Editing EPrints
There are various reasons why you may want to edit an existing eprint.
- Full text may need to be added when it becomes available,
- alterations may need to be made to the full text when reviewers corrections are
factored in,
- metadata may need to added when the publication details are provided by the publishers
- or errors may need to be corrected in the metadata.
Editing EPrints
Editing an eprint follows exactly the same process as
adding a new eprint.
- However, before you can make corrections to
an eprint record or add full text to it, you need to understand the role of the
workspace and buffer in an EPrint archive.
Three Ways to Edit An EPrint
Enabling Editing Again
The most important rule is that eprints should only be edited when they
are in a user's workspace.
That means that to update an eprint, the user must either
- get someone with editor privileges to move the original eprint into back into their workspace and edit it in situ
- or create a new copy (clone) of the original eprint and edit that instead.
Disclaimer
Of course, your institution may have abandoned editors and disabled the
buffer. In that case, you will be able to directly edit eprints in the
public archive. Such privilege brings great responsibility - be very
careful!
Pros and Cons: Editorial Movement
- The advantage of the first approach is that it is direct and
simple.
- The disadvantage is that it leaves no record of the previous
state of affairs — the archive ceases to be a genuine mechanism
for stable, long-term storage.
- It may have repercussions for external
users whose Web pages link to a particular record,
- For example, an unpublished technical report may suddenly become a journal article with an updated title.
- Furthermore, you may have to wait
some days for the editor to respond to the request.
Pros and Cons: Cloning
The advantage of the second approach is that it maintains the records
in the database, and allows external users to see that a particular
journal article is a later version of a previous technical report.- The
disadvantage is that it potentially leaves multiple records per publication,
all of which will show up in a search.
Rule of Thumb
The method that you use depends on the results that you want for external
users.- You are advised to use the first method only for small revisions of
or additions to the metadata.
- The second
method is much better for major revisions to the article itself.
- You should
also consider whether the original record should be deleted from
the archive to avoid it showing up as an apparent duplicate in search
results.
Procedure for Cloning
The easiest way to copy an eprint is to clone it.
- (You can just create a new blank eprint and type in all the data from scratch, but this is a last resort.)
- You can easily clone an eprint which is already in your
workspace,
- or from your User Homepage, you can click on the "Review Your
Documents in the Archive" button and clone any eprint from that list.
-
The cloning process creates a blank eprint, copies all the original's
metadata, and marks the new eprint as a successor to the old one.
Considering the Cloned Article
Having cloned an eprint, you must then decide whether the original
is still valid.
- This might be the case if the article has undergone
very significant revisions (from a conference presentation to a journal
paper, for example).
- If the edit represents only a change in the
metadata, the original eprint should probably be deleted.
Considering the Cloned Article
Although you can delete eprints in your workspace,
deletions in the archive can only be performed by a user with
editor privileges, so
to have the original record deleted by the editor
click on the "Request Removal" button next to the "Clone" button
in the "Review your Documents in the Archive" list.
Cloning Someone Else's Article
Finally, note that you can only clone eprints which you deposited in the
archive in the first place. If you need to update someone else's eprint
(you may even be an author of the paper in question) you will need to
create a fresh eprint and manually copy all the information across, ensuring
that you mark the new eprint as a successor to the original in Step 2
of the addition process.