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Summary Paper from the Publishing Research Consortium
This paper is based on flawed research, as it is based on
librarian purchasing preferences, but omits key factors:
research and educational priorities of the university, and
faculty assessment of the importance of journals. It is when we
take the latter factor into account that we can understand the
experience of physics, where nearly 100% open access through
self-archiving has peacefully coexisted with a subscription-based
system for more than 15 years.
My original comment to the SPARC Open Access Forum, November 14,
2006:
This study is interesting, however as a librarian my comment is
that the assumptions underlying the study illustrate a lack of
understanding of the basic decision-making process of the
academic librarian collections specialist.
This study looks at 6 attributes and assesses librarian
preferences, in an attempt to predict cancellations of
subscriptions in favor of open access materials if articles are
available in archives.
Elements of the model examined:
Version of Article
Percentage of a Journal's Articles that are Available
Reliability of Access
How up-to-date is the content
Quality of the content
Cost
The problem with this, is that the primary factors determining
collections decisions are not taken into account: research and
educational priorities of the university, and faculty assessment
of the importance of journals. When we take these factors into
account, we can see why it makes sense that librarians continue
to subscribe to physics journals, even when prices are considered
high and virtually all of the articles are available for free in
arXiv.
In other words, the answers this study have found really do not
matter, because it did not ask the right questions. Research
into librarians' collections decisions might be best led by
librarians.
Original post at:
https://mx2.arl.org/Lists/SPARC-OAForum/Message/3450.html
More discussion about this study, including comments from one of the
principal investigators, Chris Beckett, can be found in the SPARC
Open Access Forum Archives for November 2006.
Any opinion expressed in this message is that of the author
alone, and does not reflect the opinion or policy of the BC
Electronic Library Network or Simon Fraser University Library.
Heather Morrison
http://poeticeconomics.blogspot.com