From the moment it was conceived, PubMed Central was
controversial, and it has remained controversial ever since. The brainchild of Harold Varmus — the then
director of the US National Institutes of Health (NIH) — the idea
for PubMed Central was first mooted in 1999, but originally called E-BIOMED.
Kent Anderson |
When Varmus published his initial proposal, publishers
quickly concluded that it posed a serious threat to their livelihoods.
Specifically, they were convinced that, if E-BIOMED went ahead, the US
government would become a publisher, and they would be disintermediated as a
result. So they launched a firestorm of protest.
Their protest delivered results. When the service was
launched eight months later it had been re-branded as PubMed Central, and was a pale shadow of the revolutionary new “electronic
publications” system that Varmus had envisioned. Significantly, Varmus had had
to concede that publishers would have final say on whether the papers they
published were put into PubMed Central — and most publishers chose not to
participate.
Varmus later conceded that he had been naïve not to have
anticipated the furore. “I must have known that I was not going to be at NIH
for much longer,” he joked to New Scientist in 2003, “because this
caused a tremendous political argument: what the hell was I trying to do to destroy
the publication industry.”
Nevertheless, it was soon apparent that NIH did not
intend to give up on its dream of having a large free full-text archive of
biomedical and life science papers, along the lines of the physics preprint
server arXiv. This resolve was only strengthened when, two years
later, the Open Access (OA) movement came into being. The tide of
history, it seemed, was flowing in NIH’s direction.
Socialized science
In 2004, therefore, Varmus’ successor at the NIH Elias Zerhouni published a draft policy entitled “Enhanced Public Access to NIH Research Information. The aim was to persuade researchers to post their papers in PubMed
Central.
One again, publishers objected. In a 2004 editorial
penned in the Chemical & Engineering
News, for instance, C&N Editor-in-Chief Rudy Baum complained,
“Zerhouni’s action is the opening salvo in the open-access movement's unstated,
but clearly evident, goal of placing responsibility for the entire scientific
enterprise in the federal government's hand. Open access, in fact, equates with
socialized science.”
For publishers the nightmare scenario was that
research funders would gradually squeeze them out of the process of
disseminating research. After all, the papers published in scholarly journals
are written by researchers, and the peer review process is conducted by
researchers — at no charge to publishers. In the age of the Internet, some were
beginning to conclude, the need for publishers was beginning to look moot. At
the very least, they reasoned, the role that publishers play could be reduced in
an online world. This would help ease the burden on the public purse, which many
believed was being gouged by publishers charging excessive journal prices.
But this time publisher opposition did not succeed. In
May 2005 the NIH introduced its Public Access
Policy. While this was initially only a request that researchers
post NIH-funded papers in PubMed Central, it was later upgraded to a demand,
and today researchers are required “to submit all final peer-reviewed journal
manuscripts that arise from NIH funds to the digital archive PubMed Central upon acceptance for publication.”
Publishers continued to mutter about the Public Access
Policy, but they had to learn to live with it. And faced with growing calls for
research papers to be made freely available, many also began to experiment with
OA.
But last year their fears of being disintermediated were
reignited, when three large research funders — the Wellcome Trust, the Howard Hughes Medical Institute (HHMI) and the Max-Planck Society — announced plans to launch their own OA journal, eLife.
Since the funders indicated that they would not initially
be charging a publication fee, publishers complained that it was
anti-competitive. Writing on the Nature
newsblog on the day of the announcement, for instance, Nature’s Declan Butler commented, “[F]rom
what we know so far from today’s press conference, this new journal appears to
offer few tangible novel innovations and may indeed disrupt the thriving open
access environment. Its decision not to charge author fees, at least in the
journal’s short and medium term, in fact could risk setting back the cause of
open-access publishing by undermining — through what might be considered unfair
competition — economically successful open access publishers”.
And when at the end of October, eLife announced that it had published its first few articles, critics were angered to see that the papers had been hosted not on the
journal’s own website, but on PubMed Central.
Active critic
The most active critic of these latest developments is Kent Anderson, who has responded by
penning a series of hard-hitting posts on the Scholarly
Kitchen blog. Anderson is a former executive director of The New England Journal of Medicine, and currently CEO/Publisher of The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery. He is also Editor-in-Chief of The Scholarly Kitchen blog and, as he
puts it, “one of the more vocal sceptics of open access”.
In his several posts Anderson has argued that —
contrary to its own claims — in hosting eLife
papers PubMed Central is now clearly acting as a primary publisher, and
inappropriately competing with private publishing technology companies as a
result. Moreover, he added, by favouring eLife,
PubMed Central has drawn attention to the fact that it routinely gives OA
publishers preferential treatment when listing journals in the all-important PubMed citation database, and is thus discriminating against
subscription publishers.
