Dagmara Weckowska |
The Research
Councils UK (RCUK) policy — which came into effect on April 1st
2013 — requires that all peer-reviewed papers and
conference proceedings (and eventually monographs too it is assumed) arising
from research funded by RCUK are made open access, either by researchers paying
to publish in open access journals (gold OA), or continuing to publish in the traditional
(subscription) manner and then depositing copies of their works in an open
access repository (green
OA), usually after an embargo period.
The policy of the Higher Education Funding Council for England (HEFCE) — which will come into effect in
2016 — will require researchers to deposit all
their final peer-reviewed manuscripts in an institutional or subject repository
as soon after the point of acceptance as possible, “and no later than three
months after this date”.
It has taken the OA movement twelve years to get the UK to this
point (the Budapest Open Access
Initiative was authored in 2002), but advocates believe
that these two mandates have now made open access a done deal in the country.
As such, they say, they represent a huge win for the movement.
Above all, they argue, HEFCE’s insistence that only those works that
have been deposited in an open repository will be eligible for assessment for REF2020
(which directly affects faculty tenure, promotion and funding) is a
requirement that no researcher can afford to ignore.
But could this be too optimistic a view? Dagmara
Weckowska, a lecturer in Business and Innovation at the University of Sussex, believes it may be. While she does not doubt that the RCUK/HEFCE policies
will increase the number of research outputs made open access, she questions
whether they will be as effective as OA advocates appear to assume.
Weckowska reached this conclusion after doing some research earlier
this year into how researchers’ attitudes to open access have changed as a
result of the RCUK policy. This, she says, suggests that open access mandates will
only be fully successful if researchers can be convinced of the benefits of
open access. As she puts it, “Researchers who currently provide OA only when
they are required to do so by their funders will need a change of heart and
mind to start providing open access to all their work.”
In addition, she says: “Under the new HEFCE policy, researchers have incentives to make their best 4 papers accessible through the gold or green OA route (assuming that the REF again requires 4 papers) but they do not have incentives to make ALL their papers openly accessible.
Further
complicating matters, Weckowska points out that UK HEIs do not currently know how
many research outputs their faculty produce each year, which would suggest that
universities will struggle to ensure that faculty comply with the policies.
The conclusion would seem to be, therefore, that UK funders still
have some work to do if they want OA to become the default for published
research, both in terms of educating researchers about the benefits of open
access, and ensuring that adequate compliance mechanisms are put in place.
And judging by a
survey undertaken earlier this year by the publisher Taylor & Francis it would appear that there is still an urgent need to educate
researchers in the specifics of what the mandates actually require of them. Only
30% of respondents to the T&F survey said they understood the RCUK policy,
and many “appeared to be unsure whether the policy applies to them, since over
half [55%] were unable to say whether or not their future articles would need
to be published in accordance with the policy or not.”
The interview begins
RP: Earlier this year you gave a presentation
on some research you have done looking at scientists’ motivations for open
access publishing. This was focused specifically on the new RCUK OA policy and
your conclusions were as follows:
·
That the policy changes in the UK have
been effective in strengthening pro-open access subjective norms among those
who had little or no experience of open access publishing.
·
That they were ineffective in
promoting beliefs in the positive impact of open access publishing and creating
the perceived behavioural control among those who had little or no experience
of open access publishing.
·
That they have shaken up confidence in
the ability to provide open access among the researchers who had been
publishing in open access journals before the changes in policies.
Can you talk me through the specifics of your study, and say why
you reached these conclusions?
DW: Ok,
let me explain the research process and the theoretical lens that I used to
look at the data and draw conclusions.
The presentation that you refer to is based on a pilot project
looking at broadly defined openness in biosciences. The project involved
interviews with 22 Principal Investigators (PIs) aged approximately 40 to 60,
who are working in the fields of systems biology, synthetic biology and
bioinformatics and hold senior research positions in 11 higher-education
institutions in the UK.
We conducted semi-structured interviews, lasting an average of two
hours, at each institution between September 2013 and January 2014. This was a
joint project between the Innogen
Institute at University of Edinburgh and Egenis
at the University of Exeter — team members at each university focused on different
aspects of ‘openness’.
Part of our analysis drew on the extended theory of
planned behaviour to understand motivations for open access publishing.
