Re: Harnad's faulty thinking on OA deposit and APA policy

2008-07-24 Thread Arthur Sale

Let me add something that I have said repeatedly in many forums and
without contradiction:

Universities are delinquent in their duty of public accountability
if they do not make all their research outputs which are not
specifically commissioned by private enterprise publicly accessible
on the Internet.

 

One simply cannot say the same for any `central' or better `subject'
repository, for which deposit is simply desirable.

 

Funders can nominate where they want the research they fund to be
deposited, but in reality, to do so other than in the institutional
repository simply creates extra work for everyone, and conflicts of
interest.

 

Arthur Sale

University of Tasmania

 

From: American Scientist Open Access Forum
[mailto:american-scientist-open-access-fo...@listserver.sigmaxi.org]
On Behalf Of Stevan Harnad
Sent: Thursday, 24 July 2008 2:58 AM
To: american-scientist-open-access-fo...@listserver.sigmaxi.org
Subject: Re: [AMERICAN-SCIENTIST-OPEN-ACCESS-FORUM] Harnad's faulty
thinking on OA deposit and APA policy

 

On Wed, Jul 23, 2008 at 8:34 AM, Guédon Jean-Claude
jean.claude.gue...@umontreal.ca wrote:

   

  How can Harnad simultaneously state that there is no
  drive on his part against institution-external OA
  repositories and then proceed to state point 4?

 

To repeat: 

 

No drive against institution-external OA repositories, just a drive
against MANDATING DIRECT DEPOSIT in institution-external OA
repositories.

 

(Deposit mandates should be convergent, on institutional OA
repositories, not divergent; then institution-external OA
repositories can harvest the deposits from the institutional OA
repositories.)

 

Reason: 

 

To facilitate instead of retarding the scaling up to universal OA.

 

(It would save readers a lot of time and bandwidth if those rushing
to proclaim Harnad's faulty thinking on OA deposit and APA policy
would first take the trouble to understand what Harnad is saying on
OA deposit and APA policy...)

 

Stevan Harnad




Re: Harnad's faulty thinking on OA deposit and APA policy

2008-07-24 Thread Thomas Krichel
  Arthur Sale writes

 ~SUniversities are delinquent in their duty of public
 accountability if they do not make all their research outputs which
 are not specifically commissioned by private enterprise publicly
 accessible on the Internet.~T

  That's what you think is their duty.

  There are plenty of publicly funded bodies that don't make their
  documents publicly available on the Internet. Think of the OECD,
  or the UK Ordenance Survey for example. Whether that's a good thing
  or not is a matter for debate.

 Funders can nominate where they want the research they fund to be
 deposited, but in reality, to do so other than in the institutional
 repository simply creates extra work for everyone,

  Not for everyone. If a funder has a repository it is safest
  for them to require deposit in their repository. It is otherwise
  cumbersome to check that the deposit is there and stays there.

  If the university wants a copy they can download it from the
  funders' site.

 and conflicts of interest.

  What conflicts?

  Cheers,

  Thomas Krichelhttp://openlib.org/home/krichel
RePEc:per:1965-06-05:thomas_krichel
   skype: thomaskrichel


RE�: Re: Harnad's faulty thinking on OA deposit and APA policy

2008-07-24 Thread Gu�don Jean-Claude
I believe Arthur is right on his first point. This said, the issue of 
university autonomy varies enormously from one country to another and that must 
also be taken into account. In some countries, universities simply do not have 
the needed margin of maneuver to create institutional repositories with a 
mandate. For example, The French case should be examined in this regard, 
especially at a time when there is a national debate about the issue of 
university autonomy.

The second point is treated too rapidly. The French case, once again, provides 
a counter example. In France, it appears that a national, central organization 
is going to act as a national repository. This points to a situation where the 
issue of accountability is transferred to a national institution. Many 
centralistic countries may opt for this kind of solution.

