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Disintermediation of Academic Publishing through the Internet: An Intermediate Report from the Front Line. Thomas Krichel http://openlib.org/home/krichel Simeon M. Warner h ttp://t8web.lanl.gov/people/simeon/. Nature of this talk. intermediate report
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Disintermediation of Academic Publishing through the Internet: An Intermediate Report from the Front Line Thomas Krichel http://openlib.org/home/krichel Simeon M. Warner http://t8web.lanl.gov/people/simeon/
Nature of this talk • intermediate report • Interaction welcome, ample time • Done by pioneer (Krichel) and practitioner (Warner) • Normative rather than positive emphasis • listen to the horse’s mouth • descriptive and speculative parts
The Internet threat • Internet is a relatively recent technology that threatens all sorts of businesses whose essential function is to provide an intermediary between different parties • these include estate agents, marital agencies, academic publishers
Esoteric authors • An academic has little change but big ego. • No monetary reward for writings, therefore optimal for authors to allow free access. • But big ego only satisfied with quality certification. • Social optimum reached when price is equal to marginal cost. • Unclear if free access can become a reality
Problems for toll-gate publishers • Static demand for material by libraries leads to upward spiral prices to raise profits. • Remedy is pricing per customer and consortia deals. • Risk of a downward spiral where poor dissemination may detract best authors away to alternative venues.
Alternative venues on Internet • Homepage on the web • Some isolated Internet publishing venture (budding electronic journals) • Institutional multidisciplinary archive • Formal internet archiving and dissemination venues, essentially limited to the preprint disciplines.
The preprint disciplines • Some few disciplines have had a tradition of informal publication through • preprints • working papers and tech reports • These are • Computing • Economics • Mathematics • Physics
Centralised and decentralised model discipline centralised decentralised • Computing CORR NCSTRL • Economics EconWPA RePEc • Mathematics arXiv MathNet • Physics arXiv PhysNet and then there is the web...
arXiv • Oldest (1991) and best-known author self-archiving system • in fact the essence of an author self-archiving system • authors upload papers to a centralised system • the centralised system itself is mirrored • founded by Paul Ginsparg at LANL
History • Mail exchange (August 1991) • ftp server (1992) • web interface (December 1993) • automatic PostScript generation from TeX source (June 1995) • PDF generation (April 1996) • web upload (June 1996) • OAI interface (February 2000)
Statistics for 2000 • 70,000 users in over 100 countries • 13,000,000 downloads of papers • 30,000 submissions • 3,500 additional new submissions per annum • Over 98% of submissions are entirely auto-mated: 68% via the web, 27% via email and 5% via ftp. • arXiv uses less than one full-time equivalent to deal with day-to-day operations.
Special strengths of arXiv • Simple to understand concept • Usage of TeX document formatting system • indefinite funding horizon thanks to NSF and US DoE • strong community support (e.g. volunteer moderators)
(minor) Weaknesses of arXiv • Its model failed on other discipline-based attempts • cogprints • EconWPA • CORR • not as well integrated as possible with other sources • lack of important innovation in past few years
RePEc • Comprehenisive academic self-documentation system • in fact, the very essence of an academic self-documentation system • run decentrally by academic volunteers • comprehensive picture of academic output activity • originates with WoPEc project founded by Thomas Krichel in 1993
RePEcprinciple • Many archives • archives offer metadata about digital objects (mainly working papers) • One database • The data from all archives forms one single logical database despite the fact that it is held on different servers. • Many services • users can access the data through many interfaces. • providers of archives offer their data to all interfaces at the same time. This provides for an optimal distribution.
WoPEc EconWPA DEGREE S-WoPEc NBER CEPR US Fed in Print IMF OECD MIT University of Surrey CO PAH RePEc is based on 190+ archives
…to form one dataset... • over 140,000 items in over 1,000 series, contains working paper, published paper, software, personal and institutional data • largest distributed free source about online scientific publications, over 45,000 electronic papers • data is encoded using the purpose-built ReDIF format • all archives follow a convention called the Guildford protocol on how to store ReDIF files and other data on their servers. Therefore the archives can be mirrored.