This theory assumes that whether we behave in a certain way or not
depends on (1) our attitudes towards the particular behaviour (formed on the
basis of our beliefs [so called behavioural beliefs] in the positive and
negative effects of such behaviour), (2) our perceived control over performing
such behaviour (formed on the basis of our beliefs [so called control beliefs]
about ease or difficulty of performing the particular behaviour), (3) our
subjective norms (formed on the basis of our beliefs [so-called normative
beliefs] about social normative pressures, that is, what we believe significant others
want us to do) and (4) our moral norms (formed on the basis of our beliefs [so-called
moral beliefs] about whether a particular behaviour is the right or wrong thing
to do).
The purpose of the analysis was to identify (behavioural, control,
normative and moral) beliefs expressed by scientists during the interviews and
identify differences between the beliefs of early adopters of open access
publishing (those who had been publishing in open access journals before the
changes in RCUK policies in 2012) and late adopters.
Differences in beliefs of early and late adopters illustrate
differences in motivations for open access publishing. Slides 3 and 4 of my presentation portray
the answers given to the question “Why have you made your publications openly
accessible?” Slides 5, 7, 8, 14 provide all the beliefs expressed by early and
late adopters during the interviews.
Please note that I made conclusions about the effects of policy
change although I did not speak to scientists before and after the policy
change. I made an assumption that late adopters did not hold any strong beliefs
about open access prior to 2012 and that the beliefs that they hold now are the
result of the new policy. I think it is a reasonable assumption and it was reported
by many late adopters that open access just wasn’t on their radar before 2012.
RP: So you found that scientists’ beliefs about — and attitudes towards
— open access and the RCUK OA policy are dependent on whether they were already
making their papers open access before the new policy was announced?
DW:
Yes. Late adopters expressed strong normative beliefs (they said that they now
feel they should do open access because it matters to significant others —
their employers or RCUK). Such beliefs were not expressed by early adopters.
Thus late adopters are likely to have formed pro-open access subjective norms.
This motivating factor is absent among early adopters.
On the basis of these observations one can conclude that the policy changes in the UK have been
effective in strengthening pro-open access subjective norms among those who had
little or no experience of open access publishing.
Late adopters did not express many (behavioural) beliefs in the positive
effects of open access publishing as opposed to early adopters who believe that
all sorts of good things will happen to themselves and to the world thanks to
open access publishing. Thus it is unlikely that late adopters formed pro-open
access attitudes while early adopters are likely to hold pro-open access
attitudes based on their behavioural beliefs.
On this basis one can conclude that the policy changes were
ineffective in promoting beliefs in the positive impact of open access
publishing among those who had little or no experience of open access
publishing.
Both early and late adopters expressed (control) beliefs about
difficulties associated with open access publishing. On this basis, one can
conclude that (1) late adopters are unlikely to have formed perceived
behavioural control over open access publishing which could motivate them to
publish open access and (2) the perceived behavioural control over open access
publishing of early adopters has been shaken up (early adopters said it used to
be easier to publish open access before 2012 when they had control over open
access funds).
The second point of my second conclusion and the third conclusion that
you cite above are based on these observations.
So these observations suggest that the policy changes were ineffective in creating the perceived behavioural
control among those who had little or no experience of open access publishing,
and they have shaken up confidence in the ability to provide open access among
the researchers who had been publishing in open access journals before the
policy changes.
All the written outputs of this pilot project are available online.
We are working on an academic paper that will provide more detailed data and more
in-depth analysis.
Not very optimistic
RP: To what extent do you think your findings can be generalised
to other disciplines?
DW:
One should not generalise these findings to other disciplines. Each discipline
has its own publishing culture and the differences are stark between the
sciences and the humanities. Bioscience, which was the empirical context of our
study, has been one of the disciplines pioneering open access journals and open
data movement.
Given the importance of copyright in arts and humanities, I would
expect that researchers in these disciplines may be less motivated to provide
open access to their work than researchers in, for example, biosciences. This
however would need to be verified in another study.
RP: You said: “the perceived behavioural control over open access
publishing of early adopters has been shaken up (early adopters said it used to
be easier to publish open access before 2012 when they had control over open
access funds)”. Am I right in thinking that this is because previously RCUK
allowed researchers to pay for gold OA out of their research funds, but under
the new policy they are no longer allowed to use these funds to pay
article-processing charges but must instead request the money from their
university?