The last point is way too rapid. The distributed solution of IRs remains flaky 
when it comes to retrieving articles. I know because I try to use these 
resources myself and sometimes I do not find documents which I know are there. 
Furthermore, researchers in a given discipline like to go to a one-stop entry 
point to find their documentation. Perhaps Google will be that universal entry 
point some time in the future, but this is not presently the case, and facing 
this prospect brings up othe rissues related to monopolistic power which i do 
not want to broach here but which should nonetheless stay in the background. 
For biomedical researchers, knowing that Pubmed is the place for bibliographic 
searches *and* document retrieval is a clear advantage. and this point, I 
think, amply justifies the decision by NIH to have the research articles they 
finance deposited in their depository. Furthermore, the NIH deposit does not 
prevent a parallel deposit in the local IR. So the conflict of interest appears 
non-existent or minimal in practice. 

Finally, so long as solutions roughly work in the same direction, let us agree 
to support them all. Time for refinements will come later. As the IETF people 
say in the Internet world, what we need is rough consensus and working code! To 
repeat myself, let us avoid the narcissism of minor differences.

Jean-Claude Guédon 


 Message d'origine
De: American Scientist Open Access Forum de la part de Arthur Sale
List-Post: goal@eprints.org
List-Post: goal@eprints.org
Date: jeu. 24/07/2008 03:10
À: american-scientist-open-access-fo...@listserver.sigmaxi.org
Objet :  Re: Harnad's faulty thinking on OA deposit and APA policy
 
Let me add something that I have said repeatedly in many forums and without
contradiction:

Universities are delinquent in their duty of public accountability if they
do not make all their research outputs which are not specifically
commissioned by private enterprise publicly accessible on the Internet.

 

One simply cannot say the same for any 'central' or better 'subject'
repository, for which deposit is simply desirable. 

 

Funders can nominate where they want the research they fund to be deposited,
but in reality, to do so other than in the institutional repository simply
creates extra work for everyone, and conflicts of interest.

 

Arthur Sale

University of Tasmania

 

From: American Scientist Open Access Forum
[mailto:american-scientist-open-access-fo...@listserver.sigmaxi.org] On
Behalf Of Stevan Harnad
Sent: Thursday, 24 July 2008 2:58 AM
To: american-scientist-open-access-fo...@listserver.sigmaxi.org
Subject: Re: [AMERICAN-SCIENTIST-OPEN-ACCESS-FORUM] Harnad's faulty thinking
on OA deposit and APA policy

 

On Wed, Jul 23, 2008 at 8:34 AM, Guédon Jean-Claude
jean.claude.gue...@umontreal.ca wrote:

 

How can Harnad simultaneously state that there is no drive on his part
against institution-external OA repositories and then proceed to state
point 4?

 

To repeat: 

 

No drive against institution-external OA repositories, just a drive against
MANDATING DIRECT DEPOSIT in institution-external OA repositories.

 

(Deposit mandates should be convergent, on institutional OA repositories,
not divergent; then institution-external OA repositories can harvest the
deposits from the institutional OA repositories.)

 

Reason: 

 

To facilitate instead of retarding the scaling up to universal OA.

 

(It would save readers a lot of time and bandwidth if those rushing to
proclaim Harnad's faulty thinking on OA deposit and APA policy would first
take the trouble to understand what Harnad is saying on OA deposit and APA
policy...)

 

Stevan Harnad


Re: Harnad's faulty thinking on OA deposit and APA policy

2008-07-24 Thread Stevan Harnad
On Thu, Jul 24, 2008 at 9:10 AM, Thomas Krichel kric...@openlib.org
wrote:

   Arthur Sale: Funders can nominate where they want the
  research they fund to 

   be deposited, but in reality, to do so other than in
  the institutional

   repository simply creates extra work for everyone,

   Not for everyone. If a funder has a repository it is
  safest
   for them to require deposit in their repository. It is
  otherwise
   cumbersome to check that the deposit is there and stays
  there.

   If the university wants a copy they can download it from
  the
   funders' site.


And an author having to import and deposit every one of his own
institutional outputs into his own institutional repository because
it was deposited institution-externally instead of institutionally is
not extra work (for every author, and institution)?

Isn't the gist of the OAI concept that central service-providers
should harvest from distributed local content-providers, rather than
vice versa? (Or should everyone be depositing directly in Google, and
then harvesting back?)

