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Include preprints

Open ctb opened this issue 9 years ago • 8 comments

Preprinting (as opposed to open access, #9) seems like an omission from the current topic suggestions.

ctb avatar Jun 02 '16 15:06 ctb

Here the wikipedia page on journals by preprint policy would be a great resource to link to, along with more rhetorically persuasive pages.

ctb avatar Jun 02 '16 15:06 ctb

That's a good idea, thanks @ctb.

Other nice resources are also: http://www.sherpa.ac.uk/romeo/search.php https://rchive.it/ (a wrapper for SHERPA/ROMEO)

aleimba avatar Jun 02 '16 15:06 aleimba

More generally, the list of resources in this paper:

https://figshare.com/articles/The_open_research_value_proposition_How_sharing_can_help_researchers_succeed/1619902

is reasonably recent and might be a good starting point for many things.

ctb avatar Jun 02 '16 15:06 ctb

Thanks for your input, @ctb! I personally would count this still as part of open access (#9). In the open access topic the different paths (golden, green (i.e. preprints and instistitutional repositories) and diamond open access) should be described. But independent if this will be a distinct topic or part of open access (#9) it is good to have this explicitly mentioned as something to that needs to be addressed.

konrad avatar Jun 02 '16 16:06 konrad

The reason I would suggest classifying it separately is that many people are afraid to publish in open access journals b/c of stigma. With preprints, you can make your work open (and citable), while also targeting the journals that your co-authors think are important.

ctb avatar Jun 02 '16 17:06 ctb

Okay, just a question of "marketing" :) Good point.

konrad avatar Jun 02 '16 17:06 konrad

Would be great to list benefits for each group. For example,

Authors:

  1. Fixing issues by suggestions.
  2. Citing growth.

Publishers:

  1. Gems early discovery.

Companies and Funding bodies:

  1. Faster proof of the topic viability

What are the other benefits?

RomanGurinovich avatar Jun 03 '16 08:06 RomanGurinovich

I don't think authors always view the opportunity to have more people review their work as a positive ;).

There's a more complete list in the figshare preprint I link to above, but in addition to citations and finding out about major problems BEFORE the peer reviewers, I also see:

  • authors benefit by getting the work out there and citable during the (sometimes lengthy) peer review process; in many physics fields, peer review can take years, but in the meantime everyone has read the paper.
  • preprints establish priority of publication.

ctb avatar Jun 03 '16 14:06 ctb