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Re: The Value of OA
There is a fundamental misunderstanding of how the Internet works
in this post. OA is contrasted with hardcopy and Web 1.0
applications. Everything that is listed here for OA can be done
(and done better) with proprietary services.
Joe Esposito
On 4/4/07, Alma Swan <a.p.swan@talk21.com> wrote:
Peter Banks wrote:
However, like most commentators, Anderson takes the value of
OA as a given: "There is no question that OA offers
potentially significant benefits to society. All other things
being equal, free public access to scientific information is
clearly a good thing." I think that this common assumption
merits a far more critical examination than it has received.
But even if democratic communications probably won't save
mankind for its worst tendencies, can access to scientific
information accelerate research
Yes, it can. Open access is essential for the optimal progress
of research for the following reasons:
1. It increases the visibility of research output and hence its
usage
2. It speeds up the research cycle
3. It enables semantic computer technologies to do two things:
i) create one research space from which new information can be
derived
ii) track, monitor, and measure citation and other patterns,
thus enabling better understanding of scientific developments
and better predictive methodologies (highly desirable for
managers and funders of research)
4. It is a critical enabler of
interdisciplinary/multidisciplinary research
All these things are discussed at more length in an invited
essay ("Open access and the Progress of Science"), including
supporting data, in the next issue (May/June) of American
Scientist, out soon on a bookstall near you.
In talking with researchers at major research institutions, I
have yet to meet a single one who felt that access to
information was a limiting factor in research.
John Houghton has already provided references to the empirical
studies of others that appear to contradict this. In our own
work, too, we have found that every time we ask researchers
about this we get a completely different answer to the one you
hear. And they are still saying it. Dozens of them, from all
disciplines, sat around the table in focus group sessions I ran
through last autumn and told of their difficulties in getting
hold of articles they wanted (and these were just the articles
they know about).
Many simply give up the chase - with untold repercussions for
research progress, of course. These were people from some of
the best-resourced research universities in the UK, places that
could by no stretch of the imagination be described as
'less-connected'. The report of that study will be published in
the next week or so by the Research Information Network (and
will be open access).
The study of how information changes research, practice, and
understanding is too important to remain unexamined or to
remain the untested given of the open access movement.
Indeed. And those who examine it (empirically) and test it
(empirically) draw the conclusion that open access will be a
great driver in the advancement of scholarship.
Alma Swan
Key Perspectives Ltd
Truro, UK