Stevan Harnad



RE�: Re: Harnad's faulty thinking on OA deposit and APA policy

2008-07-24 Thread Gu�don Jean-Claude
Leaving aside the bandwidth-wasting remarks about the inability of people to 
read what Harnad writes, I still find Harnad's answer unsatisfactory. The 
reason is that he and I agree that a repository without a mandate is 
ineffective. Consequently, arguing that one is not against 
institution-external OA depositories while driving against mandating direct 
deposit is more than a little disingenuous. Both Harnad and I know that, 
without mandates, the depository will not fill beyond 15%. Fighting against the 
mandate is tantamount to ensuring ineffectiveness, which is of course what 
Harnad wishes for these institutional-external OA depositories. 

Jean-Claude Guédon


 Message d'origine
De: American Scientist Open Access Forum de la part de Stevan Harnad
List-Post: goal@eprints.org
List-Post: goal@eprints.org
Date: mer. 23/07/2008 12:57
À: american-scientist-open-access-fo...@listserver.sigmaxi.org
Objet :  Re: Harnad's faulty thinking on OA deposit and APA policy
 
On Wed, Jul 23, 2008 at 8:34 AM, Guédon Jean-Claude 
jean.claude.gue...@umontreal.ca wrote:

How can Harnad simultaneously state that there is no drive on his part
 against institution-external OA repositories and then proceed to state
 point 4?


To repeat:

No drive against institution-external OA repositories, just a drive against
MANDATING DIRECT DEPOSIT in institution-external OA repositories.

(Deposit mandates should be convergent, on institutional OA repositories,
not divergent; then institution-external OA repositories can harvest the
deposits from the institutional OA repositories.)

Reason:

To facilitate instead of retarding the scaling up to universal OA.

(It would save readers a lot of time and bandwidth if those rushing to
proclaim Harnad's faulty thinking on OA deposit and APA policy would first
take the trouble to understand what Harnad is saying on OA deposit and APA
policy...)

Stevan Harnad

  Message d'origine

 De: American Scientist Open Access Forum de la part de Stevan Harnad
 Date: mar. 22/07/2008 15:44
 À: american-scientist-open-access-fo...@listserver.sigmaxi.org
 Objet :  Re: Harnad's faulty thinking on OA deposit and APA policy

 On Tue, Jul 22, 2008 at 2:06 PM, Armbruster, Chris chris.armbrus...@eui.eu
 
 wrote in SOAF:

 I fail to see how Harnad's drive against the best that exists: large,
 functional and service-oriented repositories, is of any service to the OA
 movement.

 (1) No drive against institution-external OA repositories, just a drive for
 mandating direct deposit in institutional OA repositories instead of
 institution-external ones -- into which the institutional repository
 contents can then be harvested.

 (2) Institutions are the research-providers (of all of OA's target research
 output, funded and unfunded, across all disciplines, institutions and
 countries).

 (3) Institutions are in the position to mandate and monitor the deposit of
 all their own research output (funded and unfunded, across all
 disciplines) in their own OA institutional repositories.

 (4) Funder OA mandates need to converge with and reinforce institutional OA
 mandates, rather than diverge from or compete with them, so as to
 facilitate
 a coherent transition to universal OA.

 Chris keeps talking about the functional benefits of central services,
 which
 are neither disputed  by anything I am saying nor diminished in the least
 by
 the locus of deposit I am urging. Meanwhile Chris completely overlooks th
 real problem of OA, which is getting the content provided.

 Convergent institutional and funder mandates will facilitate and accelerate
 this OA content provision; divergent ones will needlessly complicate and
 retard it.

 (APA has, as predicted, withdrawn its proposed $2500 surcharge for
 institution-external deposit, and continues to be Green on immediate
 deposit
 in the institutional OA repository, without charge, as it has been since
 2002.)

 The OA Deposit-Fee Kerfuffle: APA's Not Responsible; NIH Is
 http://openaccess.eprints.org/index.php?/archives/436-guid.html


 Stevan Harnad


 On Tue, Jul 22, 2008 at 2:06 PM, Armbruster, Chris chris.armbrus...@eui.eu
 
 wrote:

 Stevan Harnad keeps on claiming that the natural and only sensible locus
 for
  Green OA deposits is the institutional repositories. He says we must fill
  the institutional repositories first. He also claims that any kind of
  service based on repositories (like SSRN, RePEc, CiteSeerX, Arxiv, PMC,
  European Research Paper Archive etc.) will then take care of itself. The
  proposed solutions is centralised harvesting, inlcuding harvesting from
 IRs
  to PMC.
 