Anderson has also suggested that the preferential
treatment given to eLife is evidence
of “cronyism” — a charge he makes partly on the grounds that a Wellcome Trust employee
serves on the PubMed Central National Advisory Committee (PMC NAC).
As I discovered when I contacted him, eLife’s Managing Executive Editor Mark Patterson rejects the last charge. He also dismisses Anderson’s claim that PubMed
Central is acting as a primary publisher. And Wellcome’s Head of Digital
Services Robert Kiley insists
that neither he (when he served on the PMC NAC) nor the Trust’s solicitor Chris Bird (who
currently serves on it) have ever asked for any kind of favourable treatment
for Wellcome and/or eLife whilst
serving on the Committee.
Nevertheless, Anderson maintains, questions still
remain, and he intends “to continue to poke around” in pursuit of answers.
Meanwhile David Lipman, the Director of the
National Center for Biotechnology Information (which runs PubMed Central),
declined to comment on the matter. “At this time, we don’t think that engaging
Mr. Anderson in a public rebuttal is productive,” he emailed me.
Below I publish an interview with Anderson that was conducted
by email over the last few days.
The interview begins …
RP: In a couple of recent posts on the Scholarly
Kitchen blog (here and here) you expressed concern about the way in which you believe that eLife — the new Open
Access journal being launched and funded by the Wellcome Trust, HHMI and the Max-Planck
Society — is being given preferential treatment by PubMed Central. Specifically,
it is your belief that the normal selection process that journals are supposed
to go through before they are listed in PubMed Central has been waived for eLife.
If you are right, then why should the research and publishing communities be concerned
about this, and what would you like to see PubMed Central do to correct the situation?
Do you think it will?
KA: PubMed Central is a government initiative, part of
the US National Library of Medicine [NLM] and the National Institutes of Health. These agencies are supposed to
act fairly and uniformly according to rules they make obvious to everyone. In
the case of eLife, the normal rules
were not followed — eLife was
accepted into PubMed Central before it had demonstrated any capacity to publish
independently.
This is against the stated policies of PubMed Central,
as expressed both on their sites and in email communications with other
publishers before and during my initial examination of the situation. All of
this is documented in my first blog post.
For publishers, this is frustrating because they abide
by rules they feel are uniformly applied, so to see a new and unproven journal
cut the line with the clear assistance of PubMed Central only adds to their
worst fears — that something in the leadership at PubMed Central is bending the
rules to suit a larger agenda, that there isn’t a level playing field, and that
there’s a hidden agenda.
I see no signs that PubMed Central plans to correct
the situation. They have just published the second round of eLife
articles, again as the primary publisher. They have not explained themselves
publicly beyond responding to my direct questions.
RP: For non-scientists, can you explain why being listed in PubMed is so important?
RP: For non-scientists, can you explain why being listed in PubMed is so important?
KA: Most journals aren’t viewed as legitimate until they
are indexed in PubMed. It’s that simple. There’s an assumption that the NLM imposes rigorous
standards — demonstrated editorial and publishing capabilities, for example —
before a journal can be listed in PubMed. This is no longer true. It is true
for being listed in MEDLINE, which gets us to the fundamental confusion in the market between
PubMed and MEDLINE: for many authors, editors, and readers, MEDLINE and PubMed
are viewed as one and the same.
Initially, they were. PubMed, however, has become
something different. It is not manually curated, and you can shortcut into it
by putting free content into PubMed Central.
RP: Just to
clarify: PubMed Central is the free full-text archive of biomedical and life
science papers, and PubMed is a citation database. Is that correct?
KA: Correct.
When PubMed Central gives quick access to PubMed
listing, they are putting their thumb on the scale for journals that provide
free access — not because of editorial quality. This adds to the impression
that they have an open access bias. Their behaviour would be different if they
had a quality bias, for instance.
In the case of eLife,
they didn’t even wait to see if eLife
could independently publish articles before facilitating their entry into
PubMed. eLife received this while
also receiving primary publishing services from the US government.
Primary publisher
RP: Right, as you point out, eLife’s first few papers have been published directly on PubMed Central. This you believe underlines the fact that PubMed Central is now acting as a primary publisher. If that is correct, why in your view is it significant and to be deprecated? What would you like to see PubMed Central do to correct the situation? Do you think it will?
KA: PubMed Central has always stated, and still does so
in multiple places in its online descriptions of itself, that it is not a publisher.
This has never been true — it has always been a secondary publisher of primary
content. Because they were a secondary publisher, most of us just let it slide —
not all, but most. There have been editorials complaining about PubMed Central
as a publisher in some high-profile journals, even in its secondary role.
