INTERNATIONALNUCLEARINFORMATIONSYSTEM(INIS) INISPROGRESSANDACTIVITYREPORT2013 Vienna,Austria,2014 i InternationalNuclearInformationSystem(INIS) Organizingtheworld'snuclearinformation andmakingituniversallyaccessible www.iaea.org/inis @INISsecretariat II Contents INISATAGLANCE .................................................................................................................... iv INISMEMBERS .......................................................................................................................... v MemberStates ...................................................................................................................... v InternationalOrganizations................................................................................................ vi 2013HIGHLIGHTS ..................................................................................................................... 1 INIS ............................................................................................................................................. 3 INISCOLLECTION ..................................................................................................................... 3 BibliographicRecords .......................................................................................................... 3 Non‐conventionalLiterature(NCL) .................................................................................... 4 INISCOLLECTIONSEARCH(ICS) ............................................................................................ 4 PRODUCTSANDSERVICES ...................................................................................................... 5 INISNCLCollectiononDVD ................................................................................................. 5 INISAtomindexFilesviatheIAEAFTPServer .................................................................. 5 PreservationofNon‐conventionalLiterature .................................................................... 5 CAPACITYBUILDING ................................................................................................................ 6 PUBLICATIONS ......................................................................................................................... 6 INISThesaurus ...................................................................................................................... 6 SubjectCategoriesandScopeDescriptions ........................................................................ 7 ManualforSubjectAnalysis ................................................................................................. 7 INISListofJournalTitles ..................................................................................................... 7 NCLGuidelines ...................................................................................................................... 7 COOPERATIONWITHINISMEMBERS .................................................................................... 8 OUTREACHANDPROMOTION ................................................................................................ 8 INISWebsite .......................................................................................................................... 9 PromotionalMaterials.......................................................................................................... 9 ICTDEVELOPMENTPROJECTS ............................................................................................. 10 HUMANRESOURCESANDBUDGET ...................................................................................... 11 APPENDIXES ........................................................................................................................... 12 Fig.1.InputtotheINISCollectionbyCountryofOrigin. ....................................................... 12 Fig.2.InputtotheINISCollectionbyCountryofInput(Graphicalrepresentation)............. 13 Fig.3.InputtotheINISCollectionbyNationalINISCentre(incl.voluntaryinput). ............ 14 Fig.4.InputtotheINISCollection(nationalvs.voluntaryinput). ........................................ 15 Fig.5.InputtotheINISCollection(timelag). ........................................................................ 16 Fig.6.InputtotheINISCollectionbyLiteratureType. .......................................................... 17 Fig.7.InputtotheINISCollectionbySubjectArea. ............................................................... 18 Fig.8.TotalNumberofRecordsandNCL. .............................................................................. 19 Fig.9.InputtotheINISCollectionbyYearofPublication. .................................................... 20 Table1. INISMembershipGrowth‐HistoricalOverview ................................................... 21 Table2. INISCollectionSearchStatistics2013 ................................................................. 23 Table3. INISWebsiteStatistics2013 ................................................................................. 30 Table4. INISMembers’WebsiteStatistics2013 ................................................................ 36 Table5. InputtotheINISCollectionbyCountryofInput.................................................. 40 Table6. NCL2013InputperCountry/InternationalOrganization ................................ 47 Table7. DigitizationoftheINISNCLCollectiononMicrofiche ......................................... 49 III INISATAGLANCE (asof31December2013) 44 years since the IAEA, in cooperation with interested Member States and international organizations, established the International Nuclear Information System (INIS). 152 INIS members — 128 countries and 24 international organizations. 1 main objective — to collect, process and provide access to non‐conventional literature on the peaceful uses of nuclear science and technology. 3 additional objectives: preserve nuclear literature; maintain the INIS Thesaurus as a major tool for describing nuclear information and knowledge in a structured form; and assist Member States in building their nuclear information capacities. 12 INIS staff members supported by 6 SDSG staff. €2.7 million INIS budget in 2013. 8 languages of the INIS Thesaurus: Arabic, Chinese, English, French, German, Japanese, Russian, and Spanish. 30 781 descriptors in the INIS/ETDE Thesaurus; 22 093 valid descriptors and 8 688 forbidden terms. 3.6 million bibliographic records in the INIS Collection. 128 803 added in 2013. 482 949 full‐text documents in the INIS Collection; 322 141 available to the public; 13 678 added in 2013. 700 GB of data in the INIS Collection. 147 255 visits to the INIS Collection and 89 863 unique visitors in 2013. 296 254 unique searches of the INIS Collection and 682 729 web pages views in 2013. 49 500 full‐text documents downloaded in 2013. 5 490 files on www.iaea.org/inis website with 1.5 GB of data. 52 855 visits to the INIS website and 28 242 unique visitors to the INIS website in 2013. 113 506 INIS website page views in 2013. 5 662 PDF documents digitized from the INIS NCL Collection on microfiche in 2013. 347 590 pages digitized from INIS NCL Collection on microfiche in 2013. 18 INIS Information letters sent to members in 2013. 50 Twitter messages sent to 203 followers in 2013. 22 INIS Highlights created and placed on the INIS website in 2013. 