Wellcome Trust to Require Open-Access Publishing 89
Lars Arvestad writes "The Wellcome Trust, one of the worlds largest research funding agencies, will require results from research funded by the Trust to be available in public repositories six months after publication. The Trust's policy advisor Robert Terry writes in
an article in PLoS Biology that the Trust plans to start its own public access repository where authors are expected to deposit their published works. The repository is modeled after NLM's PubMed Central and is called UKPMC. Terry's article also mentions that a recent Wellcome report found that an author-pays business model has the opportunity for a saving of 30 % on publishing costs alone compared to reader-pays. This contrasts the recent IEEE report (Slashdot story last week) where it was claimed that some universities will face higher costs using author-pays."
Author pays or user pays? (Score:3, Interesting)
Maybe differtent strokes for different folksis the way to go.
What is undeniably good is that people are trying to do something about access to the information and the cost of accessing it.
Re:Author pays or user pays? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Author pays or user pays? (Score:2, Insightful)
That sounds a lot like the description of an infomercial. We have too many of those already.
The economic benefits you point out are also a conflict of interest, pressuring the journals into publication of mediocre, question
Re:Author pays or user pays? (Score:2)
Both costs and income should be spread out (Score:1)
Only a tiny fracton of the costs ( less than one tenth) of producing a journal have actually to do with printing and distribution. Most of the cost is in the production and review. That is already paid for by a combination of the researchers, their research grants and their university departments. So journals are getting articles for free, which are then edited and peer reviewed for free. Then the journals c
Re:Author pays or user pays? (Score:2)
or at least stem the tide of mediocre papers which are submitted over and over again to different places
I wish something would happen about that. I saw a paper a while back which took some previous work and changed *one* equation by replacing an equals with a "greater than". Somehow that was considered worth 10 pages in an important journal - it can only have taken the author an afternoon to write.
The number of times I get deja-vu reading journals these days is huge.
Re:Author pays or user pays? (Score:2)
Re:Author pays or user pays? (Score:1)
Who pays to publish scientific studies is an interesting aside to the real question:
Who decides what gets published in the first place?
For example, if a tobacco company commisions a study that shows that smoking is harmful, they are under no obligation to make that research public, at all.
In order that governments (and individuals) can make an informed choice, they must have all the data available to base their decision on.
The only way to achieve this is that research is registered before it is carr
Re:Author pays or user pays? (Score:3, Informative)
"The only way to achieve this is that research is registered before it is carried out, and only allowed to proceed if the results will be published, regardless of the 'success' or 'failure' of the research."
I don't think this will work quite the way you want it to.
I can see what you are trying to achieve and broadly agree. But registered with who? For what? If I find and interesting side alley not directly related to what the project was registered as can I still publish it? Ever?
If universities weren'
Good for them! (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Good for them! (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Good for them! (Score:3, Informative)
If you don't want to post the article info here, feel free to email it to neuronexmachina, at gmail dot com.
Re:Good for them! (Score:2, Flamebait)
Re:Good for them! (Score:1, Troll)
Because that requires three things:
Re:Good for them! (Score:2)
I don't know if you have any academic connections, but you'll usually find that university libraries stock lots of journals in dead tree format. I'm often amazed at some of the obscure books and journals I've wanted that've turned out to been shelved in my local university.
Complete online journal and proceeding archives are a relatively new invention that requires a certain amount of technical expertise, and it's no surprise that a lot of publishers simply haven't caught up.
If you're near an acad
Re:Good for them! (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Good for them! (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Good for them! (Score:3, Insightful)
The people you're calling myopic are the ones who want the books to go *into* the search engines. Until then, the information in those books is locked behind a wall of time. You can dig through it, but your expected return for time invested is often not nearly worth it.
Besides, isn't myopia something you get from spending too much time reading... books?
Re:Good for them! (Score:2)
Author pays? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Author pays? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Author pays? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Author pays? (Score:3, Interesting)
Under the author-pays model, libraries get a free ride. Before we give them all that money back, we should ask them to do something small to help the process. Libraries should cover the distribution costs. A few terabytes here and there isn't going to cost a lot of money, probably the amount that they spend on a single journal now. And putting a copy of all this information i
Re:Author pays? (Score:2)
Re:Author pays? (Score:2)
That's my point. Journals can reject papers freely precisely because they aren't dependant upon submissions for revenue. And there is no shortage of submissions because scientists rarely pay up front for peer-review. These are features of the business model which encourage journal integrity, and under an author-pays model th
Re:Author pays? (Score:2)
Besides which, for even poorly funded research the cost of publication (say $1500 for a paper) is relatively small in comparision to the cost of doing research in the first place. Research is expensive, period. It costs about 100-150,000 dollars a year to keep me on the road and I am relatively cheap! In a
Hopefully the author pays thing isn't like sci fi (Score:5, Insightful)
I can see the 'published research' model being misused by the drug companies in that all they have to do is spam the repository with studies saying the cigarettes and cellphones aren't that bad for you, drowning out the studies which say otherwise.
