Report on the Meeting of the Committee on Electronic Information and Communication

This is a report on the meeting of the Committee on Electronic Information and Communication (CEIC) of the IMU in Berkeley, December 5, 1999, MSRI, during and after the conference The Future of Mathematical Communication, Berkeley, Dec. 1-5, 1999, see http://msri.org/activities/events/9900/fmc99/index.html for the full record of the conference including overheads and streaming video. The conference was very successful. It was jointly sponsored by the three Canadian research Institutes (CRM, Fields and Pims) and by MSRI, with additiona support from the IMU, AMS, CMS, Springer, Cambridge University Press, Mathematica and Maple. Their support is gratefully acknowledged.

There were roughly 100 participants and 35 speakers from more than a dozen countries representing mathematicians, computer scientists, physicists, educators, librarians, software developers, publishers and many other perspectives. One highlight was a stimulating public symposium held on December 4th. This symposium --- as much of the rest of the meeting --- helped emphasize that we are a small part of a much larger world. In particular, there are three parts to the mathematical literature: commercial journals, freely accessible parts (see below), and all the rest.

The CEIC is a standing committee of the IMU which held its first meeting in Berlin in November 1998 and its second meeting on December 5th, 1999 at Berkeley. It will meet next fall in Vienna. As described in Appendix 1, the CEIC has an ambitious mandate and is now quite advanced in its activity. Some details of the December 5 meeting follow. They give a good sense of the CEIC's preoccupations and of topics discussed at the conference.

The December 5 1999 CEIC Meeting

The morning was a session of the CEIC, open to the general public, with the following lectures: The afternoon was a closed session of CEIC.
Present: Jonathan Borwein (deputy chair, CA), John Ewing (US), Jonas Gomes (Brazil), Wilfrid Hodges (UK), Martin Groetschel (D), Kapil Paranjape (India), Peter Michor (chair, A), David Morrison (US), Alf van der Poorten (AUS), Alexei Zhizhchenco (RU).
Absent: Qin Zhou (China)

The MathNet initiative which was started in Germany will be developed as a worldwide system of access to electronic information and communication. It is based on the use of machine readable metadata for preprints, institutions, persons, etc., which are developed within the frameweork of the `Dublin core metadata initiative'. Contacts are being preserved with the Santa Fee initiative on metadata for preprint servers. See http://www.mathnet.de/ for an entry point into the existing system. A charter for the organizational infrastructure was discussed and will be available on the MathNet site soon. Many thanks are owed to our German colleagues who have been developing MathNet for several years.

It is anticipated that the CEIC will have a robust web site by April and will make a general call for the establishment of secondary home pages and for development of harvestable preprint servers. Prototypes are presently being checked in Vancouver, Rio de Janeiro and elsewhere.

A checklist devoted to copyright issues for authors of mathematical literature is in preparation. This will be continued as an open source intiative, lead by Wilfrid Hodges. See http://www.maths.qmw.ac.uk/~wilfrid/copyrightdoc.pdf

The CEIC discussed whether bundling of small and independent journals should be considered so that they could compete with the large electronic libraries of Elsevier, Springer-Verlag, and Academic Press in consortia negotiations. The European Mathematical Society EMIS (http://www.emis.de) is addressing this already, in freely accessible fashion. The work of EMIS is commended and encouraged by CEIC.

What will happen to the electronic material in the electronic libraries of the commercial publishers? Will the publishers archive this material permanently? Should there be an independent archiving facility somewhere?

The arXiv (http://www.arXiv.org) is a very reliable and technically very competent server for primary physical and mathematical literature, growing out of the Los Alamos preprint server. It is willing to consider reliable archiving for the indefinite future. The work of the arXiv is also commended and applauded by the CEIC.


Appendix 1: Terms of Reference of the CEIC