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Bill Hooker, member since Jan 4, 2006
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by sennoma 2009-12-24 16:35 lostart · scienceasabusiness · scienceisasnakepit · management
http://pbeltrao.blogspot.com/2009/12/name-that-lab.html?showComment=1261690523808_AIe9_BG7y_iu2nXOCXBLMqzVXdxPjjgBaoja4l... - cached - mail it - history
by sennoma 2009-12-24 16:32 lostart · abelpharmboy
http://scienceblogs.com/terrasig/2009/12/four_for_pharmboy.php - cached - mail it - history
by sennoma 2009-12-24 15:58 lostart
http://biocurious.com/2009/12/22/analyze-this?commented=1 - cached - mail it - history
The open access movement is an attempt to free scholarly communication from restrictions on access, control, and cost, and to enable benefits such as data mining and increased citations. While open access is approached here from the problem of subscription inflation, open access is not merely a library issue; it affects the availability of research to current and future students and scholars. This white paper offers an introduction to open access as well as a look at its current development.
by sennoma 2009-12-24 15:52 oa · oa.money · publishing · serialscrisis
http://eprints.rclis.org/17582 - cached - mail it - history
by sennoma 2009-12-24 15:49 oa.money · publishing.models · richardpoynder
http://poynder.blogspot.com/2009/11/open-access-who-pays-how-much.html - cached - mail it - history
Journal prices have long been a matter of controversy. Lacking has been any objective information on costs that could be used to judge whether price increases have been justified by rising costs. Using a rare, publicly available set of data for the American Economic Review, the premier journal in economics, this article normalizes costs for number of issues per annum, number of pages per issue, and print quantities per issue to construct an index for the costs of producing this journal. It shows that costs have in fact increased more slowly than the general rate of inflation and argues that the cost experience of this journal provides a reference point for academic journals generally.
by sennoma 2009-12-24 15:43 oa.money · publishing · scholarlycommunication
http://utpjournals.metapress.com/content/076807036544p52u/?p=f895318b0b1a42e38ae65727a97245b8&pi=1 - cached - mail it - history
Recession is currently causing a resurgence of the academic serials crisis. Profit-mongering by commercial publishers is once again denounced as the key driver of the crisis. However, a critical analysis of institutional and bibliometric data does not reveal excessive corporate greed in recent years; instead, it suggests that the present hurdles stem largely from years of inadequate budget allocations to academic libraries and from a publishing frenzy fuelled by simplistic methods of evaluating faculty productivity. To prevent what is likely to be the publishing equivalent of a tsunami in the next few years, universities and research institutions urgently need to re-emphasize quality over quantity in the publishing process, and they must find ways to include peer-reviewing efficiency among their criteria for productivity and impact.
by sennoma 2009-12-24 15:42 scholarlycommunication · peerreview · publishing
http://utpjournals.metapress.com/content/hp2776l95462809n/?p=f895318b0b1a42e38ae65727a97245b8&pi=4 - cached - mail it - history
by sennoma 2009-12-24 15:40 machinereadabledata · opendata
http://electronicmuseum.org.uk/2009/07/13/pushing-mrd-out-from-under-the-geek-rock - cached - mail it - history
the tedious details put together add up to an understanding of how the cell works and how it goes wrong. The details could be put together by a human, going through the thousands of papers on the topic, assembling the facts and finding the trends. Or, more plausibly, given the amount of tedious details out there, they could be assembled by a computer, with a database and a clever algorithm. Except that four in every five of those tedious details, discovered at great expense to taxpayers, will be inaccessible to that clever algorithm. They will be locked away in the basements of university libraries, hidden in human-readable prose that humans will never read. The results of billions of pounds of work searching for an understanding of cancer and a better chance at defeating it will be worthless, because they will never be amongst the parts that add up to the greater whole.
by sennoma 2009-12-24 15:39 oaos.need · oa
http://www.cotch.net/blog/20091223_1558 - cached - mail it - history
Our board member Hal Abelson points us to Modeling a Paradigm Shift: From Producer Innovation to User and Open Collaborative Innovation , an important new paper by Carliss Y. Baldwin and Eric von Hippel. If you’re interested in the theoretical case for the ascendancy of innovation and creativity in the commons — and for policy that does not cripple the commons — read, or at least skim these highly readable 29 pages.
