FWD (SK) Open Access to Scientific Research

From: Terry W. Colvin (fortean1@mindspring.com)
Date: Thu Aug 07 2003 - 22:07:55 MDT

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    Open Access to Scientific Research

    August 7, 2003

    A number of influential scientists have begun to argue that
    the cost of research publications has grown so large that
    it impedes the distribution of knowledge. Some
    subscriptions cost thousands of dollars per year, and those
    journals are usually available online only to subscribers.
    This looks less like dissemination than restriction,
    especially if it is measured against the potential access
    offered by the Internet. That is why a coalition led by Dr.
    Harold Varmus, the former director of the National
    Institutes of Health, is creating a new model, called the
    Public Library of Science.

    Several years ago Dr. Varmus's group issued an open letter,
    signed by some 30,000 colleagues, calling on the publishers
    of scientific journals to make their archived research
    articles freely available online. Most journals declined,
    so they would not undercut the profitable business of
    selling expensive subscriptions to libraries. But there is
    a basic inequity when much of the research has been
    financed by public money.

    The Public Library of Science plans to confront that
    inequity by establishing a new series of peer-reviewed
    journals that will be freely available on the Internet. The
    first ones, published this October, will be PLoS Biology
    and PLoS Medicine. The aim is to create a freer flow of
    data about research and results. The journals will pay for
    themselves by charging a small fee to the organizations and
    institutions that support the research.

    Most of us, admittedly, will not have much use for free
    access to new discoveries in, say, particle physics. But it
    is a different matter when it comes to medical research.
    Popular nostrums abound on the Web, but it can be very
    hard, if not impossible, to find the results of properly
    vetted, taxpayer-financed science - and in some cases it
    can be hard for your doctor to find them, too. The Public
    Library of Science could help change all that, creating
    open access to research. The publishers of scientific
    journals are naturally skeptical, but the real test will
    come in the marketplace of ideas. What will matter this
    fall, when the new journals make their debut, is how many
    scientists choose to publish in them rather than in the
    journals traditionally deemed the most prestigious in their
    disciplines.

    http://www.nytimes.com/2003/08/07/opinion/07THU3.html?ex=1061234116&ei=1&en=b0ab2044519cf50b

    Copyright 2003 The New York Times Company

    -- 
    Terry W. Colvin, Sierra Vista, Arizona (USA) < fortean1@mindspring.com >
         Alternate: < fortean1@msn.com >
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