August 2022

Spotlight on….

IRUS (Institutional Repository Usage Statistics)

The EPrints platform incorporates a usage statistics system called IRStats2. However, the software requires regular attention from a developer to ensure the system is only counting genuine accesses. Other repositories use different software to collect usage statistics which means that it is difficult to make valid comparisons between repositories.

In 2022, QUT Library took up a subscription for IRUS-ANZ, a standards-based statistics service which enables participating institutions to receive and compare standardised information about the usage of items in their institutional repositories.

The IRUS usage counts tend to be lower than the counts recorded by inbuilt software such as IRStats2. This most likely reflects the more diligent checking by IRUS for crawlers (robots) and duplicate accesses from the same address on the same day. However, as this is equally true for other participating repositories, it creates a level playing field when comparisons are being made between repositories; nationally and internationally. QUT ePrints is now included in the list of repositories that can be compared based on IRUS usage counts.

As can be seen in the table below, for August 2022, the total unique item requests (deduplicated downloads) for QUT ePrints was 126,434. When benchmarked against the August statistics for the G08 universities UniMelb, UQ and UniSyd and Otago University in NZ, it confirms that QUT ePrints continues to punch above its weight. Source

Platform Metric Type Reporting Period Total August 2022
QUT ePrints Unique_Item_Requests 126,434 126,434
Minerva Access (University of Melbourne) Unique_Item_Requests 106,656 106,656
Sydney eScholarship Repository Unique_Item_Requests 70,705 70,705
UQ eSpace (University of Queensland) Unique_Item_Requests 51,778 51,778
OUR Archive (Otago Research Archive) Unique_Item_Requests 30,615 30,615

IRUS also records the total number of requests (all downloads),  the total number of item investigations (page views) and the number of unique item investigations (de-duplicated page views). Page view statistics are not available from QUT ePrints’ inbuilt statistics software (IRStats2) so this represents an added bonus. This data will be useful when reporting repository statistics to CAUL because number of page views is one of the statistics they collect.

The difference between the inbuilt statistics, IRStats2, and IRUS statistics can be seen in the table below. IRUS data is updated every month but data is not available for individual items not can it be collated by author so it is recommended that we continue to use the IRStats2 software to generate the download statistics that are displayed in QUT ePrints but use the IRUS statistics when benchmarking against other institutions. It is also recommended that we provide the information about the lack of congruence between IRStats2 and IRUS statistics to DBS and request more frequent maintenance of the IRStats2 software.   

Platform Metric Type Source Mar 22 Apr 22  May 22 Jun 22 Jul 22  Aug 22
QUT ePrints Total Item Investigations IRUS 338,395 344,987 333,544 257,820 214,497 256,361
QUT ePrints Total Item Requests IRUS 173,863 164,234 168,912 130,670 108,337 128,818
QUT ePrints Unique Item Investigations IRUS 285,102 293,225 250,851 217,403 181,787 215,830
QUT ePrints Unique Item requests IRUS 170,667 161,366 165,912 128,357 106,316 136,434
QUT ePrints Downloads IRstats2 219,829 198,178 205,527 193,678 154,168 167,303

Congratulations Marvin: Success Champion for August

Congratulations to Marvin van Prooijen, the OSC Success Champion for August.

In 2022, Marvin successfully managed the transition of the theses processing service from Library Resource Services (LRS) to Office for Scholarly Communication (OSC) and from QUT ePrints to Pure.  To enable these transitions, Marvin worked closely with Adam Hall (LRS), Jillian Blacker (Graduate Research Centre), Kylie Perry (Research Management Solutions Uplift Program) and OSC staff and his effective communication created positive collaborations that helped ensure the work moved along as smoothly as possible.  The transition to processing theses in Pure was challenging and Marvin was instrumental in identifying and documenting ongoing issues that need addressing. His attention to detail added great value.  Marvin, thank you for your focus on theses and your determination, resilience and hard work.

‘My Friends and other Animals’ take the gong!

image

The ALIA Queensland Trivia night is always a lot of fun, and after a few quiet years due to the pandemic, QUT Library made a magnificent comeback with one of their team’s taking home the trophy.  Kate Harbison, Catherine Haden, Jenny Thomas, Lara Vanderstaay, Tony Schnyder (QUT Psychology Test Library) and Stephanie Bradbury, along with loyal ring-ins, Tony and Kim, made up ‘My Family and other Animals’. They pooled their pop culture, music, sport and nonsensical knowledge to narrowly beat the Griffith Godfathers table. You can view the trophy on the small coffee table just inside the KG Library work area.

