Mailing List Archive
tlug.jp Mailing List tlug archive tlug Mailing List Archive
[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]Re: [tlug] Journals, Authors and 'Free Peer Review'
- Date: Mon, 1 Oct 2018 22:26:09 +0900
- From: "Stephen J. Turnbull" <turnbull.stephen.fw@example.com>
- Subject: Re: [tlug] Journals, Authors and 'Free Peer Review'
- References: <2c477cca-5f27-a7e0-7947-c050828c56a3@dcook.org> <23459.16741.365151.303089@turnbull.sk.tsukuba.ac.jp> <55e2bb2c-f9ce-4ee9-beb3-c60882d35150@dcook.org> <ce9454fb-8ad7-ded3-76ec-41cc1ac6f413@gmail.com> <20180925090623.GA2941@priv.dyadic.cynic.net> <CADR0rndonq88pf-hGTrzU88yNXYOww-t8pVGaBvcc2EgLC86fQ@mail.gmail.com> <5449dd1f-c5de-b2fe-9cdc-28d38866b612@gmail.com> <23466.30380.591476.397634@turnbull.sk.tsukuba.ac.jp> <f01cdddd-9b67-e7de-cdb9-5b038b19b3fa@gmail.com> <23471.46103.13779.224393@turnbull.sk.tsukuba.ac.jp> <afb753b0-9819-9592-baba-6b36abf23438@gmail.com>
Raymond Wan writes: > (Looking back at my previous message...) We were > hypothetically talking about me being a referee and looking > at some paper which has not cited an ArXiv paper. Do I > point it out to the author? That depends on the ArXiv paper. I think two things are being confused here: the *scope* of the search request, and the *contents* of the search response. If you do a search, and an ArXiv paper comes up within the scope of that search, I'm say you should check that paper to see if it should be cited. There *is* a cost to searches with wide scope: the effort needed to filter crap or inappropriate material (eg, secondary sources like newspaper articles and blog posts) from the results. ArXiv papers purport to be original research, I suppose, so you can't exclude them on the basis that they're secondary -- you'd have to read them to determine that. However, if in your experience, or that of reliable colleagues, ArXiv papers are 99.44% uncitable because they are crap or because they are mere abstracts that provide no help in evaluating or reproducing the results, narrow the search scope to exclude ArXiv. If the engine doesn't allow that, of course it's perfectly OK to ignore ArXiv items in the response. The important thing is that you've made a decision in principle and *before* searching to ignore ArXiv with prejudice. And yes, this is prejudice, but it's unavoidable. It's important to do it consciously and to occasionally test the principle, to avoid descending into bigotry. > I don't think it's a rule but one does have to have a > filter. I wish we had the time to read everything in our > field, but we don't. But that's the whole point of algorithms, keyword fields in papers, and search engines, to refine searches based on some criteria. > But this thread started (I think) because of my reply to Benjamin's > suggesting that it is really great. I don't agree with that and I > think it's worth saying why. That's fine. But you haven't done so so far. Instead, you've asked why you should change your mind, and there have been two things, whether you should cite and whether you should publish, both of which you seem to be very negative about, but not for reasons that I really understood. > Personally, I think these are all legitimate reasons, even > the ones that I didn't single out above. In particular, #2 > is actually a good reason that I didn't think about -- being > scooped. Scoops happens legitimately, too. I recall a case where I was at a seminar where an open problem was discussed. A few months later, two very senior researchers independently solved it in essentially the same way. One immediately submitted it as part of a longer paper treating some related (but less important) problems to the leading journal, where it was very quickly accepted. The second immediately submitted *his* paper containing only the main result to a "letters" journal where it appeared in print approximately a year earlier. It took five years for the paper in the higher-status journal to catch up in citations (now it's no contest, of course). I was personally involved in a similar situation where I and the other team submitted to the same journal (my serial number was one less than theirs, nyaah, nyaah, nyaah). I almost got screwed, because I was a grad student and got a low-quality reviewer who said "great! publish!" while my later-to-be coauthors (who already had a reputation) got a high-quality reviewer. Their resubmitted paper had far more content than my accepted paper, but the editor put his foot down and wrote "I'm sure Mr. Turnbull would have addressed the issues raised by the referee as well as you did", so we ended up co-authors. :-) Life isn't fair. Not to me (I didn't get a good review), not to my coauthors (I get credit for their work, and I'm not sure I would have figured out the method they used for myself -- now that I've seen it it seems obvious). > Someone beating another to publication can make what would > have been a tier 1 publication to a tier 2 or tier 3. Life is like that. This happens all the time; I told you another of my editor stories earlier. He preferred a long lynching to a short statement of an interesting problem. But you're looking only at the downside. There are two upsides: one, you may deter somebody with better connections from working on the problem and beating you out based on connections or simply working faster or choosing a journal with a short review queue. Two, if you succeed at deterring them, they save the effort and can work on something else. That benefit doesn't accrue to you but is socially valuable. > And speaking of the publisher, I don't really think they are > that evil. I assure you, they are that evil. Just look at the horrible law they are pushing through in the EU. :-( Not to mention their profits. > Yes, they are expensive. But if it's an open > access publication charge, then it has been included in the > project's budget. And it's actually a small portion > compared to the cost of running the research project itself. Speak for yourself, empirical guy. For many social scientists, especially the more theory- or policy-oriented variety, submission fees or conference registration is most of the non-labor cost of publication. And grad students generally don't have much funding -- my boss was rich in grants but I went to the main conferences every year on student loans. At Japanese national universities, most grad students are lucky to get JPY10,000 for a domestic conference and JPY 30,000 (30,000!!) for an international conference. > It's probably worth nitpicking when we're running out of > money at the end... As for accessing the journals, the > library does pay for it; again, it's part of their budget. Not any more: it's a prohibitively high share of their budget. All the universities in Japan are cutting back on everything but ScienceDirect and friends because of the high cost of access to journals. > As for peer review, I actually don't see it as being a slave > to the publisher. This I agree with. However, I think that promptness bonuses to referees, and things like that would be very good for most fields. The publishers have no incentive to do this, so mostly they don't. > Anyway, that's a long-winded answer to your "Why not?". At > least for me, the "Why not" out-weighs the "Why". I can understand why you personally might not submit to ArXiv, but that discussion got mixed up in with the question of whether anybody should search or cite work in ArXiv. Referees aren't magicians, and their incentives are almost entirely noblesse oblige. Unrefereed sources suffer from worse incentives, but they're not 100% unreliable. Steve
- Follow-Ups:
- Re: [tlug] Journals, Authors and 'Free Peer Review'
- From: Raymond Wan
Home | Main Index | Thread Index
- Next by Date: Re: [tlug] Journals, Authors and 'Free Peer Review'
- Next by thread: Re: [tlug] Journals, Authors and 'Free Peer Review'
- Index(es):
Home Page Mailing List Linux and Japan TLUG Members Links