  Steven Harnad is currently publicly applauding the policy of the APA
  (American Psychological Association), which wishes to charges authors USD
  2500 for NIH-compliant OA deposit in PMC, but leaves standing an earlier
  policy that enables Green OA deposit in the author's IR for free.
 
  Given the APA stance, is it conceivable that they 

RE�: Re: Harnad's faulty thinking on OA deposit and APA policy

2008-07-24 Thread Gu�don Jean-Claude
One more exercise of turning in circles. The main point is that the NIH mandate 
does not affect at all the way in which institutional repositories develop. If 
it did, I would like to have very precise and concrete examples...

Let's go once more:

How does 3 follow from 2 in the first response? There is a logical gap here 
which indeed does not register. And, as it is repeated twice further on in 
Harnad's answer, one must assume it is one of his strong but mysterious 
convictions that we must all follow or be treated as heretics. 

The NIH mandate is quite effective as is. No need to spend so much time to 
tweak it further.

Saying that we must deposit first and think about retrieval later is really not 
good planning. In fact it is quite naive.

If they shop in PMC, why could they not search through PMC as well?

The reference to direct deposit in Google is beside the point, of course. If it 
is an attempt at humour or irony, it is just that: an attempt.

Researchers use PM to find articles, then go to PMC to retrieve those articles 
that are in OA. Were they in other deposits, the linkage would be more complex 
and more fragile.

Finally, Harnad's conclusion is the one I was hoping to see: either you follow 
my way very narrowly or you contribute to slowing down the progress of OA. In 
other times and places, i suspect I would end up on a  wood pile for ultimate 
purification of my soul...

Jean-Claude Guédon




 Message d'origine
De: American Scientist Open Access Forum de la part de Stevan Harnad
List-Post: goal@eprints.org
List-Post: goal@eprints.org
Date: jeu. 24/07/2008 13:51
À: american-scientist-open-access-fo...@listserver.sigmaxi.org
Objet :  Re: Harnad's faulty thinking on OA deposit and APA policy
 
On Thu, Jul 24, 2008 at 7:42 AM, Guédon Jean-Claude 
jean.claude.gue...@umontreal.ca wrote:

 I agree that a repository without a mandate is ineffective. Consequently,
 arguing that one is not against institution-external OA depositories
 while driving against mandating direct deposit is more than a little
 disingenuous.

Perhaps if it is shorter, it will register:

(1) I am and have always been an ardent and vocal supporter of NIH's
self-archiving mandate

(2) I am arguing for one tiny but crucial change in its implementational
detail:
stimulate deposit in IRs and harvest to PMC, rather than direct deposit in
PMC

(3) Purpose: To facilitate universal institutional mandates, covering all OA
output, in all fields, funded and unfunded

 Fighting against the mandate is tantamount to ensuring ineffectiveness
 which is of course what Harnad wishes for these institutional-external OA

 depositories.

I have no idea what disingenuous motives Jean-Claude is attributing to me,
or why.

I am not fighting against the NIH mandate, I am fighting to make it more
effective.

 The distributed solution of IRs remains flaky when it comes to retrieving
articles.

Let's get the articles deposited in there and we'll see how flaky retrieval
proves to be.

 researchers in a given discipline like to go to a one-stop entry point to
 find their documentation.

Fine, let them shop at PMC. But let direct deposit be in the IR, with PMC
harvesting therefrom.

 Perhaps Google will be that universal entry point some time in the future,
 but this is not presently the case...

Wherever OA content is deposited, that is where harvesters -- such as
Google, Oaister, Scirus, Scopus, Web Of Science, Citeseer, Citebase -- or
PMC -- can and will get it.

Or do you think we should be depositing directly in google too?

 For biomedical researchers, knowing that PubMed is the place for
 bibliographic searches *and* document retrieval is a clear advantage.
 [this] amply justifies the decision by NIH to have the research articles
they
 finance deposited in their depository.