With the theme ‘We are family’ Katya Henry’s table took home the prize for best costumed table. Her ‘Addams Family Values’ team was authentically dressed and propped to the max. Kendall Kousek was at the spectacularly named table ‘Read between the wines’ and Helen Davies’, our copper (Cu) for the night was on the infamous ‘The Last Grads of QUT’ table, whose members represnted the metallic family.

Office of Research Services & Library Networking

Liaison Librarians and some OSC staff got together with Office of Research Services staff over morning tea to hear a little about each other.  It was great for us to hear a little about the research funding cycles and to meet face-to-face with many staff, with whom we have liaised over the past few years. 

Tanya, Paula and Stephanie presented briefly.  Feedback on the low-key event was very positive and some actions include:

  • Following up on ‘on-boarding’ emails and processes
  • Training sessions for ORS staff, including publication metrics and copyright.

It was fabulous to also hear of so many catchups planned between Liaison Librarians and Research Grants staff.  Thank you to everyone who participated. 

Join us: Scholarly Communications Community of Practice

On the fourth Wednesday of each month, the Scholarly Communications Community of Practice (CoP) runs online for 30 minutes. The CoP is open to all and is facilitated by Dr Sameera Jayan Senanayake, School of Public Health and Social Work, who is also a Research Fellow in Health Economics at the Australian Centre for Health Services Innovation (AusHSI) and Centre for Healthcare Transformation (CHT). Sameera is the Early Career Researcher representative on the Office for Scholarly Communication (OSC) Advisory Group.

The CoP is online, and the format is usually a brief presentation (10 minutes) by one of our experts, followed by discussion.  You can register here  for future CoPs.  The next is on September 28 and will focus on Peer Review and writing a good peer review report. Ginny Barbour will briefly present before an open discussion.  We look forward to seeing you there.

Date Community of Practice Topic ​Presenter
28 September​ Peer Review – How to write a good peer review report​ Ginny Barbour​
26 October​ Publication Metrics and Altmetrics​ Tanya Harden​
23 November​ Data Availability​ Paula Callan​

End of an ERA for the Australian Research Council (ARC)

Education Minister Jason Clare announced that next year’s Excellence for Research in Australia (ERA) is cancelled, and a review of the Australian Research Council (ARC) will investigate and report on whether the council’s “role and purpose” remain relevant and its operating model is fit for purpose, as well as consider how it can meet current and future needs and maintain the trust of the research sector.  The review will be lead by our own Vice-Chancellor and former ARC CEO, Prof Margaret Sheil, with Prof Susan Dodds (La Trobe U) and Prof Mark Hutchinson (Uni Adelaide and president of Science and Technology Australia).  Read more in the CMM and on the ARC pages.

And while the QUT ePrints Team and the Research Information Systems and Support (RISS) have already donequite  a bit of work in preparation for ERA, we all agree that it won’t go astray.  The work that has been done is good house-keeping and means the reporting of our research outputs and our repository (QUT ePrints) and ORCiD connections are nicely up to date.  The work done is extremely valuable and will have a variety of applications.

 

Authorship, Peer Review & Publication returns in October

It is on again – this time at Kelvin Grove.  This Library/OREI/GRE+D collaboration aims to guide HDR students and Early Career Researchers on how the highs and lows of the publication journey.

Session 1: Pre-submission –  11am 12 Oct, 2022 Register here

– Agreeing on authorship
– Publishing strategies, preprints, and journal selection
– Deceptive journals and conferences
– Originality and plagiarism
– Reporting Conflicts of Interest and acknowledging grants
– Cover letters, titles, and abstracts
– Copyright, rights management, and licensing

Session 2: Post-submission  –  11am 13 Oct, 2022 Register here

– Journal Peer Review: Models, process, roles
– Open scholarship and open access at QUT
– Publishing outputs at QUT
– Promoting your work after publication

Some interesting reads from the last month …

Bouquets 🌺🌺🌺🌺🌺🌺🌺🌺🌺🌺🌺🌺

IFN001 / Advanced Information Research Skills (AIRS)