A recent analysis showed that PubMed Central is
stealing traffic from participating journals, which has direct financial
consequences for them, from advertising impressions to institutional usage
reports, both of which depend on traffic. So I think controversy over PubMed
Central’s role as a secondary publisher is not dead, by a long shot.
However, PubMed Central has more recently become the
primary publisher of journals, including the Journal of the Medical Library Association. And, with eLife, they helped
launch a new journal, a major crossing of many lines in the journals ecosystem
— government subsidization of a business launch, for example.
To correct the situation, PubMed Central should take
the eLife articles down, issue an
apology, and begin enforcing its stated policies uniformly.
Another option would be for them to change their
policies to allow journals to use them as a hosting platform, and state
expressly who can do that, what services they provide, and so forth. But to
have it happen in the shadows is improper.
However, I don’t expect them to change their behaviour
in the short-term. They seem to feel they are immune to criticism.
RP: I understand eLife has made it clear that this is only a temporary solution, until its own publishing platform is up and running. If that is correct, does it lessen your concern in any way?
RP: I understand eLife has made it clear that this is only a temporary solution, until its own publishing platform is up and running. If that is correct, does it lessen your concern in any way?
KA: What strikes me about this question is that you, like
eLife, are putting eLife in the driver’s seat. They said
this, too — that they chose to publish on PubMed Central, as if the US
government was providing a free publishing platform, ala WordPress, which they
chose to avail themselves of. That’s disingenuous, and not how anybody else
feels the NCBI (which runs PubMed Central within the NLM) should
operate.
So, no, my concern is not lessened because this is
“temporary.” In fact, that’s part of my concern. If this was temporary, and
because eLife has a contract with a
proven publishing platform vendor to launch in 2013, why did PubMed Central
feel the need to deviate from its policies to provide this exceptional bridge
to a journal start-up?
What was different about it? And was that difference
driven by the long-standing relationships between PubMed Central and Wellcome
Trust? There are many signs this is the case, including an exceptional meeting in June 2012 in which eLife
was the featured project — something that has never happened in the minuted
history of PubMed Central — during which the head of the NCBI gave eLife business advice. Clearly,
boundaries aren’t clear to those meant to enforce them at NLM.
RP: I emailed Mark Patterson, eLife’s Managing
Executive Editor for his views on this matter. In fact, he denied that PubMed
Central is acting as a primary publisher for eLife, saying, “Publishing
encompasses the entire process from submission and editorial assessment, to
content processing and online dissemination of content.” And he added, “Nor is
PMC the only venue for current eLife content; as soon as open-access content is
available at one site, it can be made available at many more. For example, eLife
content is also available at EuropePMC, github, Mendeley and Scribd, and will shortly be available at the eLife journal website hosted by
Highwire.
KA: If you accept Patterson’s argument that you have to
fulfil all the requirements of his definition to be a publisher, then nobody is
publishing eLife — because eLife is not doing the content processing
and online dissemination. So his argument elides the facts, and doesn’t make
intrinsic sense.
The links from the eLife
site go directly to PMC, which is where they are published. The attempt to say
that because the articles are OA means they have no primary source and are
freely circulating is weak and nonsensical. A lot of subscription-based
articles are circulating freely, as well — in fact, probably more are. That
doesn’t mean they don’t have a home or source.
There are degrees of publishing, and I’ve tried to
make it clear that these are in effect. PMC has been a secondary publisher of
content for most of its existence. Now, with at least three journals, including
eLife, it is the primary publisher of
that content. It disseminates the upstream, authoritative version.
Cronyism?
RP: You believe that eLife has received preferential treatment due to what you call “cronyism”. I think this is more a suspicion than a demonstrated fact, but what is your reason for suggesting that PubMed Central has succumbed to cronyism and, if you are correct, what in your view are the implications?
KA: Well, I’ll let the facts speak for themselves, and
we’ll let your readers determine whether this amounts to cronyism. First,
cronyism is defined as, “partiality to long-standing friends, especially by
appointing them to positions of authority, regardless of their qualifications.”
In the case of eLife,
the friendships are there — Robert Kiley, who promotes eLife in publishing venues on behalf of Wellcome Trust and is an
employee there, served on the PubMed Central National Advisory Committee for
many years; one of Wellcome Trust’s senior attorneys is currently on the same
committee; and Mark Patterson, the managing executive editor of eLife, was an invited guest at the June
2012 meeting of the same committee, a committee that has never had an unlisted
outside guest address the meeting about a new initiative.
This is where the partiality begins, in my opinion.
Also, as I mentioned above, the head of NCBI, David Lipman, proceeded to give eLife business advice in that same
meeting, clearly a loss of perspective and another sign that the two entities
are acting as cronies, beyond their proper roles and relationship.