DW: Yes, that is
the reason. In the past researchers were allowed to budget for OA publishing in
their research grant applications to RCUK and so were in control of spending.
The changed funding mechanisms for OA publishing has shaken up the perceived
behavioural control of the scientists who provided OA to their work for years.
This
was certainly an unintended consequence of the changed funding mechanism.
However, one should not jump to the conclusion that this change is bad. It
could be a good change if it is well implemented.
In
my opinion, the new funding scheme has significant advantages:
(1)
under the old system scientists had to guess how many publications their
research project will result in and in what journals they will publish before
they started the research project. If they underestimated the OA fees they were
left without funds.
(2)
research publications are often written after the research grants are finished —
that is when unspent grant-related money is inaccessible. In my opinion, if the
universities develop fair, transparent and easy processes for allocations of OA
funds, the feeling of control will likely come back.
RP: Would you say your research suggests that the RCUK policy will
be successful?
DW: It
depends on how you define “success”. The above research results are not very
optimistic as they basically mean that late adopters will publish open access
because they think they have to (e.g. when they publish the results of research
funded by RCUK), not because they strongly believe that it is worth doing or the
right thing to do.
Given that the late adopters also think that open access
publishing is a bit of hassle, there is a possibility that they will choose
open access licences only if they have to and continue to publish in a traditional
way otherwise. HEFCE’s policy that sets the rules for future REFs addresses
this potential problem to some extent.
No choice but to embrace OA?
RP: I think Green OA advocates view the situation more positively.
They argue that as a result of the HEFCE policy OA is now a done deal in the
UK, since researchers will have no choice but to embrace OA, and thus there
will be 100% compliance. Are you less optimistic because you assume many
researchers will choose green OA rather than gold OA, and so their papers may
not be available with the RCUK’s favoured Creative Commons licence (CC BY), and
only after an embargo? If so, green OA advocates would respond that this is good
enough, so long as the embargoes are not overlong. They would add that embargoes
can in any case be overridden by using the so-called “Request eprint
Button” — where repositories provide a
button to allow users to send an automatic request to the author(s) of a paper
asking for a copy to be emailed to them.
DW: The point is
that there is a possibility that the late adopters will choose gold (or green)
open access only to show compliance to their research funders’ requirements and
continue to publish in a traditional way (papers behind paywalls, no green OA) for
the results of research that is funded by different means (e.g. university
funds, industry). I would not consider this to be “good enough”. A green OA
after a short embargo, I do consider adequate.
RP:
I see. Your point is that researchers may not opt for open access at all,
despite the RCUK and HEFCE policies?
DW: Yes. We did
our research before the HEFCE policy was announced so the motivations of late
adopters may have been strengthened by now. However, if the need to comply
(with RCUK and HECFE) continued to be the only strong motivation for late
adopters, one would worry whether all their research outputs will be made OA.
RP:
I suspect open access advocates would respond by saying that since only those
papers made available in an open repository will be considered for REF
evaluation purposes, researchers will feel bound to make all their work freely
available.
DW: I think
people who believe, as you say, that “researchers will have no choice but to
embrace OA” because of the HEFCE policy forget that academics need to submit only
a few papers for REF (4 for the last REF). Good researchers publish much more
than 4 papers in any REF period (~5 years) and they could strategically choose
to make 4-6-? papers open access (green or gold) and keep the other papers
behind a paywall.
The
RCUK policy requires OA for papers resulting from research funded by RCUK.
HEFCE policy requires OA for all papers submitted to REF — e.g. 4 papers per
independent full-time scientist in the last REF period.
As
I see it, there will be papers written from research that was not funded by
RCUK (or other funders who require OA) and is not planned to be submitted to
REF. Will late adopters make these papers (gold or green) OA? I would say it is
unlikely, until they develop beliefs in the personal or societal benefits of
open access publishing.
So
I believe it is feasible that there will be near 100% compliance with the HEFCE
policy — nearly all the papers submitted to REF will be accessible from
repositories after an embargo period or from publishers under a CC BY licence.
However, in my opinion, this does not mean that nearly all papers published by
UK scientists will be open access.
Universities are bureaucracies
RP: In other words, because not all research papers published in the
UK need to be submitted for the REF, and because not all the research published
in the UK is funded by RCUK (or the Wellcome Trust etc.), your suspicion is
that many papers could still end up stuck behind a paywall?