  • “Very clear, the set up with the different components (endnote, handout, word doc and chat support) was very easy to follow” (Advanced Endnote )
  • “Excellent step by step instructions and exercise” (Advanced EndNote) 
  • “I personally really like actual in-person [Zoom] workshops, so it would be good to have these available again in the future.” (IFN001/AIRS via Qualtrics feedback)

QUT ePrints

  • Thanks so much, Debbie! This is phenomenal. Hugely appreciated! (Susanna Cramb, School of Public Health and Social Work)
  • Thank you so much Paula for your great work….. This will be useful for QUT’s ERA ranking as well as for my grant writings and making research portfolio clear. Since I am planning to apply in future for the ARC Laureate fellowship so this data will add value…. Awesome support (Prashant Sonar, International Engagement, Centre of Material Science)
  • Perfect – thanks so much Debbie!  It’s great to have the slides and abstract public 😊  (Aaron Snoswell, PhD)
  • Hi Debbie, Thank you for your very detailed and prompt reply.  I am applying for a promotion and trying to create an updated Academic Analytic Profile (AAP) and RAD Promotion
    report (Susan Chapman, School of Early Childhood and Inclusive Education)
Copyright
  • “Thank you. Very helpful”  (Copyright Considerations)

Scholarly Communication Community of Practice session

  • “Very useful overview. Thank you.” 
  • “Thanks so much. Very informative”  
  • “Thank you so much! This was a great presentation and Q&A”
  • “Thanks so much everyone 🙂 Great presentation Katya!”
  • “Thanks for a great presentation!”

Publication Metrics

AMAZING! Thank you very much! I’m particularly thrilled that there’s been a way to capture that article with high scholar citations that’s not indexed.  (From A/Prof Jenna Gillett-Swan, Early Childhood and Inclusive Education, regarding a metrics report prepared by Tanya and Kate Harbison)

Research Data Management + Fire Wardens

  • Hi Philippa, Thanks for your emails, that’s really helpful information.  (Damian (PhD student))
  • Thank you so much Philippa – perfectly explained as always. Marg (PhD student) 
  • All thanks to you and Tanya, Philippa!!  You two are the BEST Chiefs I have ever known. Your wonderful leadership has created a great Warden Team. Thank you!! Cheers Sarah 😊 

 

 August in Numbers

 QUT ePrints

New records added Existing records edited Email interactions with academics Full-text downloads Cumulative repository records Cumulative full-text downloads
837 489 118 167,303 122,802  (59.1% with full-text)  35,984,955

Copyright

Total Consultations 
15
In August, Health took over as the Faculty with the most queries for the month. It’s almost always CIESJ. Top Three Topics in August 2022:
  1. Copyright advice on contract
  2. Thesis Publishing (images)
  3. Tie between: Permission to publish QUT content; Image reuse (conference); Format shifting software; BB Content; Creative Commons licences.

The following is derived from queries directed to the managed inbox qut.copyright@qut.edu.au. Each query (composed of several emails and correspondents) is counted once. 

IFN001: AIRS

Enrolments Completions Workshops Attendances
25 21 3 20

Research Skills

Number of sessions Number of Attendances Consultations
14 94 182

Research Data Management

Hacky Hour attendees New records added to RDF RDF Cumulative datasets RDF Cumulative views
15 9 new datasets 418 556,620

QUT Theses

Number of theses processed (with DOIs minted and published)
53

Publication Metrics

Number of Enquiries Number of Consultations Reports/Spreadsheets/Data Presentations

4 (x via LLs)

2 5 0

Service Highlights

Academic Journal Publishing

The International Journal for Crime, Justice and Social Democracy finalised its latest editorial report with some inclusions provided by Tanya Harden (OSC) regarding citation activity. Overton is the world’s largest searchable index of policy documents, guidelines, think tank publications and working papers. Since 2014 the Journal has had 45 articles (19% of all articles published) cited in international policy documentation from 11 countries.  Twenty-three of these articles have been cited more than once in policy documents. This represents significant impact in terms of the research being published in this open access environment.