PM is not the same as PMC. PM links to PMC. And PMC contains only the
articles that have been made OA.

Mandating OA is amply justified. Harvesting into PMC is amply justified.

Mandating direct deposit in PMC instead of IRs is arbitrary, has no
intrinsic justification, and is counterproductive for the growth of the rest
of OA (across institutions and disciplines, funded and unfunded)

 Furthermore, the NIH deposit does not prevent a parallel deposit in the
local IR.
If the problem were preventing deposits, rather than requiring them, we
would not need any sort of mandate.

The point is that institutions are the research-providers -- of
allresearch, in all disciplines, funded and unfunded. Funder mandates
need to
facilitate institutional mandates, not complicate with them.

 Finally, so long as solutions roughly work in the same direction, let
us agree
 to support them all.

Moving roughly in the direction of OA has already taken a decade and a half.
Let us resolve needless complications that simply delay it more.

Stevan Harnad


Re: RE : Re: Harnad's faulty thinking on OA deposit and APA policy

2008-07-24 Thread Stevan Harnad
On Thu, Jul 24, 2008 at 6:29 PM, Guédon Jean-Claude
jean.claude.gue...@umontreal.ca wrote:

 How does 3 follow from 2 in the first response?
 There is a logical gap here which indeed does not register.

A Simple Way to Optimize the NIH Public Access Policy (Oct 2004)

Please Don't Copy-Cat Clone NIH-12 Non-OA Policy! (Jan 2005)

National Institutes of Health: Report on the NIH Public Access
Policy. In: Department of Health and Human Services (Jan 2006,
reporting 3.8% compliance rate after 8 months for its first,
non-mandatory deposit policy)

Central versus institutional self-archiving (Sep 2006)

Optimizing OA Self-Archiving Mandates: What? Where? When? Why?
How?(Sep 2006)

THE FEEDER AND THE DRIVER: Deposit Institutionally, Harvest
Centrally (Jan 2008)

Optimize the NIH Mandate Now: Deposit Institutionally, Harvest
Centrally (Jan 2008)

Yet Another Reason for Institutional OA Mandates: To Reinforce and
Monitor Compliance With Funder OA Mandates (Feb 2008)

How To Integrate University and Funder Open Access Mandates (Mar
2008)

One Small Step for NIH, One Giant Leap for Mankind (Mar 2008)

NIH Invites Recommendations on How to Implement and Monitor
Compliance with Its OA Self-Archiving Mandate (Apr 2008)

Institutional Repositories vs Subject/Central Repositories (Jun 2008)

On Thu, Jul 24, 2008 at 6:29 PM, Guédon Jean-Claude
jean.claude.gue...@umontreal.ca wrote:

 One more exercise of turning in circles. The main point is that the
NIH mandate does not affect at all the way in which institutional
repositories develop. If it did, I would like to have very precise
and concrete examples...

 Let's go once more:

 How does 3 follow from 2 in the first response? There is a logical
gap here which indeed does not register. And, as it is repeated twice
further on in Harnad's answer, one must assume it is one of his
strong but mysterious convictions that we must all follow or be
treated as heretics.

 The NIH mandate is quite effective as is. No need to spend so much
time to tweak it further.

 Saying that we must deposit first and think about retrieval later
is really not good planning. In fact it is quite naive.

 If they shop in PMC, why could they not search through PMC as well?

 The reference to direct deposit in Google is beside the point, of
course. If it is an attempt at humour or irony, it is just that: an
attempt.

 Researchers use PM to find articles, then go to PMC to retrieve
those articles that are in OA. Were they in other deposits, the
linkage would be more complex and more fragile.

 Finally, Harnad's conclusion is the one I was hoping to see: either
you follow my way very narrowly or you contribute to slowing down the
progress of OA. In other times and places, i suspect I would end up
on a  wood pile for ultimate purification of my soul...