2 issues of the Nuclear Information and Knowledge Newsletters published in 2013. IV INISMEMBERS (asof31December2013) MemberStates ALBANIA ALGERIA ARGENTINA ARMENIA AUSTRALIA AUSTRIA AZERBAIJAN BANGLADESH BELARUS BELGIUM BENIN BOLIVIA BOTSWANA, REPUBLIC OF BOSNIA AND HERZOGOVINA BRAZIL BULGARIA BURKINA FASO CAMEROON CANADA CENTRAL AFRICAN REPUBLIC CHILE CHAD CHINA COLOMBIA COSTA RICA CÔTE D'IVOIRE CROATIA CUBA CYPRUS CZECH REPUBLIC DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC OF THE CONGO DENMARK ECUADOR EGYPT EL SALVADOR ESTONIA ETHIOPIA FINLAND FRANCE GEORGIA GABON GERMANY GHANA GREECE GUATEMALA HAITI HUNGARY INDIA INDONESIA IRAN, ISLAMIC REPUBLIC OF IRAQ IRELAND ISRAEL ITALY JAPAN JORDAN KAZAKHSTAN KENYA KOREA, REPUBLIC OF KUWAIT KYRGYZSTAN LATVIA LEBANON LIBYA LITHUANIA LUXEMBOURG MADAGASCAR MALAYSIA MALI MAURITANIA MAURITIUS MEXICO MONGOLIA MOROCCO MOZAMBIQUE MYANMAR NAMIBIA NETHERLANDS NEW ZEALAND NICARAGUA NIGER NIGERIA NORWAY OMAN PAKISTAN PANAMA PARAGUAY PERU PPHILIPPINES PPOLAND PORTUGAL QATAR REPUBLIC OF MOLDOVA ROMANIA RUSSIAN FEDERATION SAUDI ARABIA SENEGAL SERBIA SEYCHELLES SIERRA LEONE SINGAPORE SLOVAKIA SLOVENIA SOUTH AFRICA SPAIN SRI LANKA SUDAN SWEDEN SWITZERLAND SYRIAN ARAB REPUBLIC TAJIKISTAN, REPUBLIC OF THAILAND THE FORMER YUGOSLAV REP. OF MACEDONIA TUNISIA TURKEY UGANDA UKRAINE UNITED ARAB EMIRATES UNITED KINGDOM UNITED REPUBLIC OF TANZANIA UNITED STATES OF AMERICA URUGUAY UZBEKISTAN VENEZUELA VIETNAM YEMEN ZAMBIA ZIMBABWE V InternationalOrganizations AFRICAN UNION ARAB ATOMIC ENERGY AGENCY (AAEA) BRAZILIAN‐ARGENTINE AGENCY FOR ACCOUNTING AND CONTROL OF NUCLEAR MATERIALS (ABACC) COMPREHENSIVE NUCLEAR‐TEST‐BAN TREATY ORGANIZATION (CTBTO) EUROPEAN COMMISSION (EC) EUROPEAN ORGANIZATION FOR NUCLEAR RESEARCH (CERN) FOOD AND AGRICULTURAL ORGANIZATION OF THE UNITED NATIONS (FAO) INTERNATIONAL CENTRE FOR SCIENTIFIC AND TECHNICAL INFORMATION (ICSTI) INTERNATIONAL COMMISSION ON RADIOLOGICAL PROTECTION (ICRP) INTERNATIONAL INSTITUTE FOR APPLIED SYSTEMS ANALYSIS (IIASA) INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATION FOR STANDARDIZATION (ISO) JOINT INSTITUTE FOR NUCLEAR RESEARCH (JINR) MIDDLE EASTERN RADIOISOTOPE CENTRE FOR THE ARAB COUNTRIES (MERRCAC) OECD/NUCLEAR ENERGY AGENCY (NEA) SYNCHROTRON‐LIGHT FOR EXPERIMENTAL SCIENCE AND APPLICATIONS IN THE MIDDLE EAST (SESAME) UNITED NATIONS INDUSTRIAL DEVELOPMENT ORGANIZATION (UNIDO) UNITED NATIONS SCIENTIFIC COMMITTEE ON THE EFFECTS OF ATOMIC RADIATION (UNSCEAR) WORLD COUNCIL OF NUCLEAR WORKERS (WONUC) WORLD ENERGY COUNCIL (WEC) WORLD HEALTH ORGANIZATION (WHO) WORLD METEOROLOGICAL ORGANIZATION (WMO) WORLD NUCLEAR ASSOCIATION (WNA) WORLD NUCLEAR UNIVERSITY (WNU) VI 2013HIGHLIGHTS MEMBERSHIP 128 countries and 24 international organizations are members of INIS. Several Member States highlighted their recognition and appreciation for the role of INIS during the 57th IAEA General Conference, giving INIS further incentive to continue its efforts and generate improvements. INISCOLLECTION INIS added 128 803 records and had its third highest annual input in 44 years. Currently, there is a total of 3 623 201 records. An additional 13 678 NCL full texts (5662 from microfiche, 623 out of print IAEA publications and 7393 from Vol. 44) were prepared and uploaded to the Collection, bringing the number of full‐text documents to 482 949, of which 322 141 are publicly accessible. INISCOLLECTIONSEARCH The INIS Collection is fully indexed and searchable on‐line using the Google based INIS Collection Search (ICS) application. There were over 147 000 visits and 682 000 page views. Further enhancements were made to the ICS and three new versions were released. INIS NCL full texts were indexed by Google Scholar. This significantly increased usage of the INIS Collection worldwide. PRODUCTSANDSERVICES As part of INIS’ efforts to preserve the world’s nuclear literature, over 285 000 electronic full texts have been digitized from its microfiche collection. Since the beginning of the project in 2003, more than 14.1 million pages (359 GB of data), which is about 82% of the total number of available microfiche, have been digitized. Digital preservation of IAEA publications supported by INIS included 105 out of print Technical Reports and Safety and Proceedings Series, covering 41 469 pages. Following an agreement with the IAEA Publications Section, the full texts of 600 out of print books published between 1957 and 1999 were released on the web by INIS. The INIS Secretariat provides ILOs with weekly Atomindex files on the FTP server. CAPACITYBUILDING The INIS Training Seminar was held from 7–11 October 2013 at the IAEA in Vienna. A regional meeting, The Role of the International Nuclear Information System (INIS) in Supporting Nuclear Education and Industry: Regional Cooperation and Knowledge Preservation, was held in cooperation with the National Research Nuclear University NRNU MEPhI, the Russian INIS Centre from 22–24 October in Moscow. PUBLICATIONS A new version of the online INIS Thesaurus was developed, creating a simpler, more user‐friendly interface, consistent with that of the INIS Collection Search. 1 COOPERATIONWITHINISMEMBERS Upon attending the Nuclear Information Technology Forum 2013, 8–9 August, in Shanghai, China, the Head of the INIS Unit held discussions with the INIS Liaison Officer of China. The National INIS Centre of France hosted a training session for a staff member from the Joint Research Centre of the European Commission. OUTREACHANDPROMOTION INIS was included in the IAEA Catalogue of Services for Nuclear Infrastructure Development. An article on the democratization of nuclear information was published in the Online Searcher Journal. A number of presentations were made regarding various aspects of INIS activities at meetings and conferences in Hannover, Geneva, and Bratislava, as well as at the IAEA in Vienna. Two issues of the Nuclear Information and Knowledge Newsletter were published. New INIS promotional materials were prepared. INFORMATIONCOMMUNICATIONTECHNOLOGYDEVELOPMENTPROJECTS An NE News application was released for iPad, iPhone and Android. The security of the INIS Members’ Area was improved by applying the Agency’s Nucleus authentication. A new application, FIBRE+, was released. Redevelopment of the Computer Aided Indexing (CAI) system was launched. HUMANRESOURCESANDBUDGET 12 INIS and 6 SDSG staff members successfully completed all assigned program tasks. The INIS budget for 2013 was €2 693 064. 2 INIS MEMBERSHIP In 2013, INIS had 152 members: 128 countries and 24 international organizations. The INIS Secretariat established contact with several Member States, encouraging them to join INIS. New members are expected to join in the near future (Table 1). INIS in 2013 • 152 INIS members 128 Member States and 24 international organizations • INIS Collection 3 623 201 bibliographic records and 482 949 full text documents INISCOLLECTION BibliographicRecords With the successful completion of Volume 44, 128 803 records were added to the INIS Collection (Figs 1–5 and Table 5), bringing the total to 3 623 201 records. This makes 2013 the third highest year for total annual input in 44 years of INIS. The amount of records input into the INIS Collection has more than doubled annually since 2000. This achievement is the direct result of each participating INIS Member’s contribution throughout the past 44 years. 13 678 full‐text documents were prepared and uploaded to the collection in 2013, bringing the total of full‐text documents to 482 949, of which 322 141 are available to the public (Table 6). Taking into account statistics for the last 10 years, the 2013 INIS Collection growth rate is beyond the yearly average of 100 000 records (chart below and Figs 8–9). Around 76% of all bibliographic records entered into the INIS Collection during 2013 were journal articles, followed by miscellaneous (10%), books (9%), and reports (5%) INIS Collection Annual Input with a (Fig. 6). Number of Input Trendline 150000 100000 50000 0 INIS Collection input by subject area remained similar to previous years. The majority of newly added records covered Nuclear Physics (16%), and Atomic, Molecular and Condensed Matter Physics (16%), followed by Life Sciences (14%) and Nuclear Materials (13%) (Fig. 7). France continued its voluntary identification and coverage of missing conferences and submitted 1317 missing conference records as well as 2049 records from the journal Radiation Protection Dosimetry, with full bibliographic descriptions and abstracts (Fig. 4). Additionally, Syria voluntarily submitted 651 records of input, Cuba 37, India 31, USA 22, Lebanon 16, Slovakia 11, EC 6, and Madagascar 2 (Fig. 4). Several INIS members sent INIS input for the first time, some after many years of no input. The INIS Secretariat continued to perform automated checks on the indexing consistency of Members’ input in order to identify records requiring manual verification. By the end of 2013, INIS subject specialists reviewed and, when necessary, corrected the indexing of 3126 such records. 