The Journal publicly launched its special issue on Fashion Justice with guest editors from QUT Alice Payne and Rowena Maguire bringing together some of the authors to discuss their research.  The event was hosted by the Centre for Justice as part of QUT’s Sustainability Week events (August 22-26)

 Student Success 

 

QUT Theses

Lyndelle, Marvin and Debbie engaged in testing rounds with Kylie Perry and the RMSUP project team to bed down the thesis processing workflow. It became clearer that there are a number of issues that will impact on the efficiency of thesis processing by placing the Pure Student Theses module in between SAMS and ePrints. The project team investigated a number of issues, and requested enhancements and fixes for a number of them from Elsevier. We’re continuing to tweak the workflow and update the procedures. It is expected that only some enhancements or fixes will be likely, and that with Pure as the conduit between SAMS and ePrints, the efficiency of the procedures will remain suboptimal.
The new Candidature Management System and the Student Thesis Pure module went live from the fourth week of August. From Monday the 22nd August to 30th September, the project will be in charge of hypercare. After September 30th, we revert to the normal channels, where Library will liaise with RISS for Pure related issues or DBS for ePrints.
Marvin, Lyndelle and Debbie continued to test and communicate and meet with Kylie to focus on outstanding issues or new ones that may become apparent as well as for general implementation support.

IFN001: Advanced Information Research Skills (AIRS) 

  • HDR Meet, Greet & Eat event report has been shared with LLT. Planning is underway for 2 gatherings of this kind in 2023 – one at GP Library in the first part of the year and another at KG Library in the second part of 2023 with the aim of aligning with HDR orientations. Invitations will be extended to a vendor to sponsor the event and have the opportunity to talk with students, demo products, etc. This would aim to alleviate expenses associated with catering for the event.
  • The AIRS team meeting was held on Wednesday 31 August 2022. 

Issues 

  • The number of polls in the AIRS workshop #4 was discussed in the AIRS team meeting. This will be reviewed by Lyndelle, Alice and Catherine H.
  • Lyndelle raised concerns about detection of plagiarism in the resource log submissions. There was agreement that there is need for greater consistency in marking of responses in which plagiarism is detected and when providing feedback. Team members agreed on the need to add wording to questions to provide further clarity for students that responses need to be in their own words. Lyndelle will draft new wording and will ask for volunteers from the AIRS team to work on this together.
  • The new UniHub feature that disables access to zoom sessions until the actual start time means that facilitators do not have the option to welcome students and chat with them while waiting for others to join before the session starts. This was considered an important part of any session and the AIRS culture.

Future activities 

  • Lyndelle and Sal will be presenting at the CAUL Enabling a Modern Curriculum Conference on 7th September 2022.
  • The next AIRS team meeting will be on Monday 17 October 2022. 

Research Skills

Core and collaborative Research Skills Program sessions

Session 

Attendances 

EndNote Essentials

11
Finding Publication Metrics:  Scopus, WoS, Google Scholar 8
Where to Publish and What to Consider  9
Copyright Considerations for Researchers   5
Publication Metrics: Q&A Drop-in  0

Copyright Clinic

1

Scholarly Communications Community of Practice

30

Research Data Management Consultation

1

Finding Publication Metrics: SciVal

2

Advanced EndNote

12

Hacky Hour (x4)

15

  • RefWorks Trial

The RefWorks trial organised by Rosie ended on August 15th. Liaison Librarians and members of the Referencing Applications Working Group (RAWG) tested the functions and features of this referencing tool in order to determine whether it would be a useful addition to our suite of subscription based referencing applications. Marvin and Rosie Glynn brought together the feedback and Rosie reported on the trial to RAWG. It was recommended to hold over any decisions or further testing pending the outcome of decisions around Mendeley. 

  • Mendeley testing 

Marvin organised testing of Mendeley during August. There are new versions of the Mendeley client as well as the Word add-in, while use of older Mendeley products by Mac users increasingly experiencing issues as well as becoming less available to new users as the vendor is transitioning support to the newer versions. The objective of the testing is to see if the products are technically fit for purpose, and sufficiently mature to make available to clients.  Mendeley could once again be the easy use alternative to EndNote and be promoted as such. 

Testing was done by RAWG members and a number of interested LLs. It was found that the products were fit for purpose technically and, while the client and web interface is not as mature as the old desktop version, most core functionalities are available, and easier to use. Two technical issues were noted that might occur for users, both of which are resolvable for clients that might experience them.  

  • Authentication proxy transition issues 

    The move from EZproxy to Open Athens has seen an increase in client issues across a number of Referencing Apps, including EndNote, Paperpile and Zotero.