Then, within four months of that meeting, PubMed
Central becomes the only place where eLife
content is published, despite policies at PubMed Central that would seem to
make this impossible — requirements to have published at least 15 articles
independently before any evaluation can begin, for instance. I think all signs
point to cronyism.
The implications of this are irksome and problematic.
First, it means that publishers who have looked to the
NLM to provide a level playing field and an objective process for registering
journals and applying various NIH mandates know that in fact the NCBI and NLM
waive their own rules when it suits them. This makes their pronouncements about
their process ring hollow, and undercuts their authority.
Second, it indicates there are deep management issues
at the NLM. For instance, when I asked to know the date that eLife applied for inclusion in PubMed
Central, I was told that the NLM doesn’t track these processes, and didn’t know
the date. That’s ludicrous, when they impose rules on publishers, who abide by
them, but then don’t track their own processes. Again, their credibility as an
authority in the field is at risk.
Finally, it means some publishers are “in” and some
are not — that there is an inside track based on favouritism and relationships,
which suggests at least some personal corruption of the process — that
management has become too invested in a certain outcome or vision of the future
to act as a fair and disinterested arbiter.
RP: I also contacted
David Lipman and Robert Kiley by email and asked them to respond to your
concerns. Lipman replied, “At this time, we don’t think that engaging Mr. Anderson
in a public rebuttal is productive.” Kiley responded, “With regard to whether
eLife was given any special favours to get its content into PMC, I really don’t
know. My sense is that eLife had some good scientific content it wanted to make
available, but doesn’t yet have its Highwire site fully up and running. (I
understand that this will go live before Christmas).” Kiley also confirmed that
neither he nor Chris Bird have ever asked for any kind of favourable treatment
for Wellcome and/or eLife whilst serving on the PubMed Central National
Advisory Committee.
And this is how Patterson responded to the suggestion
that eLife has received preferential treatment, “I can only speak from my experience
at eLife and at PLOS. In both cases, PMC has been responsive and effective. Based
on the experience of other publishers, such as Marty Frank’s, it seems PMC takes into account the reputation of the organizations
behind new open-access projects when assessing their inclusion.”
KA: Well, I think this sounds like equivocation and
evasion. Conflicts of interest are a lot about appearances, and we’ve all seen
denials that break down later as more evidence comes out.
I’ve heard through the grapevine that there’s more
than meets the eye here, and from some well-placed sources. I’m going to
continue to poke around as time allows. We’ll see at the end of the day how
this all plays out.
The facts remain that eLife received unprecedented access to the PMC National Advisory
Committee, that it used PMC as its primary publisher a few months later, and
that Wellcome has a strong presence on their board. If it looks like a duck,
walks like a duck, and quacks like a duck, it’s fair to conclude it’s a duck.
I find it interesting that instead of engaging in a
public discussion, the civil servant David Lipman chooses instead to stonewall.
Where is the investigation? Why isn’t he providing some facts and specific
information in response to specific questions?
I can’t get a straight answer from anyone in the
organizations involved about who approved this, who was involved in the
decision making, and when it was approved.
So far, we have David Lipman denying he knew anything
about it, big names at Wellcome denying they had anything to do with it, and
Mark Patterson saying it was just PMC being “responsive,” but in a manner that
blew past all their stated requirements and processes, which they are still
imposing on other publishers, OA or not.
Somebody was in the soup for this. Who was it? Who
made the decisions? Who told people at eLife
to send content to PMC? Who told people at PMC to prepare a place for eLife content? When did they do it? The
lack of specifics, answers, and accountability makes me wonder all the more.
Preferential treatment
RP: You have also expressed concern about the way in which you believe PubMed Central is now competing with private technology providers. Why do you believe this to be the case, and for those not versed in the US cultural and legal environment, can you explain why you feel this to be an important issue?
KA: PubMed Central currently serves as the primary
publisher of three journals. This means that these three journals don’t have to
pay for what everyone else has to pay for — hosting services, XML conversion,
and so forth. They are getting a free ride courtesy of the US government.
In the US, and probably in many other countries, this
doesn’t comport with the role of government, which is to provide a framework
for business but not to compete in businesses that are already in sufficiently
competitive markets.
In this case, the contract eLife has with HighWire Press could be in jeopardy if eLife
finds the PubMed Central solution to be adequate over the next few months.
In the case of the other two journals, the US
government is giving them a free ride. That’s wrong. There are many competitive
providers of these services in the publishing market, some of which are free or
very affordable.
The US government shouldn’t be a competitor to these
companies. Publishers should have to pay to play. Nobody should get a free ride
on the taxpayer’s dollar. Ironically, that’s one of the fundamental complaints
that catalyzed the open access movement.