3 The Conference Authority Tool (CAT) is continuously loaded and updated. This allows the comparison of the Meetings on Atomic Energy database and the IAEA Library holdings with the actual data in the INIS Collection, thus identifying gaps in the coverage of conferences. During 2013, conference proceedings submitted by 73 Members (71 Member States and 2 organizations) were checked. A total of 550 missing conferences were identified. Each Member State received a list of their missing conferences and feedback was received from 18 Member States (including 2 organizations) — Brazil, Canada, Cuba, Egypt, France, Germany, India, Iran, Italy, JINR, Kazakhstan, Malaysia, NEA/OECD, Romania, Singapore, Spain, Sweden and the Ukraine. These additional efforts improved the coverage of conference literature in the INIS Collection. The INIS Secretariat provided ILOs with information on relevant meetings and conferences taking place in their countries, encouraging possible contacts and promotional activities, as well as the inclusion of input of relevant literature to the INIS Collection. Nuclear science and technology are fields of great research interest, resulting in the accumulation of many new journal articles, books, patents, and reports. However, there is a delay in making this literature available to end users. Factors impacting the delay are publication, distribution, processing, and data entry. The delay, or ‘time lag’, represents the difference between the publication date and the date of input to the INIS Collection. The average time lag for all types of literature entered into the INIS Collection during 2013 was 38 months. Journal articles had a time lag of 18 months. (Fig. 5). Non‐conventionalLiterature(NCL) 18 598 NCL records were processed and added to the INIS Collection in 2013. Of these, 10 543 (available from INIS) were linked to full‐text available as 7393 PDFs (Table 6). Although the NCL collection is regarded as the most valuable part of the INIS Collection, only 14.4% of the total input for 2013 was NCL, 56.7% of which were full texts physically residing at the INIS Secretariat (6.3% of all input). Of 10 543 NCL records, 2277 were contributed by the IAEA. The remaining 8266 were contributed by 50 INIS Members, 4 more than in 2012 (Table 6). The ten highest contributors of NCL were responsible for over 76% of the total amount of NCL records. The largest contributor was France, with 22%, followed by the IAEA (21.6%) and Brazil (7.2%). In order to reduce this evident disproportion, INIS Members are strongly encouraged to increase their NCL contributions. INISCOLLECTIONSEARCH(ICS) Significant efforts were made to develop new functionalities for the INIS Collection Search (http://inis.iaea.org/search). Three new versions of the web application were released, improving usability, and extending subject coverage of the Collection. These changes bring the current version of ICS to 4.3. In cooperation with the IAEA’s Nuclear Knowledge Management Section, records from the Meetings on Atomic Energy Database (MoAE) were added to the ICS. For queries performed in ICS, the three most relevant meetings from the MoAE database are displayed at the top of the search results page. Relevant records from the Agency’s Nucleus catalogue of nuclear resources are also displayed. Additionally, in cooperation with the IAEA’s Department of Information Technology, records from the Agency’s NUCLEUS catalogue of nuclear information resources were added. When ICS produces a set of results in response to a user’s query, a new ‘Search other resources’ section is displayed in green at 4 the upper left, along with a link to NUCLEUS. When a user clicks on this link, the NUCLEUS catalogue is searched using the same search terms. Bibliographic records saved in a user’s workspace can now be translated to all official IAEA languages, as well as in German and Japanese. Support for the display of non‐English abstracts has been added. When an abstract is displayed, a language indicator now appears at the top. The number of results for a given query is now fully accurate, rather than an approximation. Further filtering of results from a given query is now possible by selecting Publication Year and/or INIS Volume, as well as Country and/or Language. Users can see the size of associated full‐text PDF files, when such a file is returned in a search result. A customizable set of search results can now be sent to any email address. The range of supported record types in the Advanced Search interface was extended to include Legislative material, Thesis/Dissertation, Standard, and Software. The full‐text link of a lead record to the title of all of its Analytic records was added. Authority records for Authors were added to the advanced interface. Users can now begin typing, and all authors matching the first few letters typed will be displayed. Also, when exporting records to PDF, HTML, Excel, or Print, a hyperlink to each record is included. This gives users an easy way to return to each referenced record. New ‘widgets’ were also developed for inclusion in other websites. The widgets provide a convenient initial search box that automatically limits the search to certain areas of interest. In 2013, two such widgets were created, one for the IAEA’s Fast Reactor Section and another for the IAEA’s Research Reactor Section. Each widget was included on topical web pages. 682 729 pages were viewed during 89 863 visits to the INIS Collection, while unique searches reached 296 254 by the end of 2013. More than 49 500 full‐text documents were downloaded. For the list of INIS Collection Search statistics please see Table 2. Statistics on INIS Collection Search usage are mainly derived from Google Analytics. Information on each visit to ICS is logged, compiled and presented in a variety of useful reports. PRODUCTSANDSERVICES INISNCLCollectiononDVD Nine DVDs were distributed in 2013 to 77 free and 5 paid subscribers, bringing the total volume of data to 414 GB, comprising over 7.5 million pages with links to the full‐text of over 236 500 bibliographic references from the INIS Collection. The INIS Liaison Officers were informed that the INIS NCL on DVD will no longer be distributed as of January 2014. INISAtomindexFilesviatheIAEAFTPServer The INIS Secretariat continued to provide ILOs weekly Atomindex files on the FTP server. PreservationofNon‐conventionalLiterature DigitizationoftheINISmicrofichecollection A total of 5662 full texts consisting of 347 590 pages were digitized from microfiche and added to the INIS Collection in 2013. This was coordinated with Member States. 285 146 electronic full texts have been digitized from microfiche since the beginning of the project in 2003 (14.1 million pages, 359 GB of data). Over 82% of the INIS microfiche collection has been digitized since the beginning of the 5 project. Approximately 2.8 million pages need to be processed before project completion. Depending on available resources, this is expected to be completed within the next two years. The ultimate goal is the complete integration of the microfiche‐based NCL into the INIS Collection and on‐line access provided to the full texts (Table 7). DigitizationofIAEApublications The INIS Secretariat supported several important digital preservation initiatives within the IAEA. This included the digitization of 105 out of print IAEA publications (51 469 pages) from the Technical Reports, and Safety and Proceedings Series. Furthermore, following an agreement with the IAEA Publications Section and different stakeholders within the IAEA, INIS released on the web the full texts of over 600 out of print books published between 1957 and 1999. They are now indexed and accessible through the INIS Collection Search. This activity will continue in 2014. CAPACITYBUILDING Provision of assistance to national INIS centres to facilitate their active participation in all aspects of their INIS operational capabilities continued in 2013. The INIS Secretariat organized the INIS Training Seminar from 7–11 October 2013, at the IAEA Headquarters in Vienna, Austria. The seminar covered all aspects of INIS, offering hands on training in input preparation and submission of non‐conventional literature (NCL), including OCR and digitization, and the INIS Collection Search. It also covered the role of the national INIS centre and the INIS Secretariat, sources for national literature, and INIS promotion and outreach. The program included a tour of the IAEA Library and a presentation on the International Nuclear Library Network (INLN). The seminar consisted of lectures in the form of presentations, followed by practical sessions on the different INIS tools and software which facilitate input preparation. This included the use of Friendly Inputting of Bibliographic Records (FIBRE) and Computer Assisted Indexing (CAI). Participants from 18 INIS Member States attended the seminar, and actively participated in all sessions. Participants from Austria, Bosnia and Herzegovina, China, Cuba, Egypt, Ghana, India, Indonesia, Japan, Republic of Korea, Lebanon, Pakistan, Russian Federation, Slovak Republic, Syrian Arab Republic, Tajikistan, Uruguay, and Vietnam attended the seminar. Their feedback confirmed the high quality of the training course and the information which was provided. PUBLICATIONS INISThesaurus In close cooperation with ETDE, maintenance of the INIS Thesaurus continued, and the fully updated version is now available on the INIS website. It is updated on a regular basis, giving users an opportunity to consult the latest version in a single document. INIS Thesaurus document identification numbers were adapted as well. Monthly supplements to the INIS Thesaurus continue to be maintained and made available on the INIS website. INIS created an on‐line Thesaurus Advisory Group to evaluate proposals for new descriptors and other thesaurus related topics. In 2013, the Thesaurus Advisory Group discussed and agreed on the addition of 95 new descriptors, which are now available in the on‐line thesaurus, in CAI, and in FIBRE+. 