DW: Exactly.
Under the new HEFCE policy, researchers have incentives to make their best 4
papers accessible through the gold or green OA route (assuming that the REF
again requires 4 papers) but they do not have incentives to make ALL their
papers openly accessible.
To
submit their very best papers to the REF, scientists would need to provide OA
to their first 4 papers published in a given REF period and then every paper that they feel is
stronger than the ones that they already made OA.
RP:
But does that not suggest that all their papers will therefore end up OA? And
should we not assume that they will in any case want to make them all OA “just
in case”?
DW: Scientists
have their ways of judging the quality of a paper (e.g. on the basis of a
journal’s impact factor [unfortunately] or the quality of a journal’s editorial
board) and having gone through the last REF exercise researchers are aware of
departmental strategies and criteria for a ‘REF-able’ paper.
So
I believe that many researchers may develop strategies for identifying REF-able
papers and making them open access and leaving other papers behind a paywall, particularly
if the process of depositing papers in repositories is time-consuming (e.g. due
to complicated repository systems or copyright issues).
However,
if universities set up easy processes for depositing papers, or units dedicated
to making all the institution’s papers accessible at least through the green
route then it is more likely that 100% of UK scientific outputs will be openly
accessible.
RP:
The management and monitoring of OA policies, and ensuring compliance, is
clearly going to be a big challenge. You may know that a recent Jisc report stated the
following: “One of the most significant issues which arose during the TCoO [Total
Cost of Ownership] data capture exercise was the fact that not one of the 24
universities involved in the project were able to tell the project the total
number of APCs paid by their institution. In the vast majority of cases, the
Library handled the RCUK and Wellcome funds and captured data on APCs paid from
those funds. But none were able to establish how many APCs were paid from
departmental/ faculty research project funds. A number of librarians asked the
University Finance department for this information, but none were able to
provide a figure. The speed that the data was collected at meant that institutions
had very little time to compile data which they were not already collecting,
which also meant that in some cases the data could not be fully checked for
accuracy. In addition it was interesting to note that, despite a specific
request, only one of the libraries was able to provide IPL [Information Power Limited] with the
total number of articles published by their institution in a given academic
year.” I wonder how likely you think it is that the units you feel are
necessary will be created, and if they are how successful you think they might
be — not just in terms of managing and distributing gold OA funds, but in
ensuring compliance.
DW: Universities
are bureaucracies and so take time to adapt to changes in the environment. The
capability to manage open access publishing will not be developed overnight.
The
problem increases when a university library does not have the spare capacity to
take on the extra tasks and when the library staff lack the necessary skills
and knowledge, e.g. legal knowledge of different copyright licence agreements.
In
the late 1990s universities were expected to start collecting and reporting
data about patenting, licencing and other forms of knowledge exchange with the
business and community. At that time the UK government created a HEROBAC (now HEIF) fund to help
universities develop the capacity to manage knowledge exchange activities,
which led to the creation of many university technology transfer offices. New
training organisations were also set up to train technology transfer managers
and to share good practice across universities.
I
think it should be assessed whether there is a need for a fund that would help
universities to develop the capacity to manage open access publishing. Also the
new training needs for librarians should be assessed and addressed.
No one knows
RP: You said: “I believe it is feasible that there will be near
100% compliance with the HEFCE policy — nearly all the papers submitted to REF
will be accessible from repositories after an embargo period or from publishers
under a CC BY licence. However, in my opinion, this does not mean that nearly
all papers published by UK scientists will be open access.” I wonder if you
have a sense of what percentage of the papers produced in the UK might therefore
not be made OA. If you don’t have data on this, what is your gut feeling? Are
we talking about a sizeable percentage of papers that could still end up behind
a paywall, or a sufficiently small number that it will make little difference?
DW: I
can’t answer that question. To make a guesstimate I would need to know what
percentage of research is done in the UK with funding that has no OA
requirements and how many papers are produced on the basis of such research. No
one knows that.
If you are interested in looking into it you could check the
percentage of research income received from different sources. Data on this can
be purchased from HESA.
However, looking at funders’ OA policies and the percentage of income received
by universities from those funders, you would still not get a full picture
because these statistics do not cover research activities done without external
funding.