by sennoma 2009-12-24 15:36 intellectualproperty · copyright · creativecommons
http://creativecommons.org/weblog/entry/19891 - cached - mail it - history
The "Compulsory Licensing" paper attacks this question directly - looking at an episode where the US "stole" a bunch of inventions by compulsory licensing after World War I. The consequent effect on innovation in the areas covered by the licenses? It went up by 20%.
by sennoma 2009-12-24 15:22 intellectualproperty · patents
http://www.againstmonopoly.org/index.php?perm=593056000000002084 - cached - mail it - history
Sciyo Becomes the First Academic Publisher to Introduce Usage-based Author Royalties, press release, December 18, 2009. Authors publishing with Sciyo in 2010 will be the first in academic publishing to receive royalties based on the number of downloads of their publication. For every 10 downloads, 0.2 euro will be accredited to author’s account on an annual basis. Sciyo operates under the open access publishing model, replacing subscription fees with publication fees paid by the authors or their funders. All Sciyo’s publications are available online, free to view, download, print, copy and share under Creative Commons Attribution License and without sign up, which increases their visibility and citation rates. Author royalties will be accredited directly to the author's account, with the exception of royalties under 100 euro, which will be deducted from the author's publishing fee head on the next time he or she decides to publish with Sciyo. ... Sciyo's publishing fee of 470 euro is among the lowest in the open access publishing industry. ...
by sennoma 2009-12-24 15:21 oa · oa.money · scholarlycommunication · publishing.models
http://www.earlham.edu/~peters/fos/2009/12/oa-publisher-to-pay-author-royalties.html - cached - mail it - history
by sennoma 2009-12-24 15:20 openeducation
http://openeducationnews.org/2009/12/21/blackall-starts-open-phd - cached - mail it - history
Simon Hodson of JISC examines how technology and funding policies have changed the ways that researchers share data
by sennoma 2009-12-13 13:15 opendata
http://www.researchinformation.info/features/feature.php?feature_id=243 - cached - mail it - history
by sennoma 2009-12-13 13:14 lostart
https://www.blogger.com/comment.g?blogID=10781944&postID=6833476820798078937&page=1&token=1260727933073_AIe9_BEgIfidtQoU... - cached - mail it - history
This RIN report finds that many researchers are encountering difficulties in getting access to the content they need and that this is having a significant impact on their research. Based on the findings of five studies, the report investigates the nature and scale of key restrictions on access to information resources of importance to researchers; the impact of these restrictions and the ways in which they might be alleviated or overcome. The report examines the frequency with which researchers encounter problems in accessing content; researchers’ perceptions of the ease with which they can gain access and the issue of researcher access to information resources in the public and private sector which are not formally published and which are often subject to copyright restrictions. It also reviews academic and research libraries arrangements to provide access to researchers who are not members of their institutions. The report’s key finding is that access is still a major concern for researchers.
by sennoma 2009-12-13 12:48 oa · oa.access
http://www.rin.ac.uk/our-work/using-and-accessing-information-resources/overcoming-barriers-access-research-information - cached - mail it - history
by sennoma 2009-12-13 12:19 mechanicalturk · gametheory
http://behind-the-enemy-lines.blogspot.com/2009/12/prisoners-dilemma-and-mechanical-turk.html?utm_source=feedburner&utm_... - cached - mail it - history
NIH grants vs. investigator age
by sennoma 2009-12-13 12:12 scienceisasnakepit · science.numbers · science.funding
http://metamodern.com/2009/11/27/great-science-great-scientists-and-icons/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_cam... - cached - mail it - history
The Russian travel series is remarkable.
by sennoma 2009-12-04 03:03 photo
http://www.biekedepoorter.be - cached - mail it - history
About The goal of this blog is reporting evidence concerning the reliability of Amazon Mechanical Turk as an online subject pool for experiments in economics, psychology, and social sciences in general. Using AMT to run web-based experiments allows researchers to obtain large quantities of data in a cheap and efficient way. However, there is lack of evidence regarding the actual reliability of AMT’s workforce as a subject pool; as any new instrument, AMT requires to be tested thoroughly in order to be used confidently. This blog aims at collecting any individual effort made in order to validate AMT as a research tool. It reports results from experiments that increase or decrease the reliability of AMT as an online subject pool, as well as general guidance for running experiments through this service.
by sennoma 2009-12-04 01:25 mechanicalturk · x-phi
http://experimentalturk.wordpress.com/about - cached - mail it - history
misleading title -- actually a review of literature on whether OA articles are cited more than TA ones
by sennoma 2009-11-29 22:10 oa.numbers · oa · scientometics · bibliometrics
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2780014/?tool=pmcentrez&report=abstract - cached - mail it - history
Uneven but contains some really arresting work. Including portraits, which I don't usually care for.
