What the Upcoming Federal Agency Public Access Requirements mean for NC State researchers

If you or your colleagues have been awarded federal funds to conduct your research, you may have heard about some possible changes that could affect how you share your publications and data with the public and how you represent your scholarly profile.  In August 2022, a memo titled “Ensuring Free, Immediate, and Equitable Access to Federally Funded Research” was issued by Dr. Alondra Nelson on behalf of the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy (OSTP).

General Information about Federal Policy Changes Related to OSTP Memo

Public access requirements for publications

  • What publications are going to be required to be made publicly accessible?

    Compared to the 2013 OSTP memo, the 2022 OSTP memo broadens the definition of publications and includes not only research articles and accepted manuscripts, but also peer-reviewed book chapters, editorials, and conference proceedings. From the University of Michigan Library OSTP guide:

    1. Peer-reviewed publications include "peer-reviewed research articles or final manuscripts published in scholarly journals, and may include peer-reviewed book chapters, editorials, and peer-reviewed conference proceedings published in other scholarly outlets that result from federally funded research.”
    2. Scientific data include: "the recorded factual material commonly accepted in the scientific community as of sufficient quality to validate and replicate research findings. Such scientific data do not include laboratory notebooks, preliminary analyses, case report forms, drafts of scientific papers, plans for future research, peer-reviews, communications with colleagues, or physical objects and materials, such as laboratory specimens, artifacts, or field notes." In addition, scientific data do not include data subject to legal, privacy, ethical or other similar restrictions or limitations.

     

  • Do researchers need to pay article processing charges (APCs) in order to comply with the new policies?
    • No. There is no requirement based on the OSTP memo or in any emerging information from federal funding agencies that researchers will be required or even encouraged to pay article processing charges (APCs) to journals to comply with the public access policy.
    • The OSTP guidance states that grantees may request funding to cover “reasonable publication costs,” but does not require it, and agency officials have stated that their intent is for researchers to fulfill these requirements by depositing their articles and data in a designated repository, regardless of where they publish. A Frequently Asked Questions issued by the White House in December 2022 specifically states “Importantly, adherence to and implementation of the policy guidance in the 2022 Memorandum does not require expense on the part of the researcher.”
    • You will be required to make publications freely available and publicly accessible in agency-designated repositories. In some cases, those agency-designated repositories have yet to be identified. In other cases, federal funders are already using repositories, e.g., the NIH uses PubMed Central as its primary public access repository for publications that are supported by NIH grants. See this list of designated public access repositories: https://www.library.illinois.edu/scp/ostp-mandate/
    • If you do decide to pay an APC to make your publications open access, NC State has several OA agreements in place to cover the costs of APCs required for OA publishing.
  • What is the difference between "public access" and "open access"?
    • The Office of Science & Technology Policy defines public access as the “free availability of federally funded scholarly materials to the public". Public access is often dictated as policy set forth by federal funding agencies such as NIH or NSF. Public access does not necessarily incur a publishing fee nor does it include a specific license dictating re-use. 
    • Open access is a broad set of principles and practices for sharing research outputs (including publications and data), where they are freely available online and free of most copyright and licensing restrictions.  Many (but not all) open access journals require a fee known as an article processing charge (APC).
    • In some cases, publishing in an open access journal may not meet public access policy guidelines. For example, NIH-funded research articles published in some open access journals may still need to be deposited into the NIH repository PubMed Central in order to be compliant.
  • Who is going to submit my article (or other publication type) to the agency-designated repository?

    In some cases, the publisher of the journal in which your article was published will submit it on your behalf. Publishers might do this for free, or they might charge you for this service. In other cases, you will have to submit the appropriate version of your article to the agency-designated repository yourself or set up a designee to do this for you.

  • Does NC State offer any support for helping to understand how I can comply with the public access requirements for publications?
    • The NC State University Libraries offers the Open Knowledge Center, providing support for public access to publications and expert help for securing rights to make publications publicly accessible.
    • NC State also has several OA agreements in place to cover the costs of APCs required for OA publishing.
  • Will a 12-month embargo still be allowed after publication and before an article supported by federal funds has to be made publicly available?

    No, the 12-month embargo will no longer be allowed.

  • How many publications by NC State authors are funded by US federal funding agencies?

    Eric Schares (University of Iowa) found that over 11,000 publications from 2017-2022 by NC State authors were funded by federal grants. View NC State and other institutions’ data: https://ostp.lib.iastate.edu

Public access requirements for research data

Agency guidance documentation

SPARC, a non-profit advocacy organization focused on securing open and equitable access to scholarly research, is closely tracking new agency guidance as it becomes available. Please see SPARC's website for links out to agency-specific documentation.

For more information on navigating agency guidelines for public access to research data, please see our Data Management Guide.

For questions about any of the information contained here, please feel free to contact any of the Library staff listed below.

Librarian(s)