I hope the essay pasted below will be acceptable to the listserv; the coding 
doesn't seem to go away, even when I save it as rich text (plain text or ASCII 
didn't work for some reason, but I have tried to delete all the links). If it 
doesn't, searching for the author and title should work.  

My question: Are there ecology sites that embrace this concept? 

Discussion?

WT



© 2006 Dayton; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.

 

Beyond open access: open discourse, the next great equalizer

Andrew I Dayton1 

1Laboratory of Molecular Virology, Division of Emerging and Transfusion 
Transmitted Diseases, Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research, FDA, HFM 
315 FDA/CBER, 1401 Rockville Pike, Rockville, MD, 20852-1448, USA

Corresponding author.

Andrew I Dayton:  dayton(at)cber.fda.gov

Received June 19, 2006; Accepted August 30, 2006.

This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative 
Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and 
reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

 

Abstract

The internet is expanding the realm of scientific publishing to include free 
and open public debate of published papers. Journals are beginning to support 
web posting of comments on their published articles and independent 
organizations are providing centralized web sites for posting comments about 
any published article. The trend promises to give one and all access to read 
and contribute to cutting edge scientific criticism and debate.

 

If you are reading this you are benefiting from the Open Access movement in 
scientific publishing. Open Access reduces the great divide between the haves 
and have-nots of the scientific world, allowing anyone, anywhere on the planet 
with internet access to read with full text and graphics the latest scientific 
reports, unfettered by prohibitive subscription fees or lack of affiliation 
with a major institution to pay for them. That the process directly delivers to 
the public a product paid for by their taxes can only be considered a just and 
additional benefit. But access to cutting edge knowledge is not the only divide 
between the haves and the have-nots. Even Open Access leaves a vast inequality 
in scientific discourse. If you can't afford to attend the latest scientific 
meetings (say, for instance, you work for the US government) or are not a 
member of a prestigious institution, you can be frozen out of cutting edge 
scientific discussions. You can neither query the major players nor contribute 
to the debates, unless your prestige or the media value of the subject matter 
is such to garner you a published letter to the editor. You can't even witness 
the debates until they are published in review articles, by which time they are 
mostly over.

How often have you asked yourself how a certain study was published 
unchallenged, without the results of a key control? How often have you wondered 
whether a paper's authors performed a specific procedure correctly? How often 
have you had the opportunity to question authors about previously published or 
opposing results they failed to cite, or discuss the difficulties of 
reproducing certain results? How often have you had the opportunity to command 
a discussion of an internal contradiction the referees seemed to have missed? 
The haves of science, who benefit from the status quo they shepherd, have 
seldom felt the need to redress such grievances. The have nots have basically 
been stuck with their lot - until now.

Enter JournalReview.org [1], a website forum for open peer review and 
discussion/criticism of medical literature. Essentially an online journal club 
with free membership, JournalReview.org provides a venue which will improve 
communication among physicians and scientists and foster comment and criticism 
about published scientific research. The goal is a better understanding and 
interpretation of medical literature. JournalReview.org has no political or 
commercial affiliations and was created solely by the work of two physicians 
(Jeffrey Ellis, Adam Penstein), one medical student (Lori Ellis) and one 
computer programmer (Aryeh Goldsmith).

How does it work? Simple: the site lists journals available for discussion. 
Under the "Basic Science" heading are a number of general purpose and specialty 
journals typically of interest to retrovirologists, including Nature, Cell, 
Science and this journal, among others. In future it is hoped the list of 
journals will grow in concert with interest in Open Discourse. By navigating to 
the journal and article of interest within a relevant discipline, anyone can 
initiate, read, or add to a discussion as they see fit. Currently journals are 
listed according to discipline. Corresponding authors are notified of comments 
submitted to the discussions of their articles to facilitate timely responses.

Central to the process is anonymity, which is the default option if posters do 
not self identify in the post. Though this can lead to abuses (and what human 
endeavor can not?) it allows the unempowered of science to challenge the 
empowered. But it would do a great disservice to Open Discourse to promote it 
as supporting would be Davids against reigning Goliaths. Just as Open Access 
distributes primary knowledge, Open Discourse distributes debate. It enables 
under privileged students, and even citizens, in the third world to witness the 
unfolding of science in real time. It can forewarn them of the drawbacks to 
seemingly convincing, but flawed work, saving them time and possibly resources. 
At another level, Open Discourse can raise the quality of journal clubs by 
accelerating progress through previously debated issues, and allowing 
participants to move on more quickly to the next levels of discussion. It can 
accelerate mastery of a field by those newly moving into it. And though the 
process may be painful for authors, it will give them opportunity to publicly 
defend their work and enlarge the discussion of it post publication. In short, 
everybody wins. Examples of discussions underway can be found by navigating to 
the Dermatology section of JournalReview.org [2] and choosing from the list of 
"Recent Reviews." If this commentary is successful, I hope you will find a 
similar list in the Basic Science section [3].

JournalReview.org is not the sole source for Open Discourse. Retrovirology [4] 
and other BioMed Central journals  already provide a specific tool for all 
interested participants to submit comments (without anonymity, though) about a 
published work using the "Post a Comment" function, as illustrated in the 
accompanying figure (Fig. 1). A site similar to JournalReview.org, BioWizard 
[6], hosts commentaries, but only on articles reached by searching through 
PubMed [7], and requires posters to at least identify their institutions and 
cities. PLoS ONE [8] plans to offer commentary on its publications, once it is 
launched. Even the dowager empress of biological journals, Cell [9], has 
ventured a cautious toe to the tide, inviting public commentary on selectively 
"featured" articles. The concept, it seems, is coming of age.

So let us invite ourselves to commit to Open Discourse. Let us set the tone and 
establish the precedent of enlightened debate that is public spirited, as well 
as public. Let us refrain from contributing the inconsequential, the self 
serving and the counterproductive. And above all, let us remember that 
discourse need not be discourteous. I encourage all of us to not only 
participate in this movement, but to promote it. Tell a friend. Tell a mentor. 
Tell a protégé. Start submitting comments. In the end the value we receive will 
be the value we give. And the value to the world will be greater still.

The author has no affiliation with JournalReview.org, Biowizard.com, PLoS ONE, 
nor any competing interests. Opinions expressed in this publication reflect the 
professional views of the author and should not be viewed as official policy of 
the US Food and Drug Administration or the Government of the United States. 
Additionally, the opinions expressed do not necessarily represent those of 
Retrovirology or its editorial board.

 

References (see website)

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