by sennoma 2009-11-28 17:12 photo
http://www.tobyburrows.com/index.php - cached - mail it - history
by sennoma 2009-11-28 16:46 for.will
http://vimeo.com/7508571 - cached - mail it - history
by sennoma 2009-11-27 20:19 googlebooks
http://library.duke.edu/blogs/scholcomm/2009/11/17/plus-ca-change-plus-cest-la-meme-chose-gbs-again - cached - mail it - history
by sennoma 2009-11-27 20:16 tools
http://freelancingscience.com/2009/11/03/basket-as-a-writing-tool-scan-as-a-collector - cached - mail it - history
A colleague of mine is having some difficulties getting an Open Source solution to be made available within his government organization. In providing support to him, I've collected the below resources. Of particular interest is the 2007 Government Open Source Policies from the Center for Strategic and International Studies, listing the Open Source policies of hundreds of national, state/province/territory and local governments (including Canada's).
by sennoma 2009-11-27 20:13 open.govt · foss
http://zzzoot.blogspot.com/2009/11/government-and-open-source-software.html - cached - mail it - history
A follow up to the 2006 report, 'Scientific publishing in transition: an overview of current developments,' 'The STM Report' collected the available evidence and provides a comprehensive picture of the trends and currents in scholarly communication.
by sennoma 2009-11-27 20:12 scholarlycommunication · oa · oaos
http://www.stm-assoc.org/news.php?id=255 - cached - mail it - history
Mark Ware Consulting has been commissioned by Knowledge Exchange (www.knowledge-exchange.info), a partnership of JISC (UK), SURF (Netherlands), DEFF (Denmark) and DfG (Germany), to conduct a study into the feasibility of submission fees in open access journals (i.e. as distinct from publication fees).
by sennoma 2009-11-27 20:11 oa.money · oa.businessmodels · oa
http://mrkwr.wordpress.com/2009/11/04/open-access-submission-fees - cached - mail it - history
This third report in the GISWatch series is entitled “Access to online information and knowledge – advancing human rights and democracy” and reveals how vulnerable the internet as we know it is. The report unpacks the key issues impacting on access to online information and knowledge, including discussions on intellectual property rights, knowledge rights, open standards and access to educational materials and libraries. The report also offers an institutional overview and a reflection on indicators that track access to information and knowledge. 48 country reports –-ten more than last year— analyse the status of access to online information and knowledge in countries as diverse as the Democratic Republic of Congo, Egypt, Mexico, Switzerland and Kazakhstan, while regional overviews offer a bird’s eye perspective on trends in North America, Latin America and the Caribbean, Africa, the Middle East, South Asia and Europe. For the first time there is an innovate section that visually maps global rights as seen through the lens of Google searches, as well as a visual analysis of Twitter messages sent out during the recent Iranian political crisis.
by sennoma 2009-11-27 20:10 mangosteen · oa · oa.access
http://www.apc.org/en/node/9568 - cached - mail it - history
by sennoma 2009-11-27 20:09 capitalism · socialism · intellectualproperty · patents · copyright
http://opendotdotdot.blogspot.com/2009/11/modest-proposal-how-to-fix-capitalism.html - cached - mail it - history
by sennoma 2009-11-27 20:08 copyright
http://opendotdotdot.blogspot.com/2009/11/copyright-ratchet-racket-explained.html - cached - mail it - history
As digital technologies are expanding the power and reach of research, they are also raising complex issues. These include complications in ensuring the validity of research data; standards that do not keep pace with the high rate of innovation; restrictions on data sharing that reduce the ability of researchers to verify results and build on previous research; and huge increases in the amount of data being generated, creating severe challenges in preserving that data for long-term use. Ensuring the Integrity, Accessibility, and Stewardship of Research Data in the Digital Age examines the consequences of the changes affecting research data with respect to three issues - integrity, accessibility, and stewardship-and finds a need for a new approach to the design and the management of research projects. The report recommends that all researchers receive appropriate training in the management of research data, and calls on researchers to make all research data, methods, and other information underlying results publicly accessible in a timely manner. The book also sees the stewardship of research data as a critical long-term task for the research enterprise and its stakeholders. Individual researchers, research institutions, research sponsors, professional societies, and journals involved in scientific, engineering, and medical research will find this book an essential guide to the principles affecting research data in the digital age.