    Significant and effective information is available for our officially supported product, EndNote. Marvin and Jai have been working to provide solutions and assist clients for Zotero and Paperpile. Jai is liaising with Paperpile who have said they will test the proxy with a view to providing a solution for ongoing issues.

    Our service model is based on the principle that software that is not EndNote should be able to be endorsed as self-help options rather than be fully supported. At the same we need to be able to provide some support by a few people for helping clients during this period of technical transition.

Future activities 

  • Marvin will report the findings on Mendeley testing to RAWG members with recommendations.
  • A report on the Pure ePrints integration issues will be made up for communication by Nicole Clark to Michael McArdle, Dave Dennis and Megan Duffy
  • Lyndelle will begin working with Joanna to look at approaches for consolidating and collating referencing applications data for reporting and informing decision making around services.

Copyright

  • The Australian Centre for Philanthropy and Entrepreneurial Studies has sought assistance with their application to have the Third Sector Review journal indexed in Scopus.
  • Katya presented to the Scholarly Communications Community of Practice on 24 August focusing on “Why you should put a CC licence on your images and tables.” 20+ attendees
  • Katya and Rani held the fifth Copyright Clinic on 24 August with 3 attendees. A follow up email with relevant information was sent to registered students. The Clinic is being promoted through various channels.
  • Katya and Rani held the second Copyright Considerations for Researchers session on 23 August with 5 attendees.
  • Katya and Rani attended the ASCILITE OEP SIG webinar on Universal Design for Learning. Highly recommended!
  • Rani attended the ASCILITE OEP SIG meeting (2 August)
  • Rani attended the OER Collective Community of Practice for Library Staff on Understanding accessibility and inclusion (9 August) and the Academic Author session on Writing your open textbook (23 August).
  • Katya and Rani met with Sarah Howard and Bruce Munro (members of the OER Governance Group) and Catherine Haden to discuss the OER Collective (17 August)
  • Katya and Rani met with the Canvas LMS+ Project Team to discuss copyright implications for Canvas Commons (4 August) and attended the Preparing for Canvas staff forum (26 August)
  • Katya and Rani provided a Copyright Service overview for two fieldwork students – Kia Owens and Wendy Nelissen who attended the Copyright Clinic.
  • Katya and Rani met with Marvin, Paula, Lyndelle and Stephanie re: updating the copyright information on the new thesis submission platform (25 August)

 Issues (from last month and emerging)  

  • We continue to receive numerous queries from HDR students regarding copyright, images, and thesis submission. We are in touch with GRE+D to discuss how we can clarify this for students and support the team processing the theses. 

Major future activities  

  • Katya and Rani will present Copyright Considerations for Researchers on a day during ResBaz which has been rescheduled for 1-3 November 2022 at Nathan Campus, Griffith University.
  • Katya is presenting at the CAUL Conference 13 September 2022 on QUT’s experience with Pressbooks.
  • The sixth Copyright Clinic is scheduled for Wednesday 14 September.
  • The Copyright Considerations for Canvas exemplar site will be released later this year.

23 Scholarly Communication Things

  • On Thursday 8th September, Catherine Radbourne and Stephanie Jacobs will present “From Concept to Content: 23 Scholarly Communication Things – Creating an Open Education Resource (OER) using Pressbooks” at next month’s CAUL Enabling a Modern Curriculum.
  • DOIs will be added to individual chapters

Usage in August

  • 179 total visitors
  • 352 pageviews
  • Top 3 viewed chapters (based on views):
    1. Databases for metrics;
    2. Copyright and Creative Commons;
    3. Research Integrity
  • Top sites/referrers:
    1. Google.com;
    2. Google India
    3. Bing.com


Publication Metrics

  • A trial of the Trends module of SciVal was undertaken in August.  It was promoted to ADRs and Centre Managers by Stephanie.  The module has some good functionality, particularly around analysing sets of publications to find top authors and also analysing SDGs.  So far, not a great deal of feedback has been received.
  • We are progressing with the Altmetric Explorer API.  The cost of the integration has been approved by IRC and will be rolled into the renewal.  We’ve also contacted Digital Science to get some information to assist Clem Wong (DBS, who will be managing the integration), with the plan.  It shouldn’t be a complex process.
  • Tanya provided the publication list which was used to select publications for the DVCR Publication Pick in the recent Research Update
  • Tanya worked with Kate and Alice on metrics reports for DECRA recipients
  • Tanya provided data to support reporting for the Centre for Materials Science
  • Tanya is working on finding evidence of impact for the QUT’s Research Infrastructure, by searching for mentions in publications.
  • Tanya updated QUT’s instance of Altmetric Explorer with data from RISS.  There were a few issues with the upload that Tanya wouldn’t have found, if it weren’t for the assistance of several Liaison Librarians.  These issues were resolved.

