Vice President for Research & Creative Scholarship
Vice President for Research & Creative Scholarship
NIH's Public Access Policy is effective April 7, 2008. Under a new federal law, NIH is now requiring that the author's final version of any peer-reviewed journal article resulting from NIH-funded activities MUST be submitted to the PubMed Central (PMC) repository, where it will be made available to the public within 12 months after the journal article is published
Compliance involves three main areas: (1) Address copyright, (2) Submission of your manuscript to NIH, and (3) Citing PMCID reference numbers in subsequent grant reports and proposals.
You own the original copyrights to materials you write. When a journal agrees to publish your manuscript, publishers ask you to transfer your copyrights to the publisher. Some publishers may ask you to transfer your copyrights when it is first submitted to a journal for review.
UM authors should work with the publisher before any rights are transferred to ensure that all conditions of the NIH Public Access Policy can be met. Authors should avoid signing any agreements with publishers that do not allow the author to comply with the NIH Public Access Policy.
Some publishers already address this NIH policy by filing the final finished article on your behalf. For these journals, you do not need to do anything to fulfill the submission requirement of the NIH Public Access Policy. See http://publicaccess.nih.gov/submit_process_journals.htm for a list of these journals.
If you are not publishing in one of the journals on this list, you must ensure that agreements with your publisher permit the submission of your manuscript to NIH. Resources available from the Office of Research and Sponsored Programs include:
For peer-reviewed manuscripts accepted for publication on or after April 7, 2008, UM authors must submit the final version of the manuscript, and accompanying files, to the NIH Manuscript Submission System (NIHMS).
When your manuscript is submitted to NIH you will receive a NIHMS ID number, and once it is available in PubMed Central, it will be assigned a PMC ID number.
Effective May 25, 2008, you will need to cite the PMC ID or NIHMS ID numbers for any articles you cite in your progress reports, new applications, and renewals. These are only needed for articles accepted for publication on or after April 7, 2008, but you may include PMC ID numbers for articles already in PubMed Central as well.
Resources
| VP Dwyer's letter of March 21, 2008 | Suggested Cover Letter for Author Journal Submission |
NIH Public Access Policy FAQ
Journals that systematically submit articles to PubMed Central
Tutorial on the NIHMS System
Assistance available through UM's Mansfield Library; primary contact: Kim Granath, 243-6017
Office of the Vice President
Research & Creative Scholarship
University Hall 116
(406) 243-6670
Fax: (406) 243-6330