 Jean-Claude Guédon




  Message d'origine
 De: American Scientist Open Access Forum de la part de Stevan
Harnad
 Date: jeu. 24/07/2008 13:51
 À: american-scientist-open-access-fo...@listserver.sigmaxi.org
 Objet :      Re: Harnad's faulty thinking on OA deposit and APA
policy

 On Thu, Jul 24, 2008 at 7:42 AM, Guédon Jean-Claude 
 jean.claude.gue...@umontreal.ca wrote:

  I agree that a repository without a mandate is ineffective.
Consequently,
  arguing that one is not against institution-external OA
depositories
  while driving against mandating direct deposit is more than a
little
  disingenuous.

 Perhaps if it is shorter, it will register:

 (1) I am and have always been an ardent and vocal supporter of
NIH's
 self-archiving mandate

 (2) I am arguing for one tiny but crucial change in its
implementational
 detail: stipulate deposit in IRs and harvest to PMC, rather than
direct
 deposit in PMC

 (3) Purpose: To facilitate universal institutional mandates,
covering all OA
 output, in all fields, funded and unfunded

  Fighting against the mandate is tantamount to ensuring
ineffectiveness
  which is of course what Harnad wishes for these
institutional-external OA
  depositories.

 I have no idea what disingenuous motives Jean-Claude is attributing
to me,
 or why.

 I am not fighting against the NIH mandate, I am fighting to make it
more
 effective.

  The distributed solution of IRs remains flaky when it comes to
retrieving
  articles.

 Let's get the articles deposited in there and we'll see how flaky
retrieval
 proves to be...

  researchers in a given discipline like to go to a one-stop entry
point to
  find their documentation.

 Fine, let them shop at PMC. But let direct deposit be in the IR,
with PMC
 harvesting therefrom.

  Perhaps Google will be that universal entry point some time in
the future,
  but this is not presently the case...

 Wherever OA content is deposited, that is where harvesters -- such
as
 Google, Oaister, Scirus, Scopus, Web Of Science, Citeseer, Citebase
-- or
 PMC -- can and will get it.

 Or do you think we should be depositing directly in google too?

  For biomedical researchers, knowing that PubMed is 

RE�: Re: RE : Re: Harnad's faulty thinking on OA deposit and APA policy

2008-07-24 Thread Gu�don Jean-Claude
I ask for an explanation about what appears like a logical gap to me. All I get 
in response is a series of references which reiterate the same thesis over and 
over.

This must be Stevan Harnad's notion of what a civil debate must be like... It 
goes roughly like this:

I (SH) am right.

If they disagree it is because they have not understood.

So I must repeat

And repeat

And repeat

until they either shut up (allusion to wasted bandwidth, for example)

or

they agree (and hopefully just fade away).

Sorry, my dear harnad, but this is not my notion of a civil debate.

And I still do not understand how a mandate to deposit NIH-financed articles 
into the NIH repository interferes with the development of IR's. But I believe 
I know why I do not understand: there is nothing to understand.

Jean-Claude Guédon




 Message d'origine
De: American Scientist Open Access Forum de la part de Stevan Harnad
List-Post: goal@eprints.org
List-Post: goal@eprints.org
Date: jeu. 24/07/2008 19:49
À: american-scientist-open-access-fo...@listserver.sigmaxi.org
Objet :  Re: RE : Re: Harnad's faulty thinking on OA deposit and APA policy
 
On Thu, Jul 24, 2008 at 6:29 PM, Guédon Jean-Claude 
jean.claude.gue...@umontreal.ca wrote:

 How does 3 follow from 2 in the first response?
 There is a logical gap here which indeed does not register.

A Simple Way to Optimize the NIH Public Access
Policyhttp://listserver.sigmaxi.org/sc/wa.exe?A2=ind04L=AMERICAN-SCIENTIST-OPEN-ACCESS-FORUMF=lP=92016
(Oct
2004)

Please Don't Copy-Cat Clone NIH-12 Non-OA
Policy!http://listserver.sigmaxi.org/sc/wa.exe?A2=ind05L=american-scientist-open-access-forumF=lP=2453
(Jan
2005)

National Institutes of Health: Report on the NIH Public Access Policy. In:
Department of Health and Human
Serviceshttp://publicaccess.nih.gov/Final_Report_20060201.pdf (Jan
2006, reporting 3.8% compliance rate after 8 months for its first,
non-mandatory deposit policy)

Central versus institutional
self-archivinghttp://openaccess.eprints.org/index.php?/archives/133-guid.htm
(Sep
2006)