6 The national INIS centres of France, Japan, and Germany provided updated translations of the thesaurus, which is now available in all official languages of the IAEA: Arabic, Chinese, English, French, Russian, and Spanish, as well as in German. Translation for the updates of the other languages was solicited from the respective national INIS centres. The publications section of the INIS webpage, including the INIS Thesaurus, continued to be updated, providing a simplified overview and easy access to a multitude of documents. The INIS Thesaurus links are provided to all language versions, the Thesaurus Supplement, the Interactive Multilingual INIS Thesaurus with navigation capabilities, and the multilingual dictionaries without thesaurus hierarchy. In 2013, the on‐line INIS Thesaurus application was updated to provide a simpler, more user‐friendly and tablet‐compatible interface. The new interface also auto‐completes a user’s input. A user need only enter the first few letters of a term, and all matching terms will be displayed. SubjectCategoriesandScopeDescriptions The latest version of the INIS/ETDE Subject Categories and Scope Description (IAEA‐INIS/ETDE‐02, IAEA Vienna, August 2010), is available to users (cataloguers, indexers, abstractors or searchers) on the INIS website ManualforSubjectAnalysis An updated version of the INIS/ETDE Manual for Subject Analysis (IAEA‐INIS/ETDE‐03) was prepared and published in August 2012. It is also available on the INIS website. INISListofJournalTitles The latest version of the INIS List of Journal Titles by Country or International Organization Name was published in September 2012. A new update is being prepared. NCLGuidelines An updated version of the Guidelines on How to submit Full‐text of Non‐conventional Literature (NCL) to INIS was prepared and made available to participants at the INIS Training Seminar in October 2013. 7 COOPERATIONWITHINISMEMBERS In cooperation with the National Research Nuclear University NRNU MEPhI, the Russian INIS Centre, and the INIS Secretariat, the regional meeting, The Role of the International Nuclear Information System (INIS) in Supporting Nuclear Education and Industry: Regional Cooperation and Knowledge Preservation, was held in Moscow from 22–24 October. Over 40 participants from nuclear research institutes and universities, along with representatives from the Commonwealth of Independent States, attended the meeting. The meeting provided a good opportunity to encourage further INIS cooperation among the different nuclear institutions, as well as among the participating CIS countries in the region. The meeting concurred on giving priority to identifying and submitting INIS NCL full texts, and on collecting information related to major nuclear accidents, mainly information related to the Chernobyl accident, and on exploring the possibility and best approach to provide users with access to the records of Referativnyj Zhurnal (RZ). It was also recommended to introduce INIS as a subject in a relevant course at nuclear education institutions. The participants also recommended that the INIS Secretariat acknowledge, through official channels i.e. Permanent Mission and/or National Atomic Energy Authority, the active participation of national INIS centres. More information can be found at: http://www.iaea.org/inis/highlights/2013/news‐20131023.html. At the invitation of the organizing committee of the Nuclear Information Technology (China) Forum 2013 (NITF 2013), 8–9 August in Shanghai, China, the Head of the INIS Unit, gave a presentation about INIS and its main products, and the benefits of active participation. More than 200 experts from the nuclear power industry participated. This was followed by a visit to the national INIS centre of China in Beijing, which included a meeting with the INIS Liaison Officer of China, Director, China Institute of Nuclear Information & Economics, and his team, where a review of national INIS activities and cooperation with the INIS Secretariat resulted in fruitful discussions. Further information can be found at: http://www.iaea.org/inis/highlights/2013/news‐20130823.html. In the spirit of cooperation among INIS Members and the INIS Secretariat, the National INIS Centre of France hosted a training session for a staff member from the Joint Research Centre of the European Commission. The training took place on the premises of the CEA/Saclay Research Centre near Paris, home to the national INIS centre of France, during the second week of October 2013. All aspects of INIS input preparation, from bibliographic descriptions, to subject analysis and the submission of input to INIS, were addressed. Much emphasis was placed on the coverage and input preparation of NCL literature related to eleven international nuclear conferences published by the European Nuclear Society (ENS). At the end of the training, more than 50 records and the corresponding PDF files were submitted to the INIS Secretariat by the EC. Eighteen INIS information letters, covering different aspects of INIS activities, were sent to the ILOs in 2013. OUTREACHANDPROMOTION INIS was included in the IAEA Catalogue of Services for Nuclear Infrastructure Development. The objective of the catalogue is to help Member States identify available IAEA services for national organizations at different stages of the development, or expansion of, a nuclear power programme, and request appropriate IAEA assistance. The Catalogue is based on the IAEA Milestones Approach for nuclear power infrastructure development, documented in Milestones in the Development of a National Infrastructure for Nuclear Power (IAEA Nuclear Energy Series NG‐G‐3.1). It is expected that INIS’ inclusion in the catalogue will facilitate and encourage broader use of INIS products and services, therefore generating further support for INIS. 8 The INIS Secretariat gave a presentation on INIS and its main products and services, highlighting the main benefits to INIS Member States, at the Technical Meeting on Topical Issues of Infrastructure Development: Nuclear Power Project Development in Emerging Nuclear Power States, held in Vienna, Austria, 11–14 February 2013. The briefing was well received by approximately 100 participants. Additionally, several other presentations about INIS and its benefits were delivered to delegates from Members States at IAEA in‐house meetings, and members were encouraged to increase their contributions. An article on the democratization of nuclear information was prepared by the Head of the Nuclear Information Section (NIS), and published in the Online Searcher, a leading journal on information discovery, information technology and strategy. It was featured on the cover page of the November/December issue of the journal. A number of presentations were made regarding various aspects of INIS activities at meetings and conferences in Hannover, Geneva, and Bratislava. INIS played a significant role at the 15th International Conference on Grey Literature held in Bratislava from 2–3 December. Besides making a presentation on digital preservation at INIS and participating at a poster session, the Head of NIS was a member of the Program Committee, as well as a conference moderator. New INIS promotional materials were prepared, including a redesigned INIS poster and INIS roll‐up display, which