and of course it is very strategic what is reviewed, promoted, etc. I wonder whether it is convenient to miss the point of a paper so one can in effect write a blog post about their work.
Certain media and timings promote more or less context information. A model like eLife's is pretty good. Ultimately, the point is that people will game the system no matter what, but a better system is possible, e.g., eLife.
-
-
It's ironic you think that I and
@ProfData who publish preprints are/can be against preprints because we pointed out how systems which contain them can be biased. Such criticism is exactly what is useful for progress. -
that was meant as a reductio ad absurdum. you *say* you want openness, but you're actually arguing for a (different kind of) gatekeeping model
-
open means you make things available, and people can comment on them and use them however they like. it doesn't mean "it's a preprint, but you still need to leave your comments on the same page as the original, and you can only post at certain times that are convenient for me"
-
I'm not arguing for something prescriptive like you claim. I'm giving my opinion on something that happened, proposing why it went the way it did.
-
You put words in quotes as if I said them (I haven't), assume I've a prescriptive outlook (nope), but you don't understand my perspective (you said it yourself). TBH we can't disagree when you think I'm coming from an authoritative/normative perspective...

-
I know what many in the specific psychology/neuroscience community think about open science. And yes, we do disagree, esp on issues of power dynamics. I'm for open science, but I've expressed on Twitter very often disagreement with their specific ideology within open science.
-
I have zero interest going over it again because it's always the same pattern of themes and counte-themes. My tweets on this issue, of how open science could be done to be (in my opinion) more open, are out there and Twitter has an advanced search feature if you're interested.
End of conversation
New conversation -
Loading seems to be taking a while.
Twitter may be over capacity or experiencing a momentary hiccup. Try again or visit Twitter Status for more information.