So there's a both a tremendous amount and not enough being done to address publication bias & that's a whole separate thread, but I do want to point out that there's a difference between research and the publication thereof. That's what I was getting at
https://twitter.com/mrgunn/status/1101580949555310592 …
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Replying to @mrgunn
Funny, because when you asserted your far superior understanding of “the value of academic publishing,” I was actually expecting a defense of that and not of literally all research.
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Replying to @webdevMason
The argument I'm making is essentially: research is important, publishing facilitates research, so publishing is important. There are other ways to facilitate it, too, but publishing is a big one.
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Replying to @mrgunn @webdevMason
I eagerly followed this conversation hoping for something more substantial than this. I’m pretty sure any person who seriously cares about dismantling the publishing-industrial complex, cares in part because they recognize that research is important & should be accessible to all
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Replying to @visakanv @webdevMason
I did go into greater detail, but the thread fractured into several pieces. I agree research is important, but the discussion was about publications of research. Anyone can post their manuscript online, but that doesn't necessarily make it accessible.
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The concept of common pool resources is a useful framework here. The knowledge itself is a common good that is neither rivalrous nor excludable, but access to facilities, publishing venues, and grants is very much rivalrous.
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Is it? Publishers aren’t financially enabling research. They’re providing the service of controlling its distribution, maintaining institutional exclusivity over respected work, & kingmaking scholars who play the game. Who’s actually funding the work?
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Let’s be clear: taxpayers & students fund the research that happens at universities. Peer review is generally provided by volunteers funded the same way. Journals aggregate & sell researchers’ work back to their own taxpayer-funded institutions.
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It’s insane that journals publishing publicly-funded work are able to price the public out of ever seeing it. IMO this likely has 2 prereqs: (a) universities are highly price-insensitive; (b) universities benefit from limiting expertise in the public domain.
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I hear what you're saying Mason, but I also think that 99% of people wouldn't understand 99% of scholarship. That includes me: I don't understand most articles in biology, math, physics, etc., even as someone who was well into the 99.9th percentile on standardized tests.
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The most productive scholars routinely venture into fields beyond their expertise, flounder a bit, talk to authors, consume immense amounts of material, and end of collaborating on cross-field projects where prior work is sparse. It is time-consuming and entirely doable.
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