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UCL Discovery reaches 60 million downloads!

By Naomi, on 27 August 2025

Guest Post by Dominic Allington-Smith (Open Access Publications Manager)

Two fireworks in full explosion of red, pink, and silver colour against the backdrop of a black night sky.

Maryam Khan, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons

UCL Discovery, UCL’s institutional repository, has hit another milestone! UCL Publications Board and the Open Access Team are excited to share that on Friday 18 July, the number of downloads reached the 60 million mark. UCL Discovery is UCL’s open access repository, showcasing and providing access to UCL research outputs from all UCL disciplines. UCL authors currently deposit around 1,100 outputs in the repository every month (average figure for the current academic year).

The 60 millionth download was of the interim report ‘Young people & coastal communities: Local policymaker and practitioner perspectives’ produced by the UCL Coastal Youth Life Chances project led by Professor Avril Keating.  This research project examines how growing up in coastal communities in England impacts the life chances of young people. The report arises from the project team’s A screenshot of the landing page for the publication titled 'Young people & coastal communities: Local policymaker and practitioner perspectives' which was the 60 millionth downloaded title from UCL Discoveryconversations with 50 policymakers and practitioners from around England about their perspectives on the challenges facing young adults aged 15-20.

At the time of writing, UCL Discovery hosts over 193,200 open access publications, comprising mostly self-archived copies of research outputs, but also including doctoral and research master’s theses (contemporary submissions and historic digitisations), and books published by UCL Press.  Since the 50 million downloads milestone in June 2024, the following titles are the highest-downloaded publications for each UCL Faculty, Institute or School. This list continues to reflect the diversity across UCL research:

* These publications are also the highest-downloaded of all time.

Hitting 60 million downloads highlights the reach and potential which comes from sharing research through UCL Discovery. There are a number of ways you can do this, primarily through sharing your Screenshot of the UCL Profiles homepage which has the UCL logo in the top left-hand corner, an image of the UCL portico in the background and 'Explore the UCL community' written in bold in the centre, under which is a search bar. research publications via UCL RPS and Profiles. You might also want to consider sharing other types of outputs such as data, code and software to further enhance the visibility and reproducibility of your work. UCL’s Research Data Management team maintain a guide on best practice for software sustainability, preservation and sharing, and can give further support to UCL researchers as required.

Another year of sharing research, and another incredible milestone – congratulations to everyone involved! Let’s keep it up and continue pursuing open access at UCL to ensure we are reaching the widest audience and having the greatest impact.

 

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RPS and UCL Profiles have been updated

By Rafael, on 17 October 2024

Guest post by Alan Bracey, UCL Open Access Compliance Officer

As we prepare for a full week of events and updates during International Open Access Week, the UCL Open Access team is sharing recent improvements to UCL’s Research Publications Service (RPS) and its public interface, UCL Profiles. Below is a summary of the key changes implemented, including new HTML text entry boxes for easier formatting, refined search and filtering options, and improvements in readability and accessibility. Check it out!

Overview text boxes are now html

We start with one of the most popular feature requests from colleagues at UCL and other institutions, and are very pleased to announce that this has now been added by the supplier.

The text entry boxes in RPS for entering Overview, Research interests, and Teaching summary are now HTML rather than text, and have controls to add formatting and links:

Screenshot of a text editor interface displaying various formatting options with their respective icons: bold, italics, underline, special characters, indentations, bullet points, and hyperlinks. In the text area, the words 'bold', 'italics', 'underline', and 'weblink' are shown with their respective formatting, along with special characters like pound, copyright, one-fourth, and accented letters, to showcase the different formatting options.

Any formatting added here is applied in Profiles.

Better searching and filtering in Profiles

The update brings several improvements to searching and filtering. Firstly, the search algorithm itself has been updated. This means that although users will see fewer results as they add terms, those results should be more relevant, particularly where users are searching for multiple terms or multi-word terms. The supplier is keeping the new algorithm under review, so we welcome feedback on how the search is performing.

Profiles also now highlights where the search terms have been matched to major sections within a profile, helping users to understand the relevance of their results:

Screenshot of the UCL Profiles search interface, featuring a magnifying glass icon and text that reads: 'Your search matched against this person's bio, research interests, and outputs.

Plus, the display of zero search results has also been improved:

Screenshot displaying a search error message for the term 'vwxyz,' indicating no matches were found. It advises the user to broaden their search criteria or browse a general list of experts. A magnifying glass icon represents the search function. Below the message, a prominent 'Browse All Experts' button provides an alternative way to access expert information directly.

A search has also been added to the top of the publication and activity pages, so that users can search a list for content within that list (e.g. search an academic’s publications for an article):

Screenshot of the search interface featuring a prominent 'Search by title' bar at the top for user input. Below, the text '1-6 out of 6' indicates that all six available search results are displayed. While specific article titles or images are not detailed, the layout suggests thumbnail images or content related to the search items are likely present in the page.

The list of filters is now collapsible, making the full list of available filters more prominent and easier to navigate. Highlights also remind users what filters have already been applied, making search results easier to refine:

The screenshot shows the updated filter interface. The filter categories include Department, Fields of Research, and Availability. The user has selected filters that show 1,238 profiles for Collaborative projects and 861 profiles for Conference participation as a speaker or panellist out of a total of 16,809 profiles. The new collapsible list makes all available filters easier to see and highlights active filters, simplifying the process of refining search results

Other changes in Profiles

We are pleased to announce that Profiles has a new font, with a stronger weight and wider spacing, that improves readability:

Screenshot of a bio section from UCL profiles, displaying the updated font and weight for improved readability. Some lines are partially cut off due to the crop. The excerpt highlights an individual’s extensive professional experience in water systems and engineering, with over 25 years in the field

The option to add pronouns has been available in RPS for a while now, but previously they did not display in Profiles. This has been updated so that pronouns added in RPS (on the Account Settings page) show in Profiles, under your name:

Screenshot of a UCL profile showing 'MR Alan Bracey (He/him)' in large serif-style bold font for the name, with the title and gender pronouns in regular, non-bold font.

The X/Twitter icon has also been updated.

Screenshot with two icons with text on the side: A purple paperclip icon labeled "My department page," and a purple "X" icon labeled "X (Twitter).

Other improvements you might notice in RPS

The RPS Edit Profile page (RPS > Edit my Profile) is better spaced out, making it clearer and easier to read. Updates have been made to the overall layout and to profile and field-level privacy controls. Accessibility improvements have also been made, including to the photo uploader.

Note: ‘Position’ and ‘Department’ no longer show in the Edit page, only the RPS ‘View profile’ page, which will help avoid potential confusion as these fields are sourced from HR and cannot be edited in RPS. See our FAQs for details of how to request changes to those fields.

This page used to show embedded publications (and a related graph), professional activities, teaching activities and grants. These have been removed because they were found to be confusing for users. (These tabs are still on the RPS View profile page.)

Screenshot of the UCL Profiles navigation menu with tabs: About, Publications, Professional Activities, Teaching Activities, and Grants. The 'About' section is selected, showing an overview of a civil engineer's specialisation in water and sanitation. A blue ellipse surrounds the entire navigation menu, highlighting changes to improve readability, such as wider spacing between the tabs.

This means there are no shortcuts to Manage publications/professional activities/teaching activities/grants from the Edit profile page. Use the home button (top left of RPS) to return to your home page to edit publications/professional activities/teaching activities. Grants are not editable in RPS, but this data will be improved before it is added to Profiles in future.

We’d love to hear your feedback on these updates and any other features you’d like to see in Profiles! To share your thoughts, please contact UCL’s Open Access Team.