has already been used at several conferences and meetings in and outside Vienna. INISWebsite The INIS public website and the INIS Members’ Area website are regularly maintained and updated. There are 5490 files on the INIS website containing 1.5 GB of data. Overall, there were more than 28 240 INIS website visitors viewing over 113 000 pages, the most popular of which were INIS contacts, the INIS Collection, and INIS products and services, and INIS history. Visits to the INIS mobile website have increased dramatically, becoming the fourth most visited page. Additional statistics are available in Table 3. While most of the web pages were moved from the restricted INIS Members’ area to the public site, some collections still remain accessible to INIS members only. These include INIS information letters, various statistics, and some legal documents. The webpage with Information letters was the most frequently visited page in the Members’ area. In 2013, there were aver 2000 visits and over 8000 page views (Table 4). INIS continues to promote its activities on social media. Fifty twitter messages were sent to over 190 @INISsecretariat Twitter followers. The number of followers is constantly increasing. Six INIS promotional videos are available through youtube.com. PromotionalMaterials Two issues of the Nuclear Information and Knowledge Newsletter were published. The June issue covered articles on INIS activities; on Fibre+ as the main INIS input tool which has undergone modifications; on the history of digital preservation at INIS; ICS, INLN, and the IAEA Library. The December issue covered the IAEA General Conference and INIS related issues, an interview with the Head of NIS, the INIS Training Seminar, the future of e‐learning in NIS, NE News for iPAD and iPhone apps, as well as some other articles. 9 INIS Liaison Officers were provided with assistance to promote INIS within their national boundaries, and promotional materials were sent upon request in support of such activities. Additionally, the INIS Secretariat provided ILOs with information on relevant meetings and conferences taking place in their countries, encouraging possible contacts and promotional activities and the inclusion of input on relevant literature to the INIS Collection. INIS in the World, found on the INIS website, continued to provide news and information from national INIS centres around the world, such as special events, presentations, training, newsletters and informational materials. In order to encourage Czech users to utilize the on‐line INIS Collection, the Czech Republic INIS Liaison Officer prepared an illustrated guide in Czech on how to use the INIS Collection. The guide was published in the journal entitled Bezpecnost Jaderne Energie 21(59), 2013, No. 1‐2, p. 9‐16. The author translated the guide into English, which the INIS Secretariat shared with the INIS community. ICTDEVELOPMENTPROJECTS Substantial work was done in 2013 in the area of ICT. In August, the NE News application was released for iPad and iPhone. The NE News app allows users to access all of the Department's newsletters, brochures and social media channels through a single portal. This includes the authoritative Nuclear Energy Series of technical publications, whose guidance covers a wealth of topics, ranging from introducing nuclear power to decommissioning. NE News also provides access to the INIS Collection Search. In November, the application was extended to support the Android mobile operating system. The INIS Collection search was enhanced in 2013. Three new versions of the application were released. Records from the Meetings on Atomic Energy database were added, as was the Nucleus catalogue of nuclear databases. The interface was improved in several areas, including the addition of an authority file for authors. Additional support was added for various languages, and automated translations are now available for records saved to a user’s workspace. Two specialized widgets were produced for Fast Reactors and Research Reactors website usage. Enhancements to the NCL Collection Management system included, among other things, improved security, and tools for checking data integrity. The system was refactored to match the new infrastructure, providing an opportunity to improve performance, refine codes, and introduce new frameworks for unit testing and dependency management. A security review of the production and development servers was conducted together with the Division of Information Technology (MTIT). Much effort was spent improving the quality of stored full texts to ensure that they match the related bibliographic records, thus improving the results returned by the ICS. Toward the end of 2013, INIS NCL full texts were indexed by Google Scholar. As of 1 December, records appeared in Scholar, and in the main Google search engine. This has led to greatly increased usage of the INIS Collection Search worldwide. A new version of the on‐line INIS Thesaurus was developed to provide a simpler, more user‐friendly interface, consistent with that of the INIS Collection Search. It is especially well formatted for use with tablet computers. A user simply chooses a language of input, 10 and begins typing in the text box provided. A list of terms matching the user input appears. Descriptors may be entered in seven different languages, and after selecting a term, translations are also available in each language. The security of the INIS Members’ Area was improved and integrated with the Agency’s Nucleus authentication. This allows for personalized login, instead of the previous, insecure generic login. Nucleus is the IAEA’s single sign‐on system, and registered users can be granted access to other Agency databases. A new application, FIBRE+ was released. This replaces the previous WinFIBRE application used for INIS input preparation and introduces two new important functionalities. First, the new application was made compatible with Unicode characters, adding the possibility of more than 2000 possible characters. Second, there is a new capture/edit dialog. This dialog window is available to edit a single record tag at a time. This includes the option to change the case of letters, and to create superscript and subscript. The ICT infrastructure used to support INIS business was further optimized. A project consolidating the server infrastructure was completed in 2013. All servers supporting INIS functions were virtualized for better reliability, sustainability, and fault tolerance. A project was begun to redevelop and improve the CAI system, which works with subject specialists to suggest terms for bibliographic record indexing. The project will continue into 2014. HUMANRESOURCESANDBUDGET At the end of 2013, INIS had 12 staff members. In addition, the Systems Development and Support Group (SDSG) which Grade Male Female Total 1 3 4 works on NIS IT related matters had 6 staff members. Of 12 P 4 4 8 INIS staff members, 8 were general service, and 4 were G Intern 0 professional staff members. The average age of INIS staff was 5 7 12 48. With 9 staff members over the age of 48, the issue of Total proper HR management and planning is very important to secure efficient knowledge and skill transfer, as well as to ensure the smooth continuation of INIS operations. Five external consultants, subject specialists, were recruited to review purchased journal records and assign subject categories and descriptors using the INIS Thesaurus. A number of consultants also helped SDSG to implement all the changes and developments related to the INIS Collection Search. In 2013, funding through the Regular IAEA Budget for Sub‐programme 1.3.4 ‐ International Nuclear Information System (INIS) totalled €2 693 064. This represents a decrease of 18.1% compared to 2011. An additional decrease of over 3% is included in the 2013 budget. 