Re:Hopefully the author pays thing isn't like sci (Score:3, Interesting)
The big question to ask is, "Who is the customer?" If the customer is the author, rather than the reader, the publisher bends over backward to make sure the author is happy. Want happy authors? Publish any drivel they spew.
Re:Hopefully the author pays thing isn't like sci (Score:4, Insightful)
Your idea is cute and all, but they stick it to both authors and readers.
Readers have to pay exhorbitant fees, as much as $40 for 5 days of access to a single article (that's just my discipline). The only way to get affordable access to these discplines is for libraries to band together and get big group package deals.
And authors have to pay to publish their own papers, which are already prepared according to strict formatting guidelines. Their reviewers aren't paid either.
So publishing houses are getting cash from both ends and in this era of paper-less publication have fewer and fewer BrickNMortar costs per issue sold.
Astronomy (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Astronomy (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Astronomy (Score:1, Insightful)
Re:Astronomy (Score:2)
Re:Astronomy (Score:5, Informative)
So please let's put a myth about this journal to rest. As first stated in an editorial in 1997, and since then in our Guide to Authors, if scientists wish to display drafts of their research papers on an established preprint server before or during submission to Nature or any Nature journal, that's fine by us.
Re:Astronomy (Score:2)
Separate peer review from publishing (Score:5, Interesting)
Yes, it takes the whole aspect of "profit" out of the equation, but this is science, not entertainment.
Re:Separate peer review from publishing (Score:5, Interesting)
I actually came up with an idea back 5-6 years ago for something like slashdot forums for scientists to comment on individual papers in a big archive. People could easily update results, discuss findings, etc., faster and efficiently in a forum rather than the slower process of publication. Referees don't always do a great job. I try to, and I've gotten many thorough reports on my papers, but also some shoddy ones.
Re:Separate peer review from publishing (Score:2)
That sounds like a great idea to me. For niche fields, a person could pretty much set something like that up themselves, examining recent conference submissions or journal articles. For the larger fields (especially anything in medicine), it would be a rather tremendous undertaking, though.
Re:Separate peer review from publishing (Score:1)
Re:Separate peer review from publishing (Score:2)
Re:Separate peer review from publishing (Score:2)
Re:Separate peer review from publishing (Score:1)
An Institutional Repository (IR).Since this is slashdot and many of us tend to appreciate software somewhat, may I present this: DSpace [dspace.org]
Disregard this if you already have knowledge of the project. This is a very powerful and mature development of peer-review, content management workflow and academic submission from MIT. It is an IR, NOT a content management system!
Re:Spelling (Score:2, Informative)
Nice Troll... I'll bite.
From their "About Us" page [wellcome.ac.uk]:
The Wellcome Trust is an independent charity funding research to improve human and animal health.
Established in 1936 and with an endowment of around £10 billion, it is the UK's largest non-governmental source of funds for biomedical research.
As a privately endowed charity, we are independent from governments, from industry and from donors.
The governing do
Re:Spelling (Score:2)
The New "Freedom of Information Act" (Score:5, Interesting)
Why is this such an important thing?
Imagine the follwing business plan:
1) Make people PAY to incorporate their computer programs into your project.
2) Make people give you their copyrights to accept their program into your project.
3) Make people contributing code to your project also debug other peoples code. For free.
4) Profit!
Who would put up with such a kwaaazy system? We scientists. Why do we put up with this exploitation? Because we have no other choice if we want to remain competitive.
However, if there is enough external pressure for the system to change, it will.
You think I'm a Krazy Krackpot? I present you with the following:
1) My lab publishes ~ 2-3 papers a year, in journals like Biochemistry and J. Biol. Chem. It costs us ~ $2,000/publication.
2) Although we PAY the pulishers money, we still give them full copyright. (Recall: we formatted, created graphics and edited the documents).
In case you are worrying about the poor publishers, remember the following:
1) Few people read printed journals these days, most download the articles in PDF format. How much can that cost?
2) The process of editing and reviewing papers is done by other scientists, such as myself - for FREE.
Let's hope the trend is towards liberating the information that is paid for by taxpayers.
Re:The New "Freedom of Information Act" (Score:2)
That way it costs nothing, takes a lot of your time, and gives you the incentive to corrupt the peer review process. What could be wrong with that?
--
Currency conversion calculator [ostermiller.org]
What? (Score:2, Funny)
(Laugh, because you know it went through your mind too.)
Re:What? (Score:1)
Enormously good news (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Enormously good news (Score:2)
Logics texts at print.google.com (Score:2)
I posted a story on this [lambda-the-ultimate.org] to LtU.
Missing link... (Score:1)
Author pays... (Score:2)
A shame it's not as organised as a library and so of course this is a good idea.
PLoS uses Creative Commons license for articles (Score:5, Interesting)
Hopefully the new repository that the Wellcome Trust is setting up will use something similar.