RP: eLife aside, you believe that PubMed Central is
giving preferential treatment to OA journals in general. However as Patterson
points out, a comment on your first post by the Executive Director of the American
Physiological Society Martin Frank suggests that this may not be quite as you suggest. Could it be that while
eLife may indeed have been given preferential treatment, the incident is not necessarily
evidence of a bias towards OA? In other words, while it may demonstrate favouritism,
it may not be evidence of a predisposition towards OA (and presumably a prejudice
against subscription publishers) at PubMed Central.
KA: I think you misread the comment from Marty Frank. He
noted that until he mentioned that a new journal was being published as an OA
journal, he couldn’t get PubMed Central’s attention. Once they realized this,
they greased the skids. That showed clear OA bias.
However, you’re correct that it’s not uniform. It does
exist, and there are signs of it, and it’s the only bias they seem to show
occasionally. How they created the fast-track into being listed in PubMed is
another sign of bias — it’s based on being OA, not on being a great journal.
What’s more worrisome is that their management
practices are so hard to pin down. Do they require what they say they do? Are
they consistent in how they treat journals? Their inconsistency is the bigger
problem, but it leans OA, because when they make exceptions, it’s always for OA
journals.
I think these most recent events should have all
publishers concerned, whatever their business model. Clearly, there’s a lack of
rigorous process at NLM when it comes to how journals are indexed, measured,
and accepted. And while eLife was
getting a big assist, other OA journals from other publishers were being given
the straight arm. That’s not efficient or effective management.
Intertwined issues
RP: I think there are several intertwined issues here,
including issues of transparency and consistency, the role of government
agencies, and indeed of the role of government itself. I doubt anyone would
disagree that it is important for government agencies to behave in a
transparent and consistent way, and to operate a level playing field. So if PubMed
Central is not being transparent, or if it is tilting the playing field in some
way, I am sure people would want to see you challenge the organisation. But can
you clarify your views on PubMed Central’s proper role? Is it your contention
that it is inappropriate for PubMed Central to act as a publisher at all, or
simply that if it is doing so then it needs to acknowledge as much, and to
offer its publishing services to everyone, and on a paid-for, not subsidized,
basis?
KA: I think it’s becoming clearer with each passing year
that PubMed Central is doing more than it should. It’s interesting, because
most of the publishers I knew sniffed this out early — that PubMed Central
would be competitive. Now, evidence is emerging that it is taking away
customers, page views, and traffic. PubMed Central has been diligent about
executing this strategy, as well, putting their links and their links only on
the main search results, for instance.
They are driving traffic to their version
preferentially through their proprietary interface. That’s way over the line.
They are being competitive, and they are manipulating their interfaces to their
advantage.
I personally think that PubMed Central could shift
into a dark archive, and keep the same deposit requirements and toll-free
access requirements in place. This would rectify the problem of competing with
traffic, accomplish the same access goals, leave the publishers in a better
situation from a traffic, branding, and audience standpoint, save the
government money, and preserve the literature.
I also think PubMed Central should not tie indexing in
PubMed to inclusion in PubMed Central in any way. PubMed is an index that
should be based on passing some quality threshold, not an index partially based
on publishing policies.
As for providing publishing services, I don’t think
the US government has any place scaling up a commercial publishing platform.
But let’s not forget, “free” is a price. Right now, they are offering a very
limited number of customers, for unknown reasons, free hosting. That is a
commercial venture, just with the price of “free.”
There is no need in this market for the government to
be doing this. Other comparable journals fund their own existence. Why do these
get government assistance?
RP: In terms of the proper role of government. If, as
OA advocates maintain, private industry is operating in such a way as to
restrict access to publicly-funded information, and if it is resisting becoming
more open, then is not the duty of a government to intervene — in the way, for
instance, that the UK government has done. As UK Minister of State for
Universities and Science David Willetts put it to the Publishers Association in May, “Our starting point is very simple. The Coalition is committed
to the principle of public access to publicly-funded research results. That is
where both technology and contemporary culture are taking us. It is how we can
maximise the value and impact generated by our excellent research base. As
taxpayers put their money towards intellectual enquiry, they cannot be barred
from then accessing it. They should not be kept outside with their noses
pressed to the window — whilst, inside, the academic community produces
research in an exclusive space. The Government believes that published research
material which has been publicly financed should be publicly accessible — and
that principle goes well beyond the academic community.” The upshot is that in
future all UK-funded research will need to be made OA. Do you not feel that the
UK government has intervened in the market appropriately here — with the aim of
ensuring that UK-funded research is made publicly available? And is not the
NIH’s Public Access
Policy equally appropriate?