BibEc and WoPEc Decomate Z39.50 service NEP: New Economics Papers Inomics EconPapers Ecommunics IDEAS RuPEc EDIRC HoPEc RePEc is used in many services
… describes documents Template-Type: ReDIF-Paper 1.0 Title: Dynamic Aspect of Growth and Fiscal Policy Author-Name: Thomas Krichel Author-Person: RePEc:per:1965-06-05:thomas_krichel Author-Email: T.Krichel@surrey.ac.uk Author-Name: Paul Levine Author-Email: P.Levine@surrey.ac.uk Author-WorkPlace-Name: University of Surrey Classification-JEL: C61; E21; E23; E62; O41 File-URL: ftp://www.econ.surrey.ac.uk/ pub/RePEc/sur/surrec/surrec9601.pdf File-Format: application/pdf Creation-Date: 199603 Revision-Date: 199711 Handle: RePEc:sur:surrec:9601
… describes persons (HoPEc) Template-Type: ReDIF-Person 1.0 Name-Full: KRICHEL, THOMAS Name-First: THOMAS Name-Last: KRICHEL Postal: 1 Martyr Court 10 Martyr Road Guildford GU1 4LF England Email: t.krichel@surrey.ac.uk Homepage: http://gretel.econ.surrey.ac.uk Workplace-Institution: RePEc:edi:desuruk Author-Paper: RePEc:sur:surrec:9801 Author-Paper: RePEc:sur:surrec:9601 Author-Paper: RePEc:rpc:rdfdoc:concepts Author-Paper: RePEc:rpc:rdfdoc:ReDIF Handle: RePEc:per:1965-06-05:THOMAS_KRICHEL
… describes institutions (EDIRC) Template-Type: ReDIF-Institution 1.0 Primary-Name: University of Surrey Primary-Location: Guildford Secondary-Name: Department of Economics Secondary-Phone: (01483) 259380 Secondary-Email: economics@surrey.ac.uk Secondary-Fax: (01483) 259548 Secondary-Postal: Guildford, Surrey GU2 5XH Secondary-Homepage: http://www.econ.surrey.ac.uk/ Handle: RePEc:edi:desuruk
Weaknesses of RePEc • No funding • Difficult to grasp innovative concepts • relational database for the academic process • plethora of user and contributor services • testing out concept in other discipline with to date limited results (ReLIS). Setting-up costs are large. • Little support from the top of the academic food chain
Think forward... • Optimisation over time involves finding the best path that leads to the desired outcome. • That is the essence of Bellman’s principle of intertemporal optimality. • Therefore a realistic desired outcome has to be fixed first.
Think British... • Extreme scenarios are unlikely • Slow evolution • Totally free access to scholarly documents unlikely • Budding initiatives of free quality-controlled journals shows that academics can do “it” themselves
One size does not fit all... • There are important discipline-specific differences in scholarly communication that are likely to persist in the rise of Internet-mediated scholarly communication. • This can already be demonstrated on current initiatives, all of which have a discipline anchoring. • (talk about institutional archiving later)
Disciplines differ... • communication patterns before Internet • presence or absence of entrepreneurial pioneers • rewards systems • sensitivity and contestitivity of material but all will have a free layer and a toll-gated layer
Scenario 1: vacuum cleaner • Free academic layer dispersed and available with all the rest of the web. • Toll-gated material much more quality controlled • no free bibliographical database • Scenario defended by Bill Arms. • Impossible to build scholarly communication system on the free layer alone. • Default scenario.
Scenario 2: trainspotter • Organised, decentralised free layer, separatable from the web. • Toll-gated layer of quality-controlled final publications. • Both layers interoperate through a shared free bibliographical database. • Scenario as in RePEc and OAI.
Scenario 3: Gosplan • One central archive for the discipline with much of the papers available on it. • Peer-review running as overlay to the central archive. • Scenario of ArXiv.
Suggestion to move forward • Concentrate on the provision of contents. Don’t waste so much time on • metadata schemes (adopt AMF) • user interfaces • Use OAI protocols to export contents. • Shift focus of attention away from works towards the persons who create the works.
Conclusion When a technological shock (like the Internet) hits a social structure (like the scholarly communication system), then there is an opportunity for new entrants to come along. This opportunity is here today. Seize it. Thank you for listening.