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Saturday, November 11, 2023

Scientific publishing - where are we going?

I think it's safe to say that anyone involved in scientific publishing will tell you that it's a mess and the trends are worrisome.  This week, this news release/article came out about this preprint which shows a number of the issues.  In brief (not all of this is in the preprint; some is me editorializing):

Figure 1 from this preprint

  • The number of scientific papers being published is growing at a rate that looks completely unsustainable.  In my opinion, it's problematic on multiple levels.  There aren't enough reviewers (though that doesn't bother all publishers) and the average paper gets smaller and smaller readership (raising the question of why bother to publish papers that no one reads).  Does it make sense that the number of papers is skyrocketing while the number of PhDs granted is falling?
  • Some publishers (especially Frontiers, Hindawi, MDPI) have boosted this by drastically cranking up the number of papers that they publish, through launching specialized journals with "special issues" designed to have super-short review times (assuming that review is even truly part of the process).  Lest you think this is only the provenance of publishers previously accused of being predatory, this week alone I have received five different "special issue" announcements from AIP journals.
  • Why do people do this?  To try to game the impact factor calculations.  I've aired my grievances before about why journal impact factor is a lousy metric.  
  • Why do people want to inflate impact factors?  Because that's how journals keep score, and some countries put in place big-time incentives tied to impact factor.  A publisher worries that if its journal's impact factor falls below some threshold, then the government of China, for example, will no longer view that journal as important, and then thousands of authors will stop submitting....
  • Open access is a complicating factor, with some publishers charging absolutely sky-high charges, while at the same time having very high profit margins.  In the US, at least, those charges can be much larger than what grants will support.
  • Over all of this is the concern that massively inflating the amount of scientific literature lowers its quality and undermines the credibility of science in general.  
Coincidentally, this week we hosted Steinn SigurĂ°sson for a colloquium.  He is now the scientific director of the arxiv, the preprint archive that went from a quick and dirty preprint sharing site in 1991 to an enormously important part of the global scientific enterprise.  In his talk he hit on some wild numbers.  The arxiv is up to around 20,000 papers per month now (!) (in part because new disciplines like quantitative biology are using the arxiv).  Thankfully the arxiv has recently landed some good support.  Their annual operating budget is around $3.5M, and this is an enormous bargain by any measure.  The arxiv is partnering with volunteer developers who are adding some neat functionality.  Unsurprisingly, generative AI is a serious concern, even more so than for the publishing houses.  

It's a transformative time, for sure.  Maybe what we are seeing is analogous to the fluctuations that happen when approaching a 2nd order phase transition, and we are headed for a real change in the way publishing works.  It's hard to see how the current trends can continue unabated.

15 comments:

Anonymous said...

https://cen.acs.org/policy/publishing/Malaysia-wont-pay-researchers-publish/101/i35

Malaysia won’t pay for researchers to publish in certain journals
Education ministry will no longer cover the cost of publishing in journals from Frontiers, Hindawi and MDPI

Anonymous said...

It also reflects the pyramid scheme in academia. Everyone seems to want more undergraduate researchers, more PhD students, more post-docs... Each group member 'needs' a 1st author paper/year... Meanwhile, the PIs themselves are often doing makework, teaching, conferencing, writing grants etc. We have a system built upon the least skilled doing the actual work which matters, and publishing it in smaller and smaller slices!

Anonymous said...

Regarding the for profit cases: publish with a nonprofit as the ACS, the APS, or the MRS. They have margins to stay alive, and to invest in programs in the community , but don't make a profit.

Douglas Natelson said...

@Anon9:25, that's a whole separate discussion. As long as students + postdocs are actually well informed about career paths, and they know that there are many alternative non-academic trajectories that are just fine, that's a good start on the matter at least. I also take issue with your implicit categorization of teaching as not being "actual work which matters", but your mileage may vary. The salami-slice publication strategy is a serious concern, though.

@Anon12:08, I agree - society publishers are at least nominally non-profits.

Pizza Perusing Physicist said...

I also believe that with the recent introduction of ChatGPT and similar tools, if we don't do anything the problem of unsustainable mass-produced publications will only grow exponentially.