11 APPENDIXES Spain, 0.5% Malaysia, 0.4% United Kingdom United States Brazil, 1.0% Austria, 0.7% Pakistan, 0.7% Ukraine, 1.5% Netherlands Slovakia, 0.4% China Other, 5.8% Hungary, 0.8% IAEA Germany India, 1.8% Japan Russian Federation, 2.5% Korea, Republic of United Kingdom, 24.9% France, 2.8% Korea, Republic of, 3.4% France Russian Federation India Ukraine Japan, 3.8% Brazil United States, 17.3% Germany, 4.2% Hungary Pakistan Austria IAEA, 5.5% Spain Slovakia China, 6.0% Netherlands, 15.9% Malaysia Other Fig.1.InputtotheINISCollectionbyCountryofOrigin. Vol.44(1‐50)2013 12 SY , 1% AT , 1% PK , 1% HU , 1% BR , 1% IN , 2% UA , 2% ES , 1% Other, 7% RU , 2% CN , 3% KR , 3% JP , 4% DE , 4% XA , 64% FR , 5% Fig.2.InputtotheINISCollectionbyCountryofInput(Graphicalrepresentation). Vol.44(1‐50)2013 International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) (XA) 63.74% France (FR) 5.30% Germany (DE) 4.13% Japan (JP) 3.93% Korea, Republic of (KR) 3.46% China (CN) 2.81% Russian Federation (RU) 2.46% India (IN) 1.82% Ukraine (UA) 1.51% Brazil (BR) 1.01% Other 9.83% 13 8000 7000 6000 5000 4000 3000 2000 1000 0 FR DE JP KR CN RU IN UA BR HU PK 2011 2012 AT SY ES SK MY EG XN UZ 2013 Fig.3.InputtotheINISCollectionbyNationalINISCentre(incl.voluntaryinput). Vol.42(2011)–44(2013) 14 140000 120000 100000 80000 60000 40000 20000 0 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 National Input Voluntary Members Voluntary IAEA Fig.4.InputtotheINISCollection(nationalvs.voluntaryinput). Vol.32(2001)–Vol.44(2013) 15 Fig.5.InputtotheINISCollection(timelag). Vol.44(1‐50)2013 B: Book F: Film I: Miscellaneous J: Journal P: Patent R: Report T: Computer medium 16 Reports, 5894 Computer Mediums, 83 Books, 11642 Miscellaneous, 12703 Journals, 98479 Fig.6.InputtotheINISCollectionbyLiteratureType. Vol.44(1‐50)2013 17 Fusion Research Nuclear Fuel Cycle & Technology & Radioactive 4% Waste Environmental & 2% Economic, Earth Sciences 4% Legal & Social 2% Non‐Nuclear Energy Isotopes 1% 1% Safeguards 1% Nuclear Power & Elementary Safety Particle Physics 5% Chemistry 6% 4% Engineering & Instrumentation 11% Nuclear Materials 13% Life & Sciences 14% Atomic, Molecular & Condensed Matter Physics 16% Nuclear Physics 16% Fig.7.InputtotheINISCollectionbySubjectArea. Vol.44(1‐50)2013 Nuclear Power & Safety (S21, S22); Elementary Particle Physics (S72); Engineering & Instrumentation (S33, S42‐S47); Nuclear Materials (S36); Nuclear Physics (S71, S73, S79, S97); Atomic, Molecular & Condensed Matter Physics (S74‐S77); Life & Sciences (S60‐S63); Safeguards (S98); Isotopes (S07); Non‐Nuclear Energy (S01‐S04, S08‐S10, S13‐S17, S20, S24‐S25, S30, S32); Economic, Legal & Social (S29, S96, S99); Environmental & Earth Sciences (S54, S58); Fusion Research & Technology (S70); Nuclear Fuel Cycle & Radioactive Waste (S11, S12); Chemistry (S37, S38) 18 24628 V. 20 (1989) 86143 26001 95562 28627 V. 22 (1991) 91891 26871 88932 24646 V. 24 (1993) 76499 26420 76883 26547 V. 26 (1995) 77045 26614 80486 25871 V. 28 (1997) 80445 21516 67685 26844 V. 30 (1999) 60984 23426 60808 26892 V. 32 (2001) 68886 27388 70652 25655 V. 34 (2003) 86503 24830 104967 29947 V. 36 (2005) 116180 27118 121337 29007 V. 38 (2007) 115971 26945 123116 30312 V. 40 (2009) 108820 29964 133069 25332 V. 42 (2011) 109764 25012 130982 18598 V. 44 (2013) 0 128803 20000 40000 60000 NON‐CONVENTIONAL LITERATURE 80000 100000 120000 140000 TOTAL NUMBER OF RECORDS Fig.8.TotalNumberofRecordsandNCL. Historical Overview Annual breakdown of bibliographic records and NCL in the INIS Collection Total number of bibliographic records per year Total number of NCL records per year 19 Fig.9.InputtotheINISCollectionbyYearofPublication. 20 Table1. INISMembershipGrowth‐HistoricalOverview Year Total (States + Int’l Org) INIS Members 1969 25 (23 + 2) Argentina, Australia, Austria, Belarus, Canada, CSSR, Denmark, France, Hungary, India, Israel, Japan, Korea Rep. of, Mexico, Norway, Pakistan, Russian Federation, South Africa, Sweden, UK, Ukraine, USA, Vietnam + FAO, IAEA 1970 50 (38 + 12) Belgium, Brazil, Bulgaria, Egypt, Finland, Germany, Italy, Netherlands, New Zealand, Philippines, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Thailand, Yugoslavia + CERN, EC, ICRP, ISO, OAU, OECD‐NEA, UNSCEAR, WEC, WHO 1971 51 (39 + 12) Switzerland 1972 56 (44 + 12) Bangladesh, Chile, Peru, Spain, Turkey 1973 57 (44 + 13) JINR 1974 60 (47 + 13) DDR. Indonesia, Iran 1975 61 (48 + 13) Iraq 1976 64 (51 + 13) Algeria, Ghana, Ireland 1977 66 (53 + 13) Cameroon, Venezuela 1978 75 (62 + 13) Democratic Republic of Congo, Ecuador, Kuwait, Madagascar, Malaysia, Mali, Qatar, Sri Lanka, Zambia 1979 77 (64 + 13) Colombia, D.P.R. Korea 1980 79 (66 + 13) Cuba, Greece 1981 83 (69 + 14) Libya, Paraguay, Syria + IIASA 1982 83 (69 + 14) — 1983 86 (72 + 14) Saudi Arabia, Nigeria, Guatemala 1984 87 (73 + 14) China 1985 88 (74 + 14) Uruguay 1986 88 (74 + 14) — 1987 89 (75 + 14) Panama 1988 93 (78 + 15) Costa Rica, Morocco, Jordan + UNIDO 1989 94 (79 + 15) Mongolia 1990 94 (79 + 15) DDR ceased, Sudan joined 1991 96 (80 + 16) Albania + AAEA 1992 98 (81 + 17) Bolivia + ICSTI, WMO 1993 103 (86 + 17) Nicaragua, Slovenia, Slovakia, Kenya, Ethiopia 1994 105 (88 + 17) Croatia, Lebanon and Lithuania joined, D.P.R. Korea withdrew 1995 111 (94 + 17) Armenia, Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, Myanmar, Estonia, Tunisia 21 Year Total (States + Int’l Org) INIS Members 1996 116 (99 + 17) The former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, Republic of Cyprus, Singapore, Yemen, Uganda 1997 118 (101 + 17) Latvia, Republic of Moldova 1998 122 (103 + 19) Senegal, United Arab Emirates + CTBTO, WONUC 1999 122 (103 + 19) — 2000 122 (103 + 19) — 2001 122 (103 + 19) — 2002 127 (108 + 19) Republic of Tajikistan, El Salvador, Niger, Azerbaijan, Georgia 2003 129 (110+ 19) United Rep. of Tanzania, Mauritius 2004 130 (111 + 19) Botswana 2005 136 (114 + 22) Haiti, Kyrgyz Republic, Burkina Faso + MERRCAC, WNA, WNU 2006 140 (117 + 23) Central African Republic, Namibia and Luxembourg + ABACC 2007 141 (118 + 23) Seychelles 2008 143 (120 + 23) Mozambique, Zimbabwe 2009 146 (122 + 24) Côte d'Ivoire, Sierra Leone + SESAME 2010 148 (124 +24) The Sultanate of Oman, Benin 2011 151 (127+24) Republic of Chad, the Islamic Republic of Mauritania, the Gabonese Republic 2012 152 ( 128+24) Bosnia and Herzegovina 22 Table2. INISCollectionSearchStatistics2013 http://inis.iaea.org/search Unique visitors 89 863 Visits 147 266 Unique page views 296 254 Page views 682 729 No. Country/Territory Unique Unique Visitors Visits Total Unique Searches Page views 1. United States 8939 13325 20572 41077 2. Russia 7215 9694 13123 24418 3. India 5407 8018 12202 24789 4. Japan 5380 12081 22866 54232 5. Brazil 5191 9271 18464 36367 6. France 3658 7790 17622 38767 7. (not set) 3366 3788 5233 7544 8. Indonesia 3185 4097 5718 8012 9. South Korea 3026 4354 6284 12825 10. Turkey 2921 3921 4492 8772 11. Ukraine 2266 2980 3892 6767 12. United Kingdom 2135 3026 4573 9864 13. Germany 1979 2653 3883 7883 14. Egypt 1880 3704 4548 13430 15. Canada 1602 3487 6098 15836 16. Italy 1384 1821 2455 6564 17. Poland 1344 1922 2374 4519 18. Spain 1309 1725 2417 4947 19. Austria 1204 8105 75468 224506 20. Iran 1198 1946 3356 6393 21. Malaysia 1174 1660 2244 4029 22. Thailand 1090 1311 1579 2557 23. Mexico 1001 1537 2127 3693 24. Argentina 990 2311 4873 10891 25. Algeria 953 1235 1850 3494 26. Pakistan 782 1147 1754 3883 23 No. Country/Territory Unique Unique Visitors Visits Total Unique Searches Page views 27. Morocco 689 915 1198 2119 28. Tunisia 679 877 1162 1964 29. Sweden 671 1430 2335 6872 30. Serbia 663 922 1331 2534 31. Belarus 633 971 1688 3609 32. Czech Republic 608 1224 2281 5383 33. Kazakhstan 602 749 868 1205 34. Australia 598 795 1063 2127 35. Slovakia 579 853 1148 2339 36. Netherlands 573 693 891 1526 37. Taiwan 567 651 799 1465 38. Belgium 536 806 1108 2379 39. Peru 535 804 1108 3156 40. Israel 533 744 1057 2585 41. Romania 528 851 1533 3798 42. Bulgaria 509 806 1401 2887 43. Portugal 492 580 707 1225 44. Columbia 436 647 802 1457 45. Saudi Arabia 430 548 693 1349 46. Finland 428 822 1669 3173 47. Switzerland 417 590 866 2140 48. Chile 347 573 847 1948 49. Iraq 324 460 670 1224 50. Vietnam 300 366 445 768 51. Philippines 296 419 578 984 52. Greece 262 329 408 792 53. Croatia 251 348 427 725 54. South Africa 231 313 425 808 55. China 226 720 1824 3700 56. Bosnia and Herzegovina 211 301 386 776 57. Norway 210 295 435 869 24 No. Country/Territory Unique Unique Visitors Visits Total Unique Searches Page views 58. Hungary 207 301 478 1074 59. Singapore 197 302 532 817 60. Macedonia (FYROM) 188 249 291 497 61. Nigeria 181 261 306 553 62. Syria 177 358 554 1278 63. Uruguay 170 531 1239 3668 64. United Arab Emirates 167 210 238 408 65. Armenia 166 194 168 296 66. Ecuador 160 200 238 487 67. Denmark 159 197 235 413 68. Hong Kong 155 184 223 392 69. Slovenia 154 227 301 887 70. Moldova 149 277 440 1196 71. Azerbaijan 139 191 288 541 72. Venezuela 138 165 203 372 73. Sudan 133 652 1472 3972 74. Ghana 123 514 1132 1613 75. Ireland 