KA: Taxpayers, at least in the US, have paid for the
research reports required by grants the government gives. These reports can be
posted on government Web sites, and nobody is objecting to that. In fact, I
encourage it, and have publicly said I would heartily join in a movement to get
the government to force 100% of its researchers to comply with these
requirements. So far, only a fraction do, well below 50%.
The government should focus on enforcing its own
mandates with regard to taxpayer-funded reports and on doing a good job of
posting these taxpayer-funded reports for discoverability.
What taxpayers haven’t paid for is the peer-reviewed
literature. This is often portrayed as a minor difference, but it’s actually a
huge and expensive difference. One of the biggest costs is the cost of
rejection. This can run into hundreds of thousands of dollars for a good
journal.
What does rejection do? It helps papers find their
proper homes — the audience, the editorial brand, and the venue that they’ll do
best in. A recent study confirmed that this works well for authors, boosting
their impact. But it’s an invisible cost.
There’s also a lot of disingenuity in these arguments.
For instance, while governments and universities will argue that information
should be refined, filtered, and published at no or low cost, and made into a
public good, what about the other IP emanating from taxpayer-funded research?
Well, here in the US, other IP coming from
taxpayer-funded research is not made freely available to the public. It is
patented. These results are kept from the public, exploited for millions of
dollars by higher education institutions and researchers, and it’s all based on
taxpayer-funded research.
Why is it defensible, even encouraged, for higher
education to benefit in this way from taxpayer-funded research, but discouraged
and indefensible for publishers to be paid for vetting, publishing, archiving,
and disseminating high-quality information, which is distinct from the research
reports the taxpayers paid for, and actually not taxpayer-funded?
There is also the question of whether the public
really benefits from all these papers being freely available. I have an
advanced university degree in business and an undergraduate in English. I once
earned my living, for many years, editing medical texts. I’ve been published in
some of the top journals. I’m one of the best-educated people in my family, and,
like probably everyone reading this, in the top tier of the world when it comes
to educational attainment. Can I read 1% of the scientific literature, make
sense of it, and put it into practice? No. I’ll readily admit it. I don’t even
want to try. I want the experts with more specific training, more
authorization, and more experience to get the best information possible. I
don’t need it.
There’s plenty of good information for educated lay
people like us. Most people — and if you haven’t seen a regular person wrestle
with a relatively simple scientific paper, you’ve lost touch — can’t derive
much value from the vast majority of scientific papers. Even Wikipedia has been
found to be written at too high a level, including its Simple English version.
Scientists in other, closely related fields often
don’t find value in reports from one another’s fields. Practitioners in some
fields feel their journals have gotten beyond them. Relevance, appropriateness,
and timeliness are really important. Access only matters when those three
aspects are fulfilled.
The scientific literature isn’t relevant or
appropriate for the lay public, and it’s often too far ahead of what’s
available in the real world, making it also not important from a timeliness
perspective. A new breakthrough in medicine, engineered materials,
microbiology, or physics — beyond the news aspect, which is not what we’re
talking about — is unlikely to find its way into daily life very soon after
publication, usually years later.
I think some foundational ideas have become conflated,
and they need to be separated. OA wants to continue to conflate them because
the conflation serves their purpose, but there are some real questions that
need to be asked still, despite the level of government pronouncement you
produce.
Antipathy towards Open Access?
RP: You are the CEO/Publisher of The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery. I believe the journal is subscription-based, and I think it does not offer a hybrid OA option. You are also the founder of the Scholarly Kitchen blog and President-Elect of the Society for Scholarly Publishing (SSP), both of which have been critical of Open Access. How would you respond to those who might argue that your interest in this matter is driven by an antipathy towards OA?
KA: The Society for Scholarly Publishing has no dog in
this fight. It’s been completely neutral when it comes to publishing business
models and new technology, mainly serving as one of the best and most
supportive venues for new ideas to emerge.
However, because SSP cultivates discussion and
networking, there are sceptics and critics as well as adherents and supporters
at its meetings and within its membership — and this pertains to anything, from
publishing to mobile devices to dealing with international markets to business
models to dealing with vendors. It’s a vibrant organization that welcomes all
opinions from publishers, librarians, editors, and consultants.
Some of the bloggers on the Scholarly Kitchen have
been sceptical of some of the claims made by open access adherents, and we have
featured a lot of research and analysis in this regard. But the bloggers on the
Scholarly Kitchen pass no “open access litmus test” and have a variety of
opinions on all sorts of topics, and very different backgrounds. Some run open
access journals, and quite proudly, or work for publishers with many open
access titles.
I am one of the more vocal sceptics of open access,
because I think it is structurally flawed — I have always thought that more
virtues accrue to publishers who cater more to the users of the literature than
will accrue to those who cater more to its authors.
