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The Scientist: NewsBlog:
Upping access to open access
Posted by Elie Dolgin [Entry posted at 5th March 2009 02:47 PM GMT]
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Articles are not enough by anonymous poster [Comment posted 2009-03-10 12:37:57] Articles are just interpretations of data, and were referred to by Tom Stossel as "Mere Magazines." LINK
What one really needs is access to the data to look for biases and confounders, but all too often the primary data are not available to reviewers or readers. In human studies, privacy is often a major barrier. Fixing the form by Elie Dolgin [Comment posted 2009-03-06 10:31:33] Thanks for spotting the spelling mistake, Wang Qian. The typo has now been corrected (Mar. 6).
Elie Dolgin, Associate Editor, The Scientist find a spell fault by wang qian [Comment posted 2009-03-06 04:49:17] in the sentence: "Form a library point of view, any product that goes up that amount in one year makes itself a candidate for cancelation," the "form" should be "from"? A New Publishing Methodology by Sharbaaniranjan Kundu [Comment posted 2009-03-05 23:42:37] We need to have a completely new publishing methodology in place. Any author should be encouraged to have a web site of his own. He should publish his work first on his web site. Then he may request any publisher to publish his work. The publisher will publish only after peer review and mention that the article is edited and peer reviewed, publishing the names of peers too. The author may be asked to pay a fee for this or vice versa the publisher may pay a fee to the author for publishing it in their journal based solely on business considerations, based upon editor's and peers' recommendations. The later type of article can carry the tag 'paid for by publisher'. Any article read on the publisher's website may be paid for, a very nominal amount, say $1 and allowed to be printed for say $5. Pricing of a hard copy say for a library should be based on 'recovery of cost' and a reasonable profit. Publishers should also pay the peers (I believe it is done) some consultation fee. OA Somnambulism: Conflating journal affordability and research accessibility by Stevan Harnad [Comment posted 2009-03-05 13:44:08] The universities just keep sleep-walking. It would be amusing if it weren't so appalling:
(1) U of C-1 (University of California), completely conflating, as usual, the journal affordability problem with the research accessibility problem, triumphantly bundles extra payment for optional Gold OA publishing charges for its own researchers' article output into its "Big Deal" subscription contract with Springer, throwing still more money at publishers -- instead of simply mandating that their own researchers make their own (published) journal articles Green OA by self-archiving them in U of C-1's own Institutional Repository (and, entirely independently, subscribing to whatever journals U of C-1 needs and can afford). And they think this is a "Good Deal" and a big step forward for OA. (2) U of C-2 (University of Calgary) does the same sort of thing (having first cancelled an earlier Badder Deal along much the same lines), triumphantly earmarking scarce funds -- which could have been far better spent (especially in today's financial crunch) on things that U of C-2 really needed and could not get otherwise -- to pay for Gold OA publishing charges for its own researchers's article output. This, again, instead of simply mandating that their own researchers make their own (published) journal articles Green OA by self-archiving them in U of C-2's own Institutional Repository. (3) Harvard did the far more sensible thing, and mandated Green OA self-archiving instead (but only if the author is willing and able to negotiate rights-retention with his publisher -- otherwise the author can opt out of self-archiving). Over 90% of journals already endorse immediate OA self-archiving, 63% for the refereed final draft. If Harvard adds a clause that requires the no-opt-out deposit of all articles, without exception, immediately upon acceptance for publication, whether or not the author elects to opt out of the rights-retention clause, then Harvard has the optimal policy. (Access to embargoed deposits and deposits whose authors have opted out can simply be stored in Closed Access instead of Open Access during the embargo, or indefinitely; the Repository's semi-automatic "Request a Copy" Button can provide Almost-OA to Closed Access deposits almost immediately, with just one click from the requester plus one click from the author, until universal OA inevitably prevails.) (4) It is not clear whether Boston University's "University-Wide" policy (Harvard's mandate is so far only for the Faculty of Arts and Sciences and the Faculty of Law) is indeed a mandate at all: If not, it will fail, as all other nonbinding request/encourage policies have failed -- beginning with NIH's policy, which was upgraded to a requirement after two years of abject failure as a mere request. To make all the OA dominoes fall, all it takes is universal deposit mandates; the rest is just (to mix metaphors) treading water and somnambulism. Comment on this blog |