UK universities allow academics to spend a % of their time on
research and publishing, for example, 40% — so two full days per week for
research. Some academics do not have external funding for their research
activities. I expect that the percentage of academics who do research without
external funds will differ by discipline and type of university. Again, I don’t
think anyone has an overview of how many papers are published on the basis of
research that is not funded externally.
HEFCE’s policy on OA is currently the only way to encourage open
access to papers produced on the basis of research that is not externally
funded. But as I explained earlier, it would be possible to comply with HEFCE’s
policy by making only a few papers OA in a given REF period.
RP: In a nutshell, then, your research suggests that if scientists
do not have a personal belief in the value of OA then not even the combination
of the RCUK and HEFCE (plus Wellcome etc.) policies is sufficient to ensure
that all the papers published by UK researchers are made OA. For that to happen
it will be necessary to engineer a change of hearts and minds within the
research community?
DW: That
is absolutely right. Researchers who currently provide OA only when they are
required to do so by their funders will need a change of heart and mind to
start providing open access to all their work. The future will show if the RCUK
and HEFCE polices are enough to trigger such a change.
RP: What is your personal view about open access and the current
UK OA policies?
DW: I
personally believe that open access academic publishing can potentially help
disseminate scientific knowledge around the globe and to a number of societal
groups. For instance, journalists like yourself and civil servants will benefit
from open access publishing, in my opinion.
However, I am not yet convinced that we will see local economic
benefits (you may want to look at my presentation
about Open Access and Innovation where I examine a set of assumptions
underpinning the claim that open access will lead to more innovation and
suggest that many of these assumptions are not yet supported by evidence).
I am also worried about the cost of open access publishing in the
UK during the transition period, and the criteria that will be used by RCUK and
universities to distribute open access funds (e.g. whose publications will be
restricted because of limited funds).
Because of these worries I am yet to be convinced that the gold
open access required by RCUK is a significantly better model than green open
access model adopted in the US and promoted by HEFCE’s new policy.
RP: Do you think that researchers are more likely to opt for green
or for gold OA in the UK?
DW:
Our study did not examine in detail the differences in motivations
for green and gold open access, so I cannot say whether researchers are more
likely to opt for green OA on the basis of our findings.
RP: What do you see as the likely end game so far as OA is
concerned, both in the UK and globally?
DW: I
believe that a large proportion of scientific literature will be openly
accessible in the foreseeable future, if the hearts and minds of scientists can
be changed.
Open access policies have been introduced by public funders in
many developed countries, including the US, the European Union, Australia, and
in an increasing number of developing countries.
Right now it is important to monitor whether the policies are
effective in stimulating a change in publishing behaviour and design other
interventions if necessary. The publishing industry will be keen to maintain
their business model while public funders will strive to maximize the benefits
from research that they fund. Perhaps, some form of green open access will be
the final compromise.
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Dagmara
Weckowska is a lecturer in Business and Innovation at the University of
Sussex. She holds a PhD in Technology and Innovation Management from SPRU-Science Policy Research Unit at
the Universityof Sussex. In the last 7 years she has researched the individual,
organisational, legislative and regulatory aspects that affect the emergence of
science-based innovation. More recently, while working as a research fellow at Innogen — the Institute for Innovation Generation in the
Life Sciences at the University of Edinburgh,
Dagmara started researching the relationship between open science and open
innovation, including the issues of open access.
2 comments:
OPINIONS
My, what a lot of (pessimistic) speculation based on a survey of bioscientists’ attitudes after the RCUK policy was announced and before the new HEFCE/REF policy was announced!
I’d suggest that the speculation about which (and how many) of their journal articles UK authors will deposit at acceptance time across the upcoming six years — to ensure that they will be potentially eligible for REF2020 — may be particularly unperspicacious.
Lots of conjectures about RCUK mandate compliance, but no apparent mention of the complementary university mandates that are increasingly being adopted (and especially about the HEFCE-style Liege model: immediate deposit required in order to be visible for annual performance review). Those cover all research output, funded and unfunded. And Liege is reporting near 90% compliance…
Some apparent unawareness of how simple it already is to deposit.
And still way too much talk about (Gold) OA publishing as if that were what was meant by OA, and what this is all about.
I agree with Stevan. Since a researcher has no idea what, at the end of the REF period, will be considered their best four papers (and indeed, the decision will probably not be taken by the researcher, but by some Institutional committee), they will want to play safe and make all their outputs OA.
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