I also think that by catering to the readers, you
cater to authors sufficiently and properly, but don’t lose perspective. That’s
why the journals I run are paid for based on readership and usage. There are
too many incentives that can go awry if you forget about your readers and their
needs. That’s where my scepticism comes from.
RP: I hear what you say about the Scholarly Kitchen, and
I have seen the disclaimer on the home page distancing the SSP from the views
expressed on the blog. But I have yet to meet an OA advocate who is not
convinced that the hidden agenda of the Scholarly Kitchen is to talk up the
subscription publishing model and to talk down OA. And in so far as the SSP
created the Scholarly Kitchen, and presumably funds it, critics assume that it
too is biased against OA. You are saying that this is not correct. So why then do
you think that there is such a widespread belief that the blog is anti-OA?
KA: I think the Scholarly Kitchen is one venue that has
been willing to question many of the assumptions and practices of OA
publishers, so it has stood out a bit because of that.
I also think that one of the tactics OA advocates
routinely wield is to discredit anyone who questions OA as perhaps imperfect or
improvable, and to use a broad brush to dismiss critics. They want to paint us
as illegitimate and unsympathetic and ill-informed, when I think most people
feel we have a critical eye on many things, are pretty balanced, and are just
asking tough questions.
The attacks we’ve received when we’ve talked about OA have
been surprisingly vitriolic and immature, even when we’ve said some things that
were intended to point out issues the OA community might want to think about,
in a helpful way. Some people really have a hair-trigger about anything short
of complete OA cheerleading.
When it comes to OA, we’ve had posts on the Scholarly
Kitchen about how to make OA work, what authors want from OA, proving that OA
increases downloads, and so forth.
But we aren’t patsies, and that’s what OA advocates
seem to want us to be. We question the CC licenses, the assertions about
citation advantages, the utility of scientific information to lay audiences,
and so forth. I think it’s important these ideas are tested and not just
accepted as doctrine.
And I’m surprised that scientists or scientific-types
would object to having their ideas and assertions scrutinized.
RP: Can you expand on your personal position vis-à-vis OA, both gold and green OA?
KA: I think green OA is untenable financially, redundant
in the networked world, and confusing to users.
I think gold OA is structurally flawed because it
creates incentives to publish more but has not yet yielded any increment in
quality except for those rare cases in which a gold OA journal acts more like
subscription journals — with high rejection rates, for instance.
I think gold OA probably has a place as a temporary
catalyst mode for nascent fields, in which the authors and readers are truly
one and the same. But to get beyond this, a reader-oriented model will work
better.
I also think there is no reason to believe that gold
OA will continue to be cheaper than subscription publishing — the market is
beginning to differentiate, and costs are increasing in desirable venues. There
are early signs that if the subscription model ever moves to a minority model,
gold OA will show some of its structural flaws — taking money from research
budgets, favouring rich institutions and countries, and making it harder for
good research from unexpected places to reach its intended audience in a timely
fashion.
More information is not better information, and the
subscription model aligns a lot of interests who are very effective at getting
information to people at the right time, in the right place, and with branding
they understand.
What is to be done?
RP: In your second blog post you cited the minutes of
the June 2012 PubMed Central National Advisory Committee meeting you mentioned earlier. In doing so you drew attention to the fact that eLife
may be thinking of scaling back its initial goal of competing with the likes of
Science, Nature and Cell, in favour of a PLoS ONE-style model that would see high acceptance
rates at the journal. You have in the past been critical of PLoS ONE and its
“lite” peer review model. Were eLife to go down the same road would it in your
view be a retrograde step?
KA: Yes, that was an interesting part of the minutes, not
only because eLife seems to be
abandoning its goals of becoming a premier life sciences journal, but also
because the head of the NCBI provided some of this business advice, which was
completely inappropriate.
I think PLoS ONE
is a repository calling itself a journal, and clearly has lower standards — as
stated in its own words — than other journals. It doesn’t care about novelty or
importance, but readers certainly do. It only cares about studies being
“methodologically sound,” but it’s not clear it’s set up to accomplish this.
It has an acceptance rate that is about as high as the
acceptance rate for scientific papers in general — meaning, in reality, it’s accepting
about 100% of the non-garbage papers it receives. It does not filter its
contents well, which is what readers want — relevance and quality are not on
its radar, only volume and a low bar for acceptability.
This is what happens when the open access model is
allowed to go too far, in my opinion — incentives tilt toward serving authors
and their short-term needs. The irony is that authors are, in the bulk of their
working lives, readers. And most of them want relevant, timely, high-quality
content, which PLoS ONE can only
sporadically provide. If eLife goes
down the same road, what will we have gained? And what will the users of
scientific information have gained? More noise, or more signal?
