor disabilities and access consumption. After the two initial subgroups conclude their work, two more subgroups will start their work later this spring, followed by additional subgroups starting work in the fall.

Bill Kasdorf and Nettie Lagace described the then-upcoming work at the Charleston Conference in November. Bill Kasdorf presented on the group's progress at NISO Plus in February. Nettie Lagace presented a session at ER&L in March.

Collaborative Collections Lifecycle Infrastructure Project (CCLIP) Working Groups

Acquisitions Working Group
Co-Chairs: Jesse Koennecke (Cornell University), Russell Michalak (Goldey-Beacom College)

Assessment/Data Analysis Working Group
Co-Chairs: Anne Larrivee (West Chester University of Pennsylvania), Jharina Pascual (University of California, Irvine)

Cataloging/Metadata Working Group
Co-Chairs: Gaëlle Bequet (ISSN International Centre), Jeanette Norris (Yale University) 

Collections Development and Selection Working Group
Co-chairs: Eva Jurczyk (University of Toronto), Bill Maltarich (New York University)

Infrastructure Working Group
Co-chairs: Rob Cartolano (Columbia University Libraries), Kris Maloney (Big10 Academic Alliance (BTAA), Rutgers University)

Organizational Strategy and Governance Working Group
Co-chairs: Mike Gorrell (Index Data), Boaz Nadav-Manes (Lehigh University)
Work Item Approved by NISO Voting Members
CCLP Project Web Site

CCLIP Working Groups, part of the IMLS-funded Collaborative Collections Lifecycle Project, will develop a NISO Recommended Practice, based on an open standards architecture, that will support the flow of data about distinct library collections. The Recommended Practice will document exchange protocols that will describe gathering, normalizing, and exchanging holdings information, contractual information, retention obligations, and usage data. The CCLIP model will also include aggregation of library staff and subject matter expertise, local/consortial/group-based insights, and publisher/marketplace information necessary to support collaborative decisions at both the local and cross-institutional levels.

Initial planned CCLP applications based on these recommendations may include: A) An aggregated shared index and knowledge base in which libraries/publishers can share data about their collections and expertise; B) A discovery mechanism for library staff to support searching and browsing for content, information, and human resources; C) A communication application that will support interactions across institutions; D) Data aggregation, visualization, and reporting; E) Negotiation and group purchasing decision support protocols. The group will also review existing standards and protocols for the exchange of this information and, wherever possible, will adapt these extant best practices to this process, or recommend additional changes to those existing specifications.

The second phase of the CCLIP project began in August 2023 with a call for participation for the second cohort of CCLIP Working Groups. The Acquisitions, Assessment/Data Analysis, and Cataloging/Metadata working groups started their work between January and February. The Acquisitions Working Group has begun developing its work plan and brainstorming use cases. The Assessment/Data Analysis Working Group has completed its work plan, and is now in the information gathering phase by exploring current workflows in collaborative collections. The Cataloging/Metadata Working Group has also completed its work plan, and has developed a resource sharing list to examine current literature available in collaborative collections.

After identifying the current gaps and dependencies in collaborative collections management and maintenance, the three initial working groups, Collections Development and Selection, Infrastructure, and Organizational Strategy and Governance, are now focused on developing the draft for their section of the overall Recommended Practice. Once they complete their section, it will be submitted to the CCLP Steering Committee for approval and inclusion in the greater CCLIP Recommended Practice.

Project Co-PI Todd Carpenter (substituting for Jill Morris) presented an update at February’s NISO Plus Conference. NISO hosted a public webinar on March 28th to update the public on the project’s progress. A CCLP session is planned for Saturday, June 29 at the ALA Annual Conference in San Diego.

Content Platform Migrations Working Group

Working Group Web page 
Publication: RP-38-2021, Content Platform Migrations

NISO published this recommended practice in November 2021. This effort focused on improving communications between stakeholders when a publisher moves content from one hosting platform to another. The document lists the core concepts, approaches, and tasks to facilitate a successful migration with minimal disruption to the libraries and other vendors affected, as well as the publisher itself and the content platform vendors. Ultimately, end users enjoy the most benefit from stakeholder adoption of the principles outlined in the Recommended Practice, as their access to necessary content is unimpeded. 

The main document provides context, descriptions, and definitions. Each section concludes with recommendations related to each topic, with bulleted lists of example tasks for each stakeholder group. The recommendations are also provided as a Checklist in a spreadsheet, so they can be sorted, filtered, and customized. Both versions of the Recommendations identify the stakeholder that is likely to have responsibility for a given task.

A NISO Standing Committee will take over the work of promotion and support of the Recommended Practice. If you are interested in participating, please contact Nettie Lagace, NISO Associate Executive Director.

Open Access Business Processes (OA Business Processes)

Co-chairs: Yvonne Campfens (OA Switchboard), Amanda Holmes (CRKN)
OABP Working Group Web page 
Work Item Approved by NISO Voting Members

The increasing adoption of OA policies and mandates has shifted strategy and business practices in libraries, scholarly publishing entities, and associated organizations. Meanwhile, the operationalization of financial transactions, compliance tracking with different policies, and related workflows has yet to be normalized. In the absence of established best practices there exists a sundry assortment of individualized solutions in libraries and publishers that rely heavily on publishers' workflows, systems, dashboards, invoices, and data. A number of organizations have defined local workflows to facilitate work but a shared recommendation would be of benefit to the entire community. 

The Open Access Business Processes (OABP) Working Group, which began meeting late in 2023, will develop a Recommended Practice on operationalizing OA business practices. As part of this effort the working group, through subgroup discussions, will conduct a landscape analysis on current OA business processes and take into consideration current gaps in the infrastructure and needed protocols for data exchange. It is finalizing its work plan which explains the scope and will guide the project. 