Issues (from last month and emerging)

  • Clarivate attempted to setup trial access to the Emerging Sources Citation Index to assist with ERA tagging, and instead removed access to our subscription content.  They are working to resolve it.
  • The FoR codes in SciVal not covering around a fifth of the journal content continues to be an issue.  There is no timeline for when it will be resolved.  Tanya has contacted Cassandra Sims to get clarification, but has yet to receive a response.

Future Activities

  • Implementation of the Altmetric Explorer/Pure API
  • LibGuide update

Research Data Management

  • ResBaz has been rescheduled for 1-3 November (Tuesday-Thursday) at Griffith University’s Nathan campus.  More information on the program and specifics to follow shortly.
  • A training session on accessing and using Australian Bureau of Statistics tools, resources and datasets is scheduled for Tuesday, 4 October and Wednesday, 5 October.
    • The first workshop will be aimed at HDR students, researchers and Library staff and will include the following:
      • New website introduction and tour
      • Finding data by region
      • MADIP/BLADE use and integration (huge datasets based about individuals and businesses)
      • Access to other microdata
      • Data Explorer (beta product)
      • How the ABS collects data
      • Statistical geography and how the ABS uses this to provide access to data
      • Accessing Census data

Register here for Tuesday 4 October, 10:00 am – 12:00 pm, in B330, KG (or online)

    • The second workshop is mainly for researchers currently using TableBuilder, which is a tool for creating, saving and downloading tables, graphs and maps that use ABS datasets. Talei Parker, Assistant Director, Data Services at the ABS will facilitate the training.  It would be fantastic if we were able to take advantage of having an external trainer deliver the training and invite as many researchers as possible.  Session details and registration info will be provided shortly.  

Register here for Wednesday 5 October, 1:00 – 3:00 pm, in E151, KG (or online)

  • Stephanie and Philippa met with Joanne Richardson and Kate Thompson about (respectively) responding to ARC data management requirements and using the Data Management Planning Tool to manage distributed datasets.
  • Work has commenced between the Library and DBS on getting Research Data Finder indexed in Altmetrics Explorer.  Indexation would mean that mentions of all 418 research datasets published in our data repository could be tracked and used to show research impact and engagement.  Required metadata fields need to be put in a format suitable for indexing by Altmetrics.  Big thanks to Joe Stewart, Senior Developer, DBS for making this happen.
  • A revision of web content for AIRS Module 8: Managing data is underway with Philippa reviewing and making suggestions for wording and content changes.  This update was prompted by work undertaken by Lyndelle, Sally and Ellen to develop a video on non-traditional research datasets for addition to the website.
  • Stephanie and Philippa met with Kate Devitt, Chief Scientist at Trusted Autonomous Systems (former Academic Skills Adviser in the Library) to provide advice around metadata management and database indexing for a new RAS-Gateway (Robotic and Autonomous Systems Gateway) that has just been released in beta mode – https://rasgateway.com.au/. There will be a public launch of the gateway at QUT in November 2022, in conjunction with the QUT Centre for Robotics, QUT Law and QUT Library.
  • Guidance in the Data Management Planning Tool was updated to include correct links and mention of the Research Data Management and Primary Materials Checklist.

Major Future Activities 

  • Attend: eResearch Australasia Conference,  Austalasian DataCite DOIs Community of Practice, ONDC: Safeguards: privacy protections, data sharing principles and exclusions, QUT Graduate Research Student Showcase 2022, eResearch Showcase 2022, and ONDC: Getting onto Dataplace 

 

Congratulations and thank you for reading this report (right down to the end). If you would like any further information or have burning questions on the above, please contact Stephanie or the relevant Service Manager:  Katya (Copyright), Paula (Scholarly Communications), Tanya (Publication Metrics), Lyndelle (Information Research Skills) and Philippa (Research Data Management). 

 

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