Optimizing OA Self-Archiving Mandates: What? Where? When? Why?
How?http://openaccess.eprints.org/index.php?/archives/136-guid.html(Sep
2006)

THE FEEDER AND THE DRIVER: Deposit Institutionally, Harvest Centrally
http://users.ecs.soton.ac.uk/harnad/Temp/Harnad-driverstate2.html(Jan
2008)

Optimize the NIH Mandate Now: Deposit Institutionally, Harvest
Centrally http://openaccess.eprints.org/index.php?/archives/344-guid.html(Jan
2008)

Yet Another Reason for Institutional OA Mandates: To Reinforce and Monitor
Compliance With Funder OA Mandates (Feb 2008)

How To Integrate University and Funder Open Access
Mandateshttp://openaccess.eprints.org/index.php?/archives/369-guid.html
(Mar
2008)

One Small Step for NIH, One Giant Leap for Mankind
http://openaccess.eprints.org/index.php?/archives/375-guid.html(Mar
2008)

NIH Invites Recommendations on How to Implement and Monitor Compliance with
Its OA Self-Archiving
Mandatehttp://openaccess.eprints.org/index.php?/archives/381-guid.html
(Apr
2008)

Institutional Repositories vs Subject/Central
Repositorieshttp://openaccess.eprints.org/index.php?/archives/414-guid.html
(Jun
2008)

On Thu, Jul 24, 2008 at 6:29 PM, Guédon Jean-Claude 
jean.claude.gue...@umontreal.ca wrote:

 One more exercise of turning in circles. The main point is that the NIH
mandate does not affect at all the way in which institutional repositories
develop. If it did, I would like to have very precise and concrete
examples...

 Let's go once more:

 How does 3 follow from 2 in the first response? There is a logical gap
here which indeed does not register. And, as it is repeated twice further on
in Harnad's answer, one must assume it is one of his strong but mysterious
convictions that we must all follow or be treated as heretics.

 The NIH mandate is quite effective as is. No need to spend so much time to
tweak it further.

 Saying that we must deposit first and think about retrieval later is
really not good planning. In fact it is quite naive.

 If they shop in PMC, why could they not search through PMC as well?

 The reference to direct deposit in Google is beside the point, of course.
If it is an attempt at humour or irony, it is just that: an attempt.

 Researchers use PM to find articles, then go to PMC to retrieve those
articles that are in OA. Were they in other deposits, the linkage would be
more complex and more fragile.

 Finally, Harnad's conclusion is the one I was hoping to see: either you
follow my way very narrowly or you contribute to slowing down the progress
of OA. In other times and places, i suspect I would end up on a  wood pile
for ultimate purification of my soul...

 Jean-Claude Guédon




  Message d'origine
 De: American Scientist Open Access Forum de la part de Stevan Harnad
 Date: jeu. 24/07/2008 13:51
 À: american-scientist-open-access-fo...@listserver.sigmaxi.org
 Objet :  Re: Harnad's faulty thinking on OA deposit and APA 

Re: Harnad's faulty thinking on OA deposit and APA policy

2008-07-24 Thread Stevan Harnad
On Thu, Jul 24, 2008 at 8:07 PM, Guédon Jean-Claude
jean.claude.gue...@umontreal.ca wrote:

 I still do not understand how a mandate to deposit NIH-financed
 articles into the NIH repository interferes with the development
 of IR's. But I believe I know why I do not understand: there is
 nothing to understand.

(1) because it forces authors whose institutions have an institutional
mandate to deposit twice;

(2) because it forces institutions that do not have an institutional
mandate to propose requiring their (NIH) authors to deposit twice;

(3) because, being much-imitated, it encourages other funders to
likewise mandate central deposit, which forces more authors to deposit
twice, or even more often, in ever more repositories;

(4) because it fails to reinforce the adoption of institutional
mandates, and hence fails to reinforce the self-archiving of unfunded
institutional research output;

(5) because it makes institutional self-archiving harder rather than
easier, and makes institutional author resistance to institutional
self-archiving mandates more probable rather than less probable;

(6) because it misses the opportunity for a convergent and coordinated
joint transition to universal OA, with the help of research funders
and the providers of all research, in all disciplines, funded and
unfunded: the institutions.