Co-chairs Yvonne Campfens and Amanda Holmes presented on the work at ER&L in March; a session at the Society for Scholarly Publishing Annual Meeting in May will include panelists Yvonne Campfens, Howard Ratner, Stuart Maxwell, Sherri Young, all Working Group members, and Elliott Hibbler. 
 

Seamless Access

Project Website

NISO provides support and expertise to the Seamless Access project in the form of leadership on several working groups and membership on the governance committee of the project. SeamlessAccess is designed to enable a more streamlined access experience for federated authentication across scholarly and research information infrastructures, and works to make all of federated authentication a better experience for users. 

Since our last update in September, the Seamless Access project has continued to work with browser vendors and community working groups in the creation of new technology in response to upcoming major browser vendor changes. With all major browsers  beginning their deprecation of third party cookies, SeamlessAccess is now in testing of one possible solution for this issue, and is currently calling all integrators to participate in deprecation trial for unpartitioned third-party storage. As a part of this work with browser vendors, SeamlessAccess is continuing to try and ensure that the browser developers are aware of the special challenges of the research environment and are working to help mitigate issues that might emerge from upcoming browser changes. The project is also preparing a release that implements IdP filtering for service providers, a much-requested feature that will allow important expansion of the project to move forward. 

The project has also been busy working on the development of an Access Audit Toolkit, designed to help organizations determine how robust their authentication and authorization systems are in a selection of specific areas. You can watch a presentation on this work from the Charleston Conference here, and more information will be released soon. Along with this work, there is ongoing work to simplify and clarify the SeamlessAccess.org website, and those changes will be rolled out over the next six months.

SERU (Shared E-Resource Understanding) Standing Committee

SERU Standing Committee Web page
Publication: SERU Recommended Practice (NISO RP-7-2012)

The SERU Recommended Practice was updated in 2012 to be more flexible for use with online products beyond e-journals, and is supported by its Standing Committee who works to publicize SERU and educate libraries and publishers via direct contacts and public presentations at industry conferences.  The SERU website pages are available to help publishers and libraries understand and use the SERU material and NISO continues to add more libraries and publishers to the SERU Registry upon request. 

Transfer Standing Committee

Co-chairs: Sophia Anderton (BJU International), Linda Wobbe (SCELC) 
Transfer Standing Committee Web page 
Publication: Transfer Recommended Practice (NISO RP-24-2019)

The most recent version of the Transfer Code of Practice, Version 4 was published in 2019. Transfer helps publishers ensure that content remains accessible by readers and librarians when a journal or set of journals is transferred between parties, and supports a smooth process with minimal disruption. Publishers are asked to endorse the Code of Practice and to abide by its principles wherever it is commercially reasonable to do so. Supporting publishers are included in a list of endorsers on the Transfer website. The Transfer Alerting Service, sponsored by the ISSN Agency, facilitates communication about journal transfers and includes a database where details about transfers can be searched. 

The members of the Transfer Standing Committee, who meet bi-monthly, are responsible for encouraging publisher endorsement and planning outreach, education and training activities. These continue at industry conferences where members meet publishers in person and talk to them about Transfer directly.

Since last year, the Standing Committee has been immersed in subgroup discussions around the next version of Transfer, reviewing new use scenarios--such as those involving open access details, such as transformative agreements--and inspecting Transfer elements and procedures that may need to be updated in light of these industry development. New text continues to be developed and reviewed; a draft Transfer version 5 may be available for public comment later in 2024.  

Standing Committee co-chair Sophia Anderton participated on the March Open Teleconference

Z39.7 Data Dictionary Standing Committee

Co-chairs: Martha Kyrillidou (QualityMetrics), Joe Zucca (University of Pennsylvania)
Z39.7 Standing Committee

The purpose of ANSI/NISO Z39.7-2013 Information Services and Use: Metrics & Statistics for Libraries and Information Providers - Data Dictionary is to assist the information community by indicating and defining useful quantifiable information to measure the resources and performance of libraries and to provide a body of valid and comparable data on American libraries. It identifies standard definitions, methods, and practices relevant to library statistics activities in the United States. Any user of the online standard may submit suggested changes which are then reviewed by the Standing Committee during its conference calls.  As part of its work, the Standing Committee scans and reviews the statistical survey landscape and examines other assessment efforts--including use of particular vocabularies--in the community for effects on the Data Dictionary. 

The Z39.7 Standing Committee has recently finalized a new draft of the standard. It is expected that this updated draft will be made available to NISO Voting Members for their approval in the coming months and subsequently presented to ANSI for its approval prior to NISO publication. In the meantime, the Standing Committee has assembled resources for a separate appendix to the standard which will capture ongoing work (projects and tools) related to assessment and has been discussing recent meetings of interest and updates to various industry surveys.

New Project: Unique Electronic Resource Package Identifiers

Work Item Approved by NISO Voting Members

E-resources are frequently purchased as packages, which can range in size from a handful of titles to hundreds of thousands. Currently, these packages can only be identified by their name in the supply chain, within elements such as invoices, publisher websites, knowledge bases, etc. However, names are inherently ambiguous, so this causes problems that affect all stakeholders—libraries, content providers and platforms, knowledge base providers, and even users.

The NISO Unique Electronic Resource Package Identifiers Working Group will evaluate and create recommendations for a unique identifier to enable disambiguation between packages, which can be used across the supply chain. This identifier will allow all stakeholders to streamline and simplify their processes, and to more easily track changes. It will also provide libraries with clear information about which titles a package contains, enabling them, for example, to manage claims when journals move between publishers. 

NISO expects to convene the working group later this year.  For more information contact Nettie Lagace.