Re:PLoS uses Creative Commons license for articles (Score:1)
Good (Score:1)
Wellcome do a lot of good medical research and this is the best way to make it useful to us all.
Inevitable (Score:4, Insightful)
Business model (Score:4, Interesting)
Some papers take it to the ultimate level. The IOVS (and ophthalmology research paper, huge readership) figured out how to mix all models.
- The reader pays, subscription is compulsory if you are a member of the international society of ophthalmic research.
- The paper is full of advertisements
- It's peer revieved, revievers get nothing
- Authors pay for publication (and the paper puts a footnote for each article, indicating that since the author paid, the article legally is paid advertisement), colour pictures are extra.
- Authors also assign copyright to the paper (don't know the exact terms).
So, the best of all worlds: author, reader, advertiser - they all pay!
3: Profit!!!
Arcane system from the 1970s (Score:4, Informative)
It is interesting to note that taxpayers pay for (most) research which is then published in journals. The journals then retain the copyrights to the research. As someone else pointed out, publishing in JBC costs $2000 (I can verify this personally). The best part is, the NIH paid me to do research, and then paid again for someone else to take the copyright to this taxpayer-funded research. Amazing!
There has already been an initiative from the NIH that NIH-supported research be freely accessible after 6 months.
For a directory of Open Access journals go to: http://www.doaj.org/ [doaj.org]
Many journals let you keep your copyright (Score:2)
It depends on where you publish. Many journals, like those in the Nature Publishing Group, leave the copyright with the author.
Re:Many journals let you keep your copyright (Score:1)
http://authors.elsevier.com/getting_published.html ?dc=CI [elsevier.com]
http://www.springeronline.com/sgw/cda/frontpage/0, 11855,5-40007-70-1119401-detailsPage%253Djournal%2 57CcopyrightInformation%257CcopyrightInformation,0 0.html [springeronline.com]
http://authors.nejm.org/Misc/MsSubInstr.asp [nejm.org]
Re:Arcane system from the 1970s (Score:1)
Unfortunately, after the publishing lobby got through with this, the final NIH policy is so watered down as to be rendered toothless and meaningless. The policy, best explained in the FAQ PDF [nih.gov], indicates that authors are only encouraged to place their papers in the public domain. There is no policy binding on them or on scientific publishers to allow public access, even when the work was fully
Re:Arcane system from the 1970s (Score:1)
Big Threat to Professional Scientific Societies (Score:3, Insightful)
These non-profit organizations enjoy significant cash flow and influence in their field from the current system.
Many of these organizations are mired in bureaucracy and petty internal politics. I predict history will repeat itself and they will act like the RIAA, the movie industry and other large organizations, and attempt (and fail) to avoid fundamental change when it stares them in the face.
This is sad because if one of the major professional scientific societies led the way, eventually everyone would eventually benefit.
Re:Big Threat to Professional Scientific Societies (Score:1)
That being out of my system, at least the more inorganic/physical journals do not actually charge you to sub
Re:Big Threat to Professional Scientific Societies (Score:1)
There's a big difference between the RIAA and professional societies like ACS and FASEB. RIAA makes a lot of money from charging for music. The societies only cover their costs and supplement a few (modest by most standards) salaries with their publications.
Now, I'm not just being a keyboard philosopher here. Just this fall, I sat at a table with some muckey-mucks of one of the FASEB societies and had just this discussion about Open Access Publishi
Author Pays discriminates against new scientists (Score:2, Interesting)
So far, so good, except that you need publications to get the grants, and it's possible that publishing those papers is going to prevent you from having the resources to actually do the research. A couple $4K papers on a theorist start
Re:Author Pays discriminates against new scientist (Score:2)
This costs are not insignificant.
Besides which, in many areas, which are conference paper based rather than journal based, you already have this problem. I work on a budget of around $2000 per publication (for costs, not for the research which is obviously much greater).
Phil
Should be "copyright holder-pays" (Score:4, Interesting)
Network for Earthquake Engineering Simulation (Score:1)
I say GO to such efforts. The more information is out there, the better.
This is long overdue for Science (Score:1)
Those groups committed to publishing all their work still have a hard time depositing half the work done after four years, partially due to constraints in fully documenting the ORF and it's Structure, but the goal is good from my viewpoint.
Kickback (Score:2)
Re:Kickback (Score:2)
Why shouldn't the publishers pay for the research that they are currently getting for free. I give my time and energy to reviewing articles. I get back nothing. I give my time and energy to doing the work.
More over the publishers control the way in which I can use the papers. 10 dollars to read a paper is cheap, if I am reading the paper. But what if I want to do a stastical analysis over 10,00
Re:Kickback (Score:2)
Re:Kickback (Score:2)
You misunderstand the process. We have to publish in journals with high impact factors. We have to publish in journals with high impact factors because we are told to by our funding bodies. So the notion of competition within journals and the ability to choose between them is limited.
As impact factors are based on citations, and citations start a few
Re:Kickback (Score:2)