Universities Spend Millions on Accessing Results of Publicly Funded Research (theconversation.com) 76
Mark C. Wilson, a senior lecturer at Department of Computer Science, University of Auckland, writing for The Conversation: University research is generally funded from the public purse. The results, however, are published in peer-reviewed academic journals, many of which charge subscription fees. I had to use freedom of information laws to determine how much universities in New Zealand spend on journal subscriptions to give researchers and students access to the latest research -- and I found they paid almost US$15 million last year to just four publishers. There are additional costs, too. Paywalls on research hold up scientific progress and limit the publicâ(TM)s access to the latest information.
Sci Hub! (Score:5, Informative)
That's why I use Sci-Hub when I need to find an old paper I wrote.
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That's why I use Sci-Hub when I need to find an old paper I wrote.
When I need to find an old paper I wrote, I look in my filing cabinet. But I'm old school that way.
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That's why I use Sci-Hub when I need to find an old paper I wrote.
When I need to find an old paper I wrote, I look in my filing cabinet. But I'm old school that way.
Hmm, I keep electronic copies on my computer. Each to their own.
But the version on my computer is 15 different versions. The one that actually made it into the journal is one of them. That's the one I want to provide to whoever asked me for a copy of the paper. Sci-Hub only finds the journal version.
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That's why I use Sci-Hub when I need to find an old paper I wrote.
When I need to find an old paper I wrote, I look in my filing cabinet. But I'm old school that way.
Filing cabinet? You overestimate the size of the modern cubicle dweller's cube.
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Humble brag lol
Is writing a paper brag worthy? It's part of my job.
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It's one of the most bizarre economic arrangements. The co
How much of that was New Zealand tax money? (Score:1, Insightful)
I don't see why there's an entitlement for universities in New Zealand to be given free access to work that was paid for with the tax money of people in other countries (and I'm sure the U.S. is #1 by a huge margin).
The story would have made a better point if the author actually figured out how much New Zealand universities pay to get access to papers paid for by New Zealand taxpayers.
Re:How much of that was New Zealand tax money? (Score:5, Insightful)
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Good thing you're not a researcher.
Re:Useless (Score:1)
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Not China. About four-fifths of all Chinese research is hidden from Western researchers eyes, and can only be viewed within China.
Some of that could be that it's not published in English (most papers are in English or possibly French).
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Not China. About four-fifths of all Chinese research is hidden from Western researchers eyes, and can only be viewed within China.
The most important Chinese research is published in English. This [springer.com] is one critical result; this [springer.com] is much more important work.
Re: How much of that was New Zealand tax money? (Score:1)
Re: US taxpayers, if you want to be that short-sighted, most of the money charged for access to papers goes to a Dutch company, Elsevier. How do you feel about American universities getting fleeced by them?
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Is a bunch of politically correct black women with poofy hair who make a fuss about all kinds of perceived racial injustices and such, This is SO FUCKING ANNOYING.
If it weren't for women like them, Roy Moore would have won against Doug Jones
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"All butthurt Anonymous Cowards are whiny obnoxious losers" - haruchai
Fixed that for you. You're welcome.
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Depends. Sometimes a paper in our lab can have co-authors from Brazil, Germany, Russia, and France.
So it depends on what paid for each co-authors research. It might be a combination of public and private funding.
Publishers don't pay for much (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Publishers don't pay for much (Score:4, Insightful)
The scientists writing the papers do so for free,
No, they don't. They aren't paid by the publisher, but that doesn't mean "free".
and often have to do the final print formatting themselves.
Not for the reputable journals.
The paper is then sent to the peer reviewers, who perform the reviews for free.
But the review system is managed by the publisher, not the author. There is a cost to that management.
In the end, the publisher doesn't pay for content, layout or review,
Umm, layout and review are publisher costs.
so the journals don't have good reasons to be expensive.
Printing on archival quality paper is a costly process.
This isn't saying the current system is right, it just isn't as cost free to the publisher as you claim.
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No, they don't. They aren't paid by the publisher, but that doesn't mean "free".
It's not a publisher cost, which is what the GP was getting at.
Not for the reputable journals.
Rubbish. The leading journal in my field (Phys Rev Lett) has us do our own typesetting in LaTeX. You don't get much more reputable than them.