by sennoma 2009-11-27 20:07 opendata · oaos.review
http://www.nap.edu/catalog.php?record_id=12615 - cached - mail it - history
growth in web technologies and increased transparency in the literature - and data - may be contributing to a shift in our perceptions of what constitutes a prior publication. Innovative online journals with virtually unlimited space provide researchers with opportunities to produce novel (original) contributions to the literature that are clearly and transparently linked to previously published articles. These include significantly extended/re-analysed reports of previously published summary findings in journals such as Trials and legitimate or incremental updates to previous studies in BMC Research Notes.
by sennoma 2009-11-27 20:06 science · openscience · scholarlycommunication
http://blogs.openaccesscentral.com/blogs/bmcblog/entry/what_is_original_research - cached - mail it - history
by sennoma 2009-11-27 20:05 clinicaltrials · martinfenner
http://network.nature.com/people/mfenner/blog/2009/11/18/publication-bias-in-clinical-trials - cached - mail it - history
I’m posting up some work-in-progress entitled Exploring Patterns of Knowledge Production (link to full pdf). Below I’ve excerpted the introduction plus list of motivational questions. Comments (and critique) very welcome!
by sennoma 2009-11-27 20:05 oaos.examples
http://www.rufuspollock.org/2009/10/15/exploring-patterns-of-knowledge-production-2 - cached - mail it - history
by sennoma 2009-11-27 20:02 organising · tools
http://howdanielworks.blogspot.com/2009/10/best-of-how-i-work.html - cached - mail it - history
by sennoma 2009-11-27 19:57 photo
http://www.bryanschutmaat.com - cached - mail it - history
by sennoma 2009-11-27 19:57 photo
http://www.lizafaktor.com - cached - mail it - history
by sennoma 2009-11-27 19:57 photo
http://juliabaum.com/artwork/949914.html - cached - mail it - history
by sennoma 2009-11-27 19:56 photo
http://www.martenelder.com/index.php - cached - mail it - history
by sennoma 2009-11-27 19:25 education · for.will
http://www.3quarksdaily.com/3quarksdaily/2009/11/educating-our-children-to-be-the-innovators-of-the-future.html - cached - mail it - history
by sennoma 2009-11-27 18:26 work · think
http://www.boston.com/news/science/articles/2009/11/23/nonprofit_stocks_labs_worldwide_with_boston_area_throwaways/?page... - cached - mail it - history
Abstract: A copyright system is designed to produce an ecology that nurtures the creation, dissemination and enjoyment of works of authorship. When it works well, it encourages creators to generate new works, assists intermediaries in disseminating them widely, and supports readers, listeners and viewers in enjoying them. If the system poses difficult entry barriers to creators, imposes demanding impediments on intermediaries, or inflicts burdensome conditions and hurdles on readers, then the system fails to achieve at least some of its purposes. The current U.S. copyright statute is flawed in all three respects. In this article, I explore how the current copyright system is failing its intended beneficiaries. The foundation of copyright law’s legitimacy, I argue, derives from its evident benefits for creators and for readers. That foundation is badly cracked, in large part because of the perception that modern copyright law is not especially kind to either creators or to readers; instead, it concentrates power in the hands of the intermediaries who control the conduits between creators and their audience. Those intermediaries have recently used their influence and their copyright rights to obstruct one another’s exploitation of copyrighted works. I argue that the concentration of copyright rights in the hands of intermediaries made more economic sense in earlier eras than it does today. The key to real copyright reform, I suggest, is to reallocate copyright’s benefits to give more rights to creators, greater liberty to readers, and less control to copyright intermediaries.
by sennoma 2009-11-27 18:20 intellectualproperty · copyright
http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=1474929 - cached - mail it - history
by sennoma 2009-11-27 13:17 walterjessen · oaos.examples · interviews · openscience
http://www.walterjessen.com/promoting-open-source-science - cached - mail it - history
OA data: recent discussion and announcements
by sennoma 2009-11-27 13:01 opendata
http://www.earlham.edu/~peters/fos/2009/11/oa-data-recent-discussion-and_25.html?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&u... - cached - mail it - history
by sennoma 2009-11-27 12:51 oaos.blogs · openscience
http://bukvova.wordpress.com/2009/11/27/open-research-open-science - cached - mail it - history
by sennoma 2009-11-27 12:47 oaos.misc · openscience · citizenscience
http://robertpaterson.posterous.com/science-20-the-birth-of-the-citizen-scientist - cached - mail it - history
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