Anonymous said...

I'm a bit taken back by "at least nominally". Margins exist. One can't skirt along bankruptcy (especially with the history of the Physical Review on the line). The point is that there is no 30% of publication dollars siphoned out of academia and transferred to shareholders. Any left over money is generally reinvested into academia (lobbying for science funding, diversity or department head training for faculty, support for science in developing countries etc)

Douglas Natelson said...

@Anon4:01, I should have chosen my words more carefully. I agree with everything you wrote above. I do worry, though, about whether open access charges for society journals are really in line with the true costs of publication, or if they are subsidizing other parts of the business. AAAS is a non-profit, and Science Advances has a $4500 publication fee, which is not trivial, and PRX is about $4300. I freely admit that I don't understand (and haven't tried to look closely at) the accounting behind how ACS decides what to charge for ACS Au journals or what APS

Pizza Perusing Physicist said...

Oops didn’t see you mention it last paragraph.

Rama said...

https://osf.io/preprints/socarxiv/f3bgc/

Recommendation for dual peer-reviewing in science journals supported by two interpretations of Jacques Derrida’s critical thinking and not so-tiring queries of Michel Foucault

Here is research gate site with Prof Roald Hoffman's critique and comments

https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Ramasubramania-Iyer

Scroll down to get his views.

Anonymous said...

Fair enough.
It is my understanding that the higher the selectivity is, the higher an APC has to be for a journal to be able to break even. Much work goes into (managing the review process of) papers that get rejected and that therefore do not generate revenue.

This leaves alone the desirability of APC based open access (!)

Janet R. Mack said...

Navigating the landscape of scientific publishing can be a daunting task, with emerging trends raising concerns. A recent preprint sheds light on various issues within the field, prompting reflection on the current state of scientific dissemination. As the USA considers the challenges of online exams, staying informed about the dynamics of scientific publishing contributes to a broader understanding of the academic landscape and the evolving nature of scholarly communication.
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Anonymous said...

I really enjoyed reviewing papers. I normally would review any time I was asked just because I thought it was the right thing to do. I would spend a lot of time going through the papers, giving suggestions and meaningful feedback. However, several times papers with MAJOR problems made it through without edits despite the effort I put in as a reviewer. And these were reputable journals!

I feel bad to admit but because my job doesn't value me refereeing and I felt like the journals didn't value my input, I stopped reviewing at the frequency I used to.

Douglas Natelson said...

By the way, I'm deliberately leaving up the spam comment from "Janet R. Mack", because the text was undoubtedly written by (something like) GPT-4 using the blog post itself as part of the prompt, and that's meta-appropriate for the topic at hand.

Anonymous said...

“Productivity” for promotion/tenure/grant purposes almost always end up as bean counting of least publishable units. Sometimes I see CVS with 10-20 publications/year, often in random Elsievier journals, and I wonder: what is the real scientific contribution here? It just feels like publication for the sake of publication. On the other hand I do feel the dilemma of how to evaluate our colleagues, especially if we are not in the same borrow specialty. Number of publications and/or prestige branding thereof is a metric, whatever value it has or not. I hear from old timers of how there were people (Ken Wilson) who publishes very little yet has a sterling reputation among their peers, except I don’t see how that is even possible today in the current metric-driven environment.

The other thing I don’t see being sustainable is the proliferation of branded sister journals, e.g. Nature XXX. Now even APS is getting into it and I just don’t know what distinguishes PRX vs PRB vs PR Research, etc; I certainly don’t have the time to skim the TOCs of all them every week. I also suspect publishers channels submissions from their marquee journals to these sister titles, both to gin up the selectivity of the marquee, and to fill up volumes of these often new journals with short track records. It also keeps the paper in house as often you don’t have to reformat etc, as you would if sending to a new publisher. The whole exercise reeks of publisher trying to juice up their own metrics so they can charge more for ads and subscription bundles, rather than advancing scientific communication. It’s especially disappointing to see professional societies like APS and ACS getting into this sort of thing.

Rama said...

https://osf.io/preprints/socarxiv/s8uam/

The curious relevance of Foucault's soft biopower in ghost authorship to Schrodinger's unusual cat.