The interesting thing about eLife is that it represents a new breed — a funder-sponsored
journal with funder-paid and funder-funded editors. There is no broken line
between funding and publication. Journals are supposed to provide objective and
disinterested review of content.
The principals at eLife
have stated that their goal is to increase the “productivity” of their funding
through publication. That signals they want more published. The eLife model is actually, in my mind,
worse than PLoS ONE because at eLife, it’s like the players (the
funders) have hired the referees.
Combine this with their goal to score more, and
suddenly, there are fewer penalties called. So, if eLife adopts the bulk-publishing model and the lite editorial
review approach of PLoS ONE, I think eLife will be in a slightly less tenable
position than PLoS ONE when it comes
to wondering whose interests they are serving. At PLoS ONE, they are serving the authors’ interests. At eLife, they will be serving the funders’
interests. Or, at least, that’s how it appears. And in the world of conflicts
of interest, appearances matter.
The situation with PubMed Central isn’t reassuring
because it shows that eLife is
willing to pull strings and use its influence to cut corners. If they can’t
even execute their launch without cronyism and conflicts of interest, what can
we expect in the future?
RP: Based on the email I have now received from Patterson,
it seems that the high-acceptance journal discussed at the June 12th
Meeting may be a planned spinoff journal from eLife. That is, any
high-acceptance journal would be in addition to, not instead of, eLife. This
seems more like the model adopted by PLoS: have a high-quality journal (or
several such journals) but also offer a high-acceptance journal as well. I
guess you would still view that as a retrograde development?
KA: I think high-acceptance-rate journals have the deck
stacked against them in the journals world through sheer positioning. They are
emphasizing quantity over quality.
Because of this, they usually diminish at least a few
of the functions of journals — dissemination (they are more passive);
validation (they use expert peer-reviewers but not statisticians or methodology
reviewers); designation (they don’t care as much about novelty or importance);
and filtration (they don’t make sure the information gets to the right
audience, which is related to the more passive dissemination).
Those other functions are expensive to do right, and
high-volume journals tend to focus on quantity, not quality. That stacks the
deck against their long-term primacy and vitality, I believe. They risk
becoming essentially well-documented and lightly curated repositories.
RP: You said that green OA is untenable financially.
Many OA advocates argue that subscription publishing is untenable financially —
that, after all, is why there has been a long-standing serials crisis. You are
probably right to say that gold OA will not prove any cheaper than subscription
publishing. But if you are right, does this not suggest that scholarly
publishing will remain untenable financially in the long run, whatever
publishing model is used. If so, what is to be done?
KA: There has been a serials crisis for nearly 100 years.
It’s like the old joke that the second book that came off the printing press
was entitled, “The End of the Printing Press: What’s Next?”
Our industry seems to mete out some standard
anxieties, and we always produce more capacity than content — at least, we have
since the 1700s. There are more journals on the market now than ever, there are
more researchers publishing, and scholarly publishing has continued to find
ways to grow and innovate.
One concern I have is that we’re eroding the
foundations, which is the primary research record. We can’t build fancy new
synthesized content services and “big data” if the primary literature is built
on sand. Lower standards around statistical review, methodological review,
disclosure, conflicts of interest, and so forth don’t help in this regard. A
lack of funding to purchase good information doesn’t help the primary
literature thrive.
The subscription model has many virtues, including
spreading the costs to the larger population of users and readers. OA advocates
may find that because authors produce at their most prolific one paper per year
but read 100, the asymmetries will put major price demands on 1% of the current
environment — the authors and their institutions. And that will reveal how
current OA prices were heavily reliant on the subscription model’s healthy
environment.
I think funding needs a hard look — what do we want to
be buying, more or better? Who should pay? What happened to all the department
subscription budgets when site licenses came? Why have libraries been receiving
a lower and lower percentage of university budget for 30 years? There are
implications to these choices and trends. I think we need to sort out what
we’re aiming for — quality or quantity — and have these discussions and
arguments, but with a mind toward finding a better way, not just having
battles.
I think OA has a place in the world, but it’s not
nearly as big a place as its advocates seem to want to dictate. There has never
been a single business model in publishing. Let OA compete, find its place. But
to have the government as a tacit player in the market seems wrong, and that’s how
PubMed Central is behaving. That needs to stop.
RP: Ok, let’s end on that. Thank you for agreeing to
do the interview.
1 comment:
"But last year their fears of being disintermediated were reignited, when three large research funders — the Wellcome Trust, the Howard Hughes Medical Institute (HHMI) and the Max-Planck Society — announced plans to launch their own OA journal, eLife."
There fears of being outcompeted is a more accurate assessment here. eLife is still a conventional journal -- it doesn't in any sense make an end-run around the traditional publication process. Any fear that existing publishers have of it is based on their sense that it will do a better job than they do, at lower cost.
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