9 Jun 2010

Green is no goal

This is a guest post by Joe Dunckley
To achieve a sufficiently large but distant win, it is worth sacrificing a much smaller but nearer win if it stands in the way or distracts and delays the larger achievement. To achieve a small but near win, it is not worth sacrificing a much larger but more distant win. But the difference in magnitude must be sufficiently large, and the difference in distance sufficiently small, to make delaying the gratification really pay off. Speculation and argument over the sizes and distances and relative probabilities of success and incompatibilities of the competing achievements fuel many a political argument.
Like "green" open access.
Green open access is simple: for every scientific journal paper, at least one of the authors must take action to ensure that the paper is freely available to the world online, somehow. They can deposit the text in PubMed central, or put a crude PDF of a draft version on their website. The increasingly preferred method for many advocates of green OA, though, is the institutional repository: each university library manages its own database of affiliated researchers' papers. This will solve the problem: the inability of people to read a paper that they want to read.
A heresy for you: access is not an interesting problem. The stubborn toll access publishers are correct when they say that most people can read most of the papers that they want to read. Yes, it takes emails to the authors, piracy amongst friends, and borrowed passwords, and yes it is a real problem, and no, the toll access publishers do not have any excuse to do nothing about it. But it's not an interesting problem any more. Letting us read a paper for free, without having to log-in or pester the author, once the paper reaches twelve months old, is not a revolution.
There are other similarly dull problems in science and publishing that green OA doesn't address. Like how to save university libraries from the parasitic subscription access publishers that are slowly killing their helpless hosts. Green OA tells parasitic publishers that they can continue draining libraries of their budgets with subscription bundles to poor quality journals that few people want to read, so long as they open access to the papers after twelve months. Now, as libraries face their greatest budget squeezes of the recession, is the perfect time for them to get some guts, speak up, say 'no', and shake off these parasites once and for all, before somebody comes along and hides them behind a bigger and stickier sticking plaster. Students should be rioting at the news that they are expected to do without textbooks and computers because their library has chosen instead to spend the several tens of thousands of pounds on a package of obscure and substandard journals. Instead, we're distracted by green OA, told that it is the one thing that academia desperately needs.
More interesting than these little problems are the opportunities that are currently presented to us: the real revolutions. Open, structured, reusable data has already demonstrated its revolutionary credentials in the field of genomics. Genome data that can be searched and mined by powerful computers and clever algorithms has enabled cheap and easy high-throughput hypothesis testing, and even hypothesis generation: it has led to countless discoveries that weren't on anybody's mind when they set out to collect the data, because the database as a whole is worth far more than the sum of the individual data gathering experiments. There are vast quantities of data in the literature: from microscopy to biogeography, epidemiological trends to drug toxicity. There are great and important discoveries waiting to be made in that data. But they're not being made, because unlike with genomics, no organisation has made the effort to build the database; no campaign group has achieved a mandate that the data be made open and reusable. Instead, the data, where it is available at all, is locked away in non-standard tables within unstructured PDF files, distributed across largely subscription access journals that reserve all rights to reuse.Gold open-access at least, by making literature mining possible, doesn't stifle these new open data opportunities, even if it's not the full solution; green open-access, by focussing on the need for access to human readable literature, distracts us from these possibilities entirely.
Or open notebook science: a model that, by getting scientists to discuss their ideas and publish their experiments in the open in real time, would force a revolution in the way that scientists work, the way that groups compete and collaborate, and the way that careers are evaluated and achievement rewarded; a revolution to the whole rhythm and pace of scientific discovery and the individual scientist's working life. A revolution that rather makes the whole issue of access to journal papers go away altogether.
Green OA advocates argue that open science, open data, and ONS are vague and fantastical distractions from the pressing matter of human access to journal articles; the we shouldn't waste time thinking about the former until we have solved the latter. I believe that green OA is a mundane and increasingly irrelevant distraction from the real problems and opportunities that are available for science to solve and grasp, but for a limited time only. The long-term achievements are too big to risk for the sake of such a small one.
Why spend time designing a better horse shoe when you could be inventing the railway train?

(Apologies for the unpolished post - this was made from my phone on the side of a Welsh mountain.)

3 comments:

Jean-Claude Bradley said...

It might be frustrating that there is not a single publication option that works every time for all objectives. Only publishing in traditional "high impact" journals is still a good strategy for tenure - but researchers are getting frustrated that it might not enable them to easily share their finding with anyone (toll access) or that not all types of useful knowledge can be shared via this mechanism. In many cases the best way to share information is via non peer reviewed vehicles - but that won't help much with some important academic objectives. I think the situation is fluid now and researchers need to be aware of what is available as options change. The safest course is probably a combination approach - publish different types of content via different means and monitor if your objectives are being met overall.

Matt Hodgkinson said...

I can see Joe's point, but there are several objections to his free-culture purist stance.

The simplest is that "the best is the enemy of the good." If you strive for perfection all the time, you end up not even getting an adequate result. If 100% self-archiving is an achievable goal, and 100% 'gold' OA is a pipe-dream, we'd be foolish to only push for 'gold'.

A second objection is that increasing awareness of open access through self-archiving increases awareness of open science in general. Once people get a taste for open access and the idea of free culture, they'll want more - and they won't settle for only being able to read a poorly-formatted version posted on the author's homepage, and they'll revolt when they're told they can't reproduce figures when blogging about articles. Successes in campaigning for self-archiving mandates can be built upon by campaigns for open data mandates.

A third objection is that far from propping up the publishing industry, self-archiving may be a subversive Trojan Horse that aims to increase the number of libraries who drop journal subscriptions, hastening the tipping point of the collapse of traditional publishing. Shhh, don't tell.

Pedro S. Albano said...

Matt Hodgkinson said...

A second objection is that increasing awareness of open access through self-archiving increases awareness of open science in general. Once people get a taste for open access and the idea of free culture, they'll want more - and they won't settle for only being able to read a poorly-formatted version posted on the author's homepage, and they'll revolt when they're told they can't reproduce figures when blogging about articles. Successes in campaigning for self-archiving mandates can be built upon by campaigns for open data mandates.

A third objection is that far from propping up the publishing industry, self-archiving may be a subversive Trojan Horse that aims to increase the number of libraries who drop journal subscriptions, hastening the tipping point of the collapse of traditional publishing. Shhh, don't tell.

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And what exactly would be bad with these two? ; ) Perhaps a fundamental change is needed amongst the "industry" that enveloped science and is restraining it. Science should be about finding the truth, about sharing knowledge and information with everyone, in order to get to that truth, and not about pursuing money as a corporation and serve as a slave-house with all the slaves trying to publish papers in order to survive.

This scientific reality does not respect either humanity nor the very scientific method.