122 158 198 321 76. Jordan 116 168 190 373 77. Ethiopia 111 129 163 260 78. Lithuania 108 127 165 316 79. Costa Rica 104 258 643 1321 80. Uzbekistan 100 138 167 262 81. Georgia 84 109 135 210 82. Libya 71 288 614 1164 83. Bangladesh 70 90 112 165 84. Sri Lanka 70 76 84 121 85. New Zealand 70 176 160 514 86. Lebanon 64 77 83 137 87. Latvia 64 78 91 139 88. Madagascar 61 132 173 268 25 No. Country/Territory Unique Unique Visitors Visits Total Unique Searches Page views 89. Estonia 55 68 94 214 90. Oman 53 61 66 114 91. Tajikistan 50 104 174 211 92. Cuba 49 143 321 565 93. Kyrgyzstan 48 53 55 75 94. Qatar 45 64 81 156 95. Yemen 45 63 106 190 96. Puerto Rico 42 49 51 70 97. Tanzania 42 52 62 135 98. Montenegro 40 42 45 66 99. Bolivia 39 46 58 95 100. Dominican Republic 36 44 57 81 101. Kenya 36 49 64 94 102. Mongolia 35 44 48 82 103. Myanmar (Burma) 33 44 64 103 104. Cameroon 32 45 57 98 105. Palestine 32 39 36 56 106. Kuwait 31 46 46 99 107. Senegal 31 35 42 53 108. Cyprus 29 33 52 105 109. Kosovo 28 34 40 53 110. Albania 27 27 28 46 111. Nepal 26 48 72 139 112. Côte d’Ivoire 25 33 35 60 113. Angola 23 29 38 75 114. Malta 22 30 53 107 115. Cambodia 21 21 24 38 116. Guatemala 18 18 19 21 117. Uganda 18 22 31 53 118. Zimbabwe 18 25 36 51 119. Luxembourg 17 21 34 48 26 No. Country/Territory Unique Unique Visitors Visits Total Unique Searches Page views 120. Niger 16 61 157 393 121. Trinidad and Tobago 16 16 23 37 122. Laos 15 19 21 26 123. Panama 15 30 47 89 124. Bahrain 14 28 31 61 125. Benin 14 19 27 41 126. Jamaica 14 16 14 24 127. Zambia 14 16 24 54 128. Congo (DRC) 13 18 22 51 129. Mozambique 13 17 18 34 130. Paraguay 13 13 19 25 131. El Salvador 13 14 15 22 132. Honduras 12 17 25 31 133. Burkina Faso 11 11 12 12 134. Iceland 11 14 17 30 135. Nicaragua 11 12 13 30 136. Mauritius 10 12 18 34 137. Afghanistan 8 12 14 22 138. Gabon 8 11 42 116 139. Mali 8 9 10 12 140. Namibia 8 9 10 19 141. Mauritania 7 7 7 9 142. Réunion 7 7 7 11 143. Suriname 6 7 8 14 144. Turkmenistan 6 7 8 10 145. Haiti 5 5 5 6 146. Rwanda 5 5 9 19 147. Botswana 4 5 5 7 148. Curaçao 4 6 7 12 149. Guinea 4 5 5 6 150. Brunei 3 6 6 10 27 No. Country/Territory Unique Unique Visitors Visits Total Unique Searches Page views 151. Cape Verde 3 3 3 3 152. Guadeloupe 3 5 8 11 153. Guyana 3 3 4 7 154. Lesotho 3 4 4 9 155. Macau 3 4 5 11 156. Timor‐Leste 3 3 3 3 157. Åland Islands 2 3 4 7 158. Barbados 2 2 3 4 159. Belize 2 2 2 4 160. Djibouti 2 2 2 4 161. Jersey 2 2 2 3 162. Comoros 2 2 2 2 163. Monaco 2 4 3 6 164. New Caledonia 2 2 3 5 165. French Polynesia 2 2 2 2 166. Somalia 2 2 2 2 167. Togo 2 2 3 3 168. Andorra 1 1 1 1 169. Aruba 1 1 1 1 170. Bermuda 1 1 1 3 171. Bahamas 1 1 1 1 172. Bhutan 1 1 1 1 173. Congo (Republic) 1 1 1 1 174. Eritrea 1 2 5 9 175. Fiji 1 1 1 2 176. French Guiana 1 1 1 1 177. Isle of Man 1 1 1 1 178. Liechtenstein 1 1 1 1 179. Saint Martin 1 2 2 2 180. Martinique 1 1 1 1 181. Malawi 1 1 1 2 28 No. Country/Territory Unique Unique Visitors Visits Total Unique Searches Page views 182. Papua New Guinea 1 1 1 1 183. Palau 1 1 1 2 184. Svalbard and Jan Mayen 1 1 1 3 185. Sierra Leona 1 1 1 1 186. Saint Maarten 1 1 1 4 187. Saint Vincent and the Grenadines 1 1 1 1 188. British Virgin Islands 1 1 1 3 189. Vanuatu 1 1 1 3 190. Mayotte 1 1 2 29 Table3. INISWebsiteStatistics2013 http://www.iaea.org/inis Unique visitors 28 242 Visits 52 855 Unique page views 80 345 Page views 113 506 No. Country/Territory Unique Unique Visitors Visits Unique page Page views views 1. United States 3821 4647 6061 8324 2. India 2799 3555 7112 10614 3. Austria 2077 6788 12945 21465 4. Japan 1961 2871 4043 5883 5. France 1484 2691 3391 4655 6. Brazil 1438 2127 2654 3392 7. Germany 1188 1370 1744 2181 8. China 1124 1559 2162 2757 9. United Kingdom 1048 1276 1688 2210 10. Russia 778 1988 2787 4113 11. Nigeria 775 874 1004 1064 12. Canada 754 1081 1510 1979 13. South Korea 638 1094 1441 1913 14. Iran 585 947 1566 2374 15. Malaysia 576 937 2035 2717 16. Mexico 496 718 1064 1370 17. (not set) 486 597 1203 1569 18. Poland 445 552 728 948 19. Italy 429 506 798 1024 20. Spain 413 487 694 902 21. Egypt 402 667 940 1342 22. Argentina 380 551 799 1036 23. Benin 362 390 423 447 24. Côte d’Ivoire 355 367 490 506 25. South Africa 355 387 480 576 26. Czech Republic 324 593 907 1323 27. Sweden 317 515 697 948 30 No. Country/Territory Unique Unique Visitors Visits Unique page Page views views 28. Australia 315 370 495 602 29. Indonesia 310 652 1201 1818 30. Ghana 285 450 592 740 31. Peru 272 304 368 433 32. Pakistan 258 359 618 921 33. Turkey 255 306 447 571 34. Belgium 243 331 459 599 35. Switzerland 229 322 458 561 36. Bulgaria 224 449 647 872 37. Romania 222 327 491 613 38. Morocco 218 285 390 606 39. Ukraine 215 324 515 667 40. Chile 204 235 269 33 41. Algeria 204 243 409 549 42. Netherlands 198 215 318 384 43. Finland 186 298 420 539 44. Belarus 180 220 247 387 45. Thailand 173 218 305 384 46. Ireland 171 211 258 322 47. Senegal 149 152 166 171 48. Philippines 148 202 291 391 49. Saudi Arabia 148 164 217 258 50. Costa Rica 139 187 281 401 51. Sudan 131 373 512 733 52. Iraq 124 152 192 245 53. Croatia 123 143 178 219 54. Hungary 121 164 270 439 55. Taiwan 121 133 194 261 56. Madagascar 119 332 360 570 57. Slovakia 114 186 294 446 58. Israel 111 155 250 366 31 No. Country/Territory Unique 59. Burkina Faso 102 109 131 147 60. Greece 100 110 136 189 61. United Arab Emirates 99 108 140 177 62. Singapore 98 130 168 217 63. Libya 95 370 791 1128 64. Columbia 90 116 153 204 65. Bangladesh 84 93 121 133 66. Macedonia (FYROM) 83 139 251 399 67. Tunisia 81 124 218 267 68. Serbia 78 118 194 286 69. Tanzania 78 89 118 154 70. Vietnam 75 98 148 191 71. Hong Kong 72 78 102 125 72. Norway 72 90 150 217 73. Portugal 70 77 116 145 74. Jordan 60 80 136 177 75. Togo 58 61 72 78 76. Boznia and Herzegovina 56 70 103 136 77. Lebanon 56 63 139 243 78. Moldova 56 82 115 140 79. Estonia 55 62 79 112 80. Slovenia 55 69 88 120 81. Denmark 53 65 89 115 52 98 233 376 51 52 67 76 82. Unique Visitors Visits Unique page Page views views 83. Syria Ecuador 84. Lithuania 50 60 72 84 85. Cuba 49 99 145 172 86. Kenya 48 88 151 196 87. Uruguay 43 103 262 405 88. Venezuela 42 47 64 81 89. Georgia 40 148 236 360 32 No. Country/Territory Unique Unique Visitors Visits Unique page Page views views 90. Cambodia 40 44 52 57 91. Sri Lanka 35 40 92 125 92. Kazakhstan 34 43 77 104 93. New Zealand 34 54 88 133 94. Mongolia 29 31 49 62 95. Niger 27 259 352 485 96. Albania 26 35 47 80 97. Honduras 25 25 26 28 98. Qatar 25 28 49 74 99. Armenia 23 29 49 53 100. Azerbaijan 22 38 113 206 101. Dominican Republic 22 24 32 46 102. Latvia 20 26 31 35 103. Yemen 19 19 27 43 104. Kuwait 18 18 20 21 105. Guinea 17 19 25 29 106. Mauritius 17 24 32 45 107. Uzbekistan 17 38 87 122 108. Namibia 15 17 25 41 109. Tajikistan 15 18 70 113 110. Bolivia 14 15 44 83 111. Uganda 14 22 42 54 112. Bahrain 13 15 17 17 113. Cameroon 13 16 28 30 114. Guatemala 13 13 14 18 115. Ethiopia 12 12 20 29 116. Mozambique 12 14 32 34 117. Oman 11 11 12 12 118. Paraguay 10 10 14 19 119. Botswana 9 9 15 17 120. Gambia 9 9 10 10 33 No. Country/Territory Unique Unique Visitors Visits Unique page Page views views 121. Palestine 9 10 17 18 122. Afghanistan 8 8 20 25 123. Panama 8 14 15 18 124. Cyprus 7 8 8 11 125. Jamaica 7 7 7 10 126. Malta 7 7 7 8 127. El Salvador 7 7 8 10 128. Congo (DRC) 6 6 7 11 129. Haiti 6 7 12 19 130. Luxembourg 6 6 10 14 131. Myanmar (Burma) 6 9 10 14 132. Nepal 6 12 37 80 133. Nicaragua 5 7 16 22 134. Puerto Rico 5 5 6 7 135. Zambia 5 6 9 13 136. Zimbabwe 5 7 12 12 137. Mali 4 5 7 7 138. Angola 3 3 3 3 139. Central African Republic 3 3 5 5 140. Iceland 3 4 4 7 141. Laos 3 3 3 3 142. Liechtenstein 3 4 5 7 143. Sierra Leone 3 3 3 3 144. Bahamas 2 3 3 5 145. Mauritania 2 2 5 7 146 Malawi 2 2 3 4 147. Chad 2 2 3 3 148. Kosovo 2 2 4 6 149. Andorra 1 1 1 1 150. Aruba 1 1 1 1 151. Burundi 1 1 4 9 34 No. Country/Territory Unique Unique Visitors Visits Unique page Page views views 152. Brunei 1 1 2 2 153. Cape Verde 1 1 1 1 154. Curaçao 1 1 1 1 155. Eritrea 1 1 1 1 156. Greenland 1 1 1 1 157. Guam 1 1 1 1 158. Guyana 1 1 1 1 159. Isle of Man 1 1 1 1 160. Jersey 1 2 4 4 161. Kyrgyzstan 1 1 3 6 162. Lesotho 1 1 1 1 163. Monaco 1 3 3 4 164. Montenegro 1 1 1 1 165. Réunion 1 1 1 1 166. Rwanda 1 1 7 10 167. Seychelles 1 1 1 1 168. Suriname 1 1 1 1 169. Swaziland 1 1 1 1 170. Trinidad and Tobago 1 1 1 1 35 Table4. INISMembers’WebsiteStatistics2013 http://www.iaea.org/INIS/Members‐area