If science drops in a field but no other researchers
are around to hear it, does it further the
academic area of study?
Howdy researchers, Trace here for DNews.
Science is a process, it’s a way of thinking
about the world around us.
Most of these scientific processes are thought
through and then published in a journal, but
to read them you have to pay!
Shouldn’t all this scientific knowledge
be FREE!?
Firstly, science is mostly paid for by grants
from governments, non-profits, foundations,
universities, corporations or others with
deep pockets.
We did a video about it.
But, even though the science was paid for,
that’s just the first half of the equation...
the other half is the scientific journal.
The first journals were published over 350
years ago as a way to organize new scientific
knowledge, and that continues today.
According to the International Association
of Scientific, Technical and Medical Publishers,
2.5 million new scientific papers are published
each year in over 28,000 different journals.
A new paper is published every 20 seconds.
(and you thought we’d run out of stuff for
DNews 😉).
Researchers need others to read their paper
so it can affect their field.
So, they freely send their treasured manuscripts
to journals for peer review and publication.
When a manuscript comes in, specialists select
and send the best manuscripts to volunteer
experts in the field who are “carefully
selected based on… expertise, research area,
and lack of bias” for peer review.
After that, the papers are copy-edited, compiled
into an issue of the journal, physically printed
and then shipped and/or published online!
They’re, like, the nerdiest magazines in
the world.
All this costs money…
According to a study in PLOS One this whole
process can cost 20 to 40 dollars per page,
depending on how many papers the journal receives
and how many they have to reject.
Someone has to pay for that, and there are
three ways this can happen: authors can submit
for free and readers/subscribers pay (called
the traditional model), or authors pay and
readers get it for free (called open-access),
or both authors and readers pay!English-language
journals alone were worth $10 billion dollars
in 2013!
I know what you’re thinking, just put them
on the internet!
Save on shipping, like newspapers and magazines!
Well, even though publishers don’t have
to print and ship big books of papers anymore,
they often still do.
And, even if the journals were only online,
servers and bandwidth need to be paid for,
and that ain’t cheap.
Publishing requires dollah bills, y’all
and someone has to pay, and everyone gets
their money differently…
For example: the American Association for
the Advancement of Science (AAAS) publishes
the Science journals, and the Public Library
of Science publishes PLoS One among others;
both are nonprofits.
But, while PLOS uses an open-access (free
to you) model, Triple-A-S publishes six journals:
five with a traditional model (you pay) and
one open-access.
Plus, there are for-profit journals like Macmillan
Publishers, who own the journal Nature (and
a mix of traditional and open access options).
And the giant Reed Elsevier (now called RELX)
publishes over 2000 journals some of which
are open-access and some are traditional!
So, though some are non-profits, they don’t
always give it to YOU for free, and those
that do still can charge researchers up to
2900 dollars to publish!
While others make money off scientific research
which makes some people feel icky.
The whole thing is confusing.
Asking “what is worse: for-profits charging
universities or readers for access, or open-access
charging authors?”
Shrug.
The debate rages.
Many scientists argue as the peer review is
provided for free by the scientific community,
and the papers are provided for free by the
scientific community; access to the papers
should.
be.
free.
The EU agrees, ordering any publically-funded
papers to be made free by 2020; pushing toward
open access to science!
In the US, where many of the papers originate,
some scientists are calling for boycotts on
for-profit publishing.
In the end, there was a time when practitioners
needed a physical reference to the latest
scientific achievements.
In the days before the internet, getting a
journal in the mail must have been both exciting
and illuminating, but now, thanks to digital
publishing… this whole pay-for-science model
is wont to change…
People WANT the knowledge to be free, but
no one knows how to do it.
As y’all know, more research is always needed,
but should that research be behind a paywall?
Let us know down in the comments, make sure
you subscribe so you get more DNews everyday.
You can also come find us on Twitter, @seeker.
But for more how much science actually costs,
watch this video.