And all completely needlessly. For mandating direct central deposit
entails no functional gain whatsoever over mandating institutional
deposit and central harvesting, only needless loss, both in potential
OA and in OA mandate growth, for the 6 reasons stated above (all, and
more, stated explicitly in the links cited and in previous postings).

And now I shall stop replying to Jean-Claude's postings which, as has
happened before, have waxed more and more shrill and ad hominem with
each iteration:

http://users.ecs.soton.ac.uk/harnad/Hypermail/Amsci/4747.html

Stevan Harnad

On Thu, Jul 24, 2008 at 8:07 PM, Guédon Jean-Claude
jean.claude.gue...@umontreal.ca wrote:

 I ask for an explanation about what appears like a logical gap to me. All I 
 get in response is a series of references which reiterate the same thesis 
 over and over.

 This must be Stevan Harnad's notion of what a civil debate must be like... It 
 goes roughly like this:

 I (SH) am right.

 If they disagree it is because they have not understood.

 So I must repeat

 And repeat

 And repeat

 until they either shut up (allusion to wasted bandwidth, for example)

 or

 they agree (and hopefully just fade away).

 Sorry, my dear harnad, but this is not my notion of a civil debate.

 And I still do not understand how a mandate to deposit NIH-financed articles 
 into the NIH repository interferes with the development of IR's. But I 
 believe I know why I do not understand: there is nothing to understand.

 Jean-Claude Guédon




  Message d'origine
 De: American Scientist Open Access Forum de la part de Stevan Harnad
 Date: jeu. 24/07/2008 19:49
 À: american-scientist-open-access-fo...@listserver.sigmaxi.org
 Objet :  Re: RE : Re: Harnad's faulty thinking on OA deposit and APA 
 policy

 On Thu, Jul 24, 2008 at 6:29 PM, Guédon Jean-Claude 
 jean.claude.gue...@umontreal.ca wrote:

  How does 3 follow from 2 in the first response?
  There is a logical gap here which indeed does not register.

 A Simple Way to Optimize the NIH Public Access
 Policyhttp://listserver.sigmaxi.org/sc/wa.exe?A2=ind04L=AMERICAN-SCIENTIST-OPEN-ACCESS-FORUMF=lP=92016
 (Oct
 2004)

 Please Don't Copy-Cat Clone NIH-12 Non-OA
 Policy!http://listserver.sigmaxi.org/sc/wa.exe?A2=ind05L=american-scientist-open-access-forumF=lP=2453
 (Jan
 2005)

 National Institutes of Health: Report on the NIH Public Access Policy. In:
 Department of Health and Human
 Serviceshttp://publicaccess.nih.gov/Final_Report_20060201.pdf (Jan
 2006, reporting 3.8% compliance rate after 8 months for its first,
 non-mandatory deposit policy)

 Central versus institutional
 self-archivinghttp://openaccess.eprints.org/index.php?/archives/133-guid.htm
 (Sep
 2006)

 Optimizing OA Self-Archiving Mandates: What? Where? When? Why?
 How?http://openaccess.eprints.org/index.php?/archives/136-guid.html(Sep
 2006)

 THE FEEDER AND THE DRIVER: Deposit Institutionally, Harvest Centrally
 http://users.ecs.soton.ac.uk/harnad/Temp/Harnad-driverstate2.html(Jan
 2008)

 Optimize the NIH Mandate Now: Deposit Institutionally, Harvest
 Centrally 
 http://openaccess.eprints.org/index.php?/archives/344-guid.html(Jan
 2008)

 Yet Another Reason for Institutional OA Mandates: To Reinforce and Monitor
 Compliance With Funder OA Mandates (Feb 2008)

 How To Integrate University and Funder Open Access
 Mandateshttp://openaccess.eprints.org/index.php?/archives/369-guid.html
 (Mar
 2008)

 One Small Step for NIH, One Giant Leap for Mankind
 http://openaccess.eprints.org/index.php?/archives/375-guid.html(Mar
 2008)

 NIH Invites Recommendations on How to Implement and Monitor Compliance with
 Its OA