But the review system is managed by the publisher, not the author. There is a cost to that management.
Actually it's managed by an unpaid academic editor, so no, no cost to that management.
Umm, layout and review are publisher costs.
No. Layout by authors, review assigned by free to the publisher (volunteer) editor, performed by free to the publisher (volunteer) reviewers.
Printing on archival quality paper is a costly process.
And an unnecessary one. No-one I know reads journals, we all get the articles onl
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No, they don't. They aren't paid by the publisher, but that doesn't mean "free".
It's not a publisher cost, which is what the GP was getting at.
I think "they aren't paid by the publisher" kinda covers that, but thanks for the admonishment anyway.
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Getting published in a big name journal isn't just a nice fillip to the ego; it's pretty much the only way you continue to have a career in academia.
Until universities, grant awarding bodies and tenure committees abandon "impact factor" as a factor in their decision making, we will continue to have perverse incentives to lock research behind paywalls that nobody in science wants except for paywalled publishers.
Don't journals provide value? (Score:1)
Am I wrong in saying that journals have staffs of experts that read numerous submitted papers, select the important ones, work with the authors to improve them a bit and then publish them? It's not as though journals aren't doing any work and are then charging people for their services.
Disclosure: My father is a professor at a public university and editor of a large not-for-profit journal.
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There is also no reason a third party should be making money off of giving another country access to tax payer funded research either.
Library Purges (Score:1)
In addition to subscriptions to new journals, universities are also paying to continue accessing old journals that were "paid for" decades ago. This is because many universities are removing the books in their libraries.
http://mercurynews.com/2016/12/24/montgomery-on-ucscs-outrageous-mass-destruction-of-books [mercurynews.com]
As a result, the universities have to pay the publishers for online access to the old, archival journals that used to sit on the library shelves.
Didn't you pay attention ? (Score:2)
Research paper neutrality has been repelled.
"The vibrant and open research that Americans cherish isn't going anywhere."
"it's a better way of making money"
"[research paper neutrality] had slowed investment"
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*repealed*
(spell-checker couldn't help this time)
Most research is just a job (Score:2)
At least from my experience, in most fields in CS, researchers are not that different from software engineers. A better term would be 'article writer', since that is their main concern. They don't care whether these articles enrich human knowledge, let alone freely accessible. Some of them will probably fudge the data a bit to make the article look better. For them it is just a job, just like for the rest of us, in a culture where economic gain is the only thing that matters.
Just use PubMed (Score:1)
Most medical research is published in PubMed, and you can always read it.
True but irrelevant (Score:2, Insightful)
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You have no idea what you're talking about. Publishers don't pay for peer review of the articles. It's all volunteer work.
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now charge authors several thousand dollars to publish an article, money generally taken out of grant funds which otherwise would be used to support the actual research being reported. And still these open-access journals claim to be losing money.
These journals are trash journals that only get submitted to by people desperate to get published. arXiv is the prototype free journal repository, and it does very well (although it's supported by donations).
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>> vetting the scientific content and standardizing the presentation - is expensive to perform
My understanding is that most associate editors and peer reviewers are unpaid volunteers. Is that incorrect?
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The parent must have missed this rather salient point.
Perhaps one day some enterprising security research will pop into one of these publishers and show us where the money is actually going. It appears that it isn't anyone involved in the scientifically valuable work. I grok that rent and hosting aren't free, but they certainly aren't thousands of dollars per article either.
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The simple fact is that the essential quality control involved in scientific publication - vetting the scientific content and standardizing the presentation - is expensive... Traditionally, that work has been done by publishers who charge subscription fees ... When they started, they predicted that vetting, copy-editing and maintaining an article online could easily be done for under $1000. But they now charge authors several thousand dollars to publish an article ...
This is the YouTube age. For the sake of becoming reknown, don't need journals.
Reproduce the lab work as a video, then present the theory in a nice tidy package.
Not sure what the cost would be to the researcher, but the societal benefit would be a lot quicker to propagate. Journals used to be good for listing massive bibliographies, but websites can do that too. Websites can host the video presentations too.
I've seen some nice presentations on YouTube but people try to make videos that reach wide audiences
I must pay £100 to see what a citation says (Score:2)
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