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Re: OA Now
On 29 Mar 2006, at 20:34, Peter Banks wrote:
The perfectly reasonable drive for more access to scientific
information does not require a movement to OA journals.
In my field (Endocrinology) at least, there are far more highly
cited OA papers from non-OA journals than from OA journals.
According to ISI, there were 421709 citations in Endocrinology
and Metabolism in 2004. 35.3% of the total citations came from
only 4 journals--Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and
Metabolism, Endocrinolgy, Diabetes, and Diabetes Care.
The fact that, in most fields, including Endocrinology,
established journals have, so far, continued to play a dominant
role can't logically be used to indicate that a move towards open
access is impossible, or unnecessary. It simply indicates that
such a move has not yet happened on a wide scale in that
particular field. Given the huge momentum that well established
journals have, few expect traditional journals to disappear
overnight.
c.f. the fact that most music, by value, is still (I think!)
currently bought on CD, doesn't change the fact that paid
download of tunes looks set to become ever more important.
If you look outside Endocrinology, other subject areas provide a
different picture. They can positive evidence of what is
possible, which is surely more significant that negative evidence
of what 'hasn't happened yet' in a given field. For example, in
Bioinformatics and Genomics, the journals BMC Bioinformatics, BMC
Genomics, Genome Biology, Nucleic Acids Research and PLoS
Computational Biology are leaders in the field and all make 100%
of their research open access, with the end result that a large
fraction of the articles and citations in that field are oa (it
would be interesting to gather the actual stats on how high the
proportion is)
The first two journals, from the Endocrine Society, publish
reviewed manuscripts upon acceptance. The Society's Rapid
Electronic Publication makes research papers accessible to
subscribers up to 12 weeks before the print and online journals
are published. Diabetes and Diabetes Care are freely accessible
3 months after publication, and accepted manuscripts may be
placed on acceptance in any institutional reposity. A Rapid
Electronic Publishing option is likely soon. An institutional
subscription to any of these journals is less than $1000--a bit
less than the "price of a Toyota Camry" so often mentioned as
the standard journal price in the general media.
By comparison, BMC Endocrine Disorders is not even ranked by
ISI. It may well be a good journal, but the statistics aren't
there to cause authors to choose it.
If the scientific community relied entirely on ISI impact
factors, no new journals would ever be started, since no new
journal has an impact factor for the first few years. Even more
problematically, ISI's process for deciding which journals it can
afford to spend the money to track is highly subjective, with the
result that many of the most highly cited new journals are not
yet tracked.
For example, ISI's own cited reference data shows that BMC
Biology would be in the top 5% of all tracked ISI journals, by
impact factor, if it were tracked - and yet ISI does not yet
track it. The problem here, if there is one, isn't with open
access, but with the tracking systems of one particular indexing
service. ISI is not (or certainly should not be) the ultimate and
only arbiter of what works in science publishing.
Fortunately. ISI is not the only source of metrics as to the
success and quality of journals - there are plenty of others
(Scopus and Google Scholar, for a start).
Matt Cockerill
Publisher,
BioMed Central