Unique visitors 1235 Visits 2085 Unique page views 4837 Unique Visitors Visits Page views 8131 No Country/Territory Unique Unique page views Page views 1. Austria 181 506 1271 2236 2. India 108 114 162 252 3. United States 66 70 104 137 4. Malaysia 57 78 139 204 5. Japan 52 103 236 386 6. Iran 40 59 123 351 7. Russia 35 56 89 118 8. China 34 49 135 207 9. France 30 39 92 131 10. Brazil 29 61 146 232 11. Germany 25 31 58 83 12. Argentina 21 27 105 195 13. Mexico 21 23 34 46 14. South Korea 20 30 60 71 15. Canada 18 20 45 60 16. Egypt 18 39 89 128 17. Pakistan 18 33 80 163 18. Ghana 16 16 34 54 19. Bulgaria 15 22 71 93 20. Spain 14 17 28 38 21. Indonesia 14 36 130 253 22. Madagascar 14 15 52 64 23. Niger 14 93 231 393 24. Nigeria 13 13 19 23 25. Italy 11 14 41 68 26. Switzerland 10 19 68 209 27. Côte d’Ivoire 10 10 10 10 28. Macedonia (FYROM) 9 16 52 81 36 No Country/Territory Unique 29. Poland 9 13 47 94 30. Ukraine 8 12 42 63 31. (not set) 10 10 13 14 32. Belgium 9 14 29 36 33. Costa Rica 9 9 20 26 34. Czech Republic 9 13 13 19 35. United Kingdom 9 9 12 12 36. Georgia 9 22 40 54 37. Lebanon 8 8 12 14 38. Sweden 8 13 34 59 39. Turkey 8 10 23 37 40. Australia 7 9 14 17 41. Colombia 7 10 22 28 42. Kenya 7 16 70 159 43. Serbia 7 11 21 35 44. Syria 7 23 68 119 45. Thailand 7 7 22 27 7 7 9 9 6 14 65 95 46. Unique Visitors Visits Unique page views Page views 47. South Africa Algeria 48. Libya 6 13 37 61 49. Romania 6 9 13 18 50. Tunisia 6 7 10 20 51. Uruguay 6 20 97 179 52. Bosnia and Herzegovina 5 5 17 31 53. Finland 5 5 10 15 54. Israel 5 5 5 8 55. Taiwan 5 5 5 5 56. United Arab Emirates 4 4 5 5 57. Jordan 4 4 10 12 58. Morocco 4 12 34 59 59. Netherlands 4 4 4 4 37 No Country/Territory Unique Unique Visitors Visits Unique page views Page views 60. Peru 4 4 15 21 61. Philippines 4 6 8 13 62. Sudan 4 6 10 13 63. Slovakia 4 4 5 5 64. Uganda 4 7 26 46 65. Vietnam 4 5 19 28 66. Bangladesh 3 3 7 9 67. Cuba 3 8 16 19 68. Dominican Republic 3 3 3 3 69. Ireland 3 4 5 5 70. Kazakhstan 3 4 11 16 71. Sri Lanka 3 5 5 8 72. Norway 3 4 7 17 73. Portugal 3 3 4 4 74. Singapore 3 4 8 9 75. Afghanistan 2 2 2 2 76. Azerbaijan 2 3 3 3 77. Belarus 2 2 2 2 78. Denmark 2 3 12 20 79. Estonia 2 2 10 15 80. Hong Kong 2 2 2 2 81. Hungary 2 17 65 144 82. Mongolia 2 2 2 2 83. Nicaragua 2 2 2 3 84. New Zealand 2 3 4 5 85. Qatar 2 2 2 4 86. Saudi Arabia 2 2 2 2 87. Slovenia 2 2 6 10 88. Tajikistan 2 2 8 11 89. Uzbekistan 2 4 13 26 90. Yemen 2 2 19 37 91. Armenia 1 1 1 1 38 No Country/Territory Unique Unique Visitors Visits Unique page views Page views 92. Burkina Faso 1 1 1 1 93. Bolivia 1 1 3 8 94. Congo (DRC) 1 1 1 1 95. Ecuador 1 1 1 1 96. Ethiopia 1 1 1 1 97. Croatia 1 1 1 2 98. Jamaica 1 1 1 1 99. Cambodia 1 1 1 2 100. Kuwait 1 1 1 1 101. Latvia 1 1 2 2 102. Moldova 1 1 8 11 103. Mali 1 1 1 1 104. Malta 1 1 1 1 105. Mauritius 1 1 1 2 106. Namibia 1 1 1 2 107. Nepal 1 1 1 1 108. Panama 1 1 1 1 109. Paraguay 1 1 1 1 110. Togo 1 1 1 1 111. Tanzania 1 2 15 24 112. Venezuela 1 1 2 3 113. Kosovo 1 1 1 2 114. Zambia 1 2 2 3 39 Table5. InputtotheINISCollectionbyCountryofInput Vol. 44 (1‐50) 2013 ‐ Total No. of Records 128 803 Country CC Records African Union (OAU) XO 0 Albania AL 0 Algeria DZ 0 Arab Atomic Energy Agency (AAEA) XH 32 Argentina AR 203 Armenia AM 100 Australia AU 101 Austria AT 867 Azerbaijan AZ 420 Bangladesh BD 0 Belarus BY 253 Belgium BE 8 Benin BJ 0 Bolivia, Plurinational State of BO 0 Bosnia and Herzegovina BA 0 Botswana BW 0 Brazil BR 1 296 Brazilian‐Argentine Agency for Accounting and Control of Nuclear Materials (ABACC) QP 0 Bulgaria BG 403 Burkina Faso BF 0 Cameroon CM 0 Canada CA 271 Central African Republic CF 0 Chad TD 0 40 Country CC Records Chile CL 50 China CN 3 623 Colombia CO 118 Comprehensive Nuclear‐Test‐Ban Treaty Organization (CTBTO) XQ 0 Congo, The Democratic Republic of the CD 0 Costa Rica CR 71 Cote d'Ivoire CI 0 Croatia HR 87 Cuba CU 184 Cyprus CY 0 Czech Republic CZ 121 Denmark DK 63 Ecuador EC 0 Egypt EG 500 El Salvador SV 0 Estonia EE 0 Ethiopia ET 0 European Commission (EC) XE 45 European Organization for Nuclear Research (CERN) XC 0 Finland FI 112 Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) XF 0 France FR 6 823 Gabonese Republic GA 0 Georgia GE 1 Germany DE 5 316 41 Country CC Records Ghana GH 69 Greece GR 0 Guatemala GT 0 Haiti HT 0 Hungary HU 1 014 India IN 2 338 Indonesia ID 341 International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) XA 82 105 International Centre for Scientific and Technical Information (ICSTI) XM 0 International Commission on Radiological Protection (ICRP) XR 0 International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis (IIASA) XI 0 International Organization for Standardization (ISO) XS 0 Iran, Islamic Republic of IR 161 Iraq IQ 0 Ireland IE 14 Israel IL 104 Italy IT 385 Japan JP 5 064 Joint Institute for Nuclear Research (JINR) XJ 160 Jordan JO 13 Kazakhstan KZ 0 Kenya KE 0 Korea, Republic of KR 4 455 Kuwait KW 0 Kyrgyzstan KG 0 42 Country CC Records Latvia LV 0 Lebanon LB 82 Libya LY 108 Lithuania LT 0 Luxembourg LU 0 Macedonia, The Former Yugoslav Republic of MK 81 Madagascar MG 17 Malaysia MY 509 Mali ML 0 Mauritania, Islamic Republic of MR 0 Mauritius MU 0 Mexico MX 140 Middle Eastern Radioisotope Centre for the Arab Countries (MERRCAC) QQ 0 Moldova, Republic of MD 131 Mongolia MN 0 Morocco MA 0 Mozambique MZ 0 Myanmar MM 25 Namibia NA 0 Netherlands NL 3 New Zealand NZ 20 Nicaragua NI 0 Niger NE 7 Nigeria NG 20 Norway NO 37 43 Country CC Records Nuclear Energy Agency of the OECD (NEA) XN 482 Oman OM 0 Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) XP 0 Pakistan PK 924 Panama PA 0 Paraguay PY 0 Peru PE 15 Philippines PH 34 Poland PL 0 Portugal PT 0 Qatar QA 0 Romania RO 43 Russian Federation RU 3 167 Saudi Arabia SA 0 Senegal SN 0 Serbia RS 30 Seychelles SC 0 Sierra Leone SL 0 Singapore SG 20 Slovakia SK 561 Slovenia SI 0 South Africa ZA 0 Spain ES 672 Sri Lanka LK 0 Sudan SD 110 44 Country CC Records Sweden SE 279 Switzerland CH 73 Synchrotron‐light for Experimental Science and Applications in the Middle East (SESAME) QR 0 Syrian Arab Republic SY 681 Tajikistan TJ 172 Tanzania, United Republic of TZ 0 Thailand TH 0 Tunisia TN 0 Turkey TR 0 Uganda UG 3 Ukraine UA 1 945 United Arab Emirates AE 0 United Kingdom GB 2 United Nations (UN) XU 0 United Nations Industrial Development Organisation (UNIDO) XT 0 United States US 353 Uruguay UY 220 Uzbekistan UZ 437 Venezuela, Bolivarian Republic of VE 0 Viet Nam VN 109 World Council of Nuclear Workers (WONUC) XV 0 World Energy Council (WEC) XX 0 World Health Organization (WHO) XW 0 World Meteorological Organization (WMO) XK 0 World Nuclear Association (WNA) QM 0 45 Country CC Records World Nuclear University (WNU) QN 0 Yemen YE 0 Zambia ZM 0 Zimbabwe ZW 0 Total: 128 803 46 Table6. NCL2013InputperCountry/InternationalOrganization Country / International organization Bib. records with NCL in INIS Collection PDF files France 2380 1370 International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) 2277 1495 Brazil 757 757 Russian Federation 489 4 Nuclear Energy Agency of the OECD (NEA) 461 142 Japan 438 252 Germany 420 420 Slovakia 327 239 Indonesia 279 279 Malaysia 202 202 Uzbekistan 199 199 Argentina 165 160 Belarus 149 149 Korea, Republic of 146 146 Uruguay 140 119 Ukraine 134 134 Canada 123 66 Egypt 122 122 Sudan 110 110 Bulgaria 107 107 Israel 104 1 United States 101 101 Sweden 90 90 Croatia 87 87 Pakistan 85 85 Joint Institute for Nuclear Research (JINR) 73 73 Switzerland 70 70 Czech Republic 56 56 Viet Nam 55 2 Finland 55 55 European Commission (EC) 45 12 Moldova, Republic of Mexico 37 37 37 37 Norway Serbia 31 30 31 30 Tajikistan Denmark 29 28 29 28 Myanmar Spain 25 22 25 22 47 Country / International organization Syrian Arab Republic India PDF files 13 12 13 12 Peru Ireland 9 7 1 7 Niger Netherlands 4 3 4 3 Arab Atomic Energy Agency (AAEA) Madagascar 3 2 3 2 Uganda Philippines 2 1 2 1 Georgia Italy 1 1 1 1 10 543 7393 Total: Bib. records with NCL in INIS Collection 48 Table7. DigitizationoftheINISNCLCollectiononMicrofiche Year 2003 PDF 566 2004 19 891 49 574 1 310 226 2005 36 918 1 574 178 32.1 2006 23 164 1 371 482 33.4 2007 9 331 16.3 2008 25 740 670 441 1 230 247 2009 81 223 77.4 2010 33 882 3 939 779 1 969 274 2011 24 027 511 763 16.2 2012 24 742 1 113 665 49.5 2013 5 662 347 590 18.8 285 146 14 088 219 359.0 Total: Pages Size (GB) 3.7 36.2 29.8 45.9 49
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