[ The following text is in the "utf-8" character set. ] [ Your display is set for the "iso-8859-1" character set. ] [ Some characters may be displayed incorrectly. ]
Sigh... I will respond below Le mardi 30 septembre 2008 à 17:48 -0400, Stevan Harnad a écrit : Jean-Claude Guedon thinks that because an article published by Joe Bloggs in Nature (2008, volume X, Number Y, pp NN-MM) is not OA, and Joe Bloggs's OA postprint of the final, refereed draft of his Nature article, self-archived in his Institional Repository (IR), is unpaginated, hence one cannot specify the location of a quoted passage in the Nature version except by paragraph number, one should not cite the Nature version, but the self-archived postprint. 1. I am not going to introduce a new way of locating quotations by using paragraph numbers. I do not even feel like counting paragraphs. 2. I never said that the archived article was unpaginated; I said it may be paginated differently from the journal pagination. 3. It is not that one should not cite the Nature version; it is that one cannot cite the Nature version completely. What I ask is: What does it mean to "cite" the postprint of a published Nature article? I would think you cite the publication, the Nature article, and give the URL of the postprint for access purposes. So I have a quote and I refer to the journal article and its general citation, and then I send the reader to the archived version and explain how to find the exact passage in the archived version? This is quite complicated, it seems to me. Jean-Claude seems to think the postprint itself should be upgraded into a "publication" in its own right: How? And what does that mean? It is not upgraded into a publication. It is de facto a publication. The article has been peer reviewed and it is publicly accessible. That instead of proudly listing his paper in his CV as having been published by Nature, a peer-reviewed journal of some repute, Joe Bloggs should list it as having been published by his own Institutional Repository? That again is stretching my words in strange directions. I am pointing to something lacking in referring precisely to a quotation. This does not prevent me from putting the journal reference (and the repository reference) in my cv. I dom not even begin to understand how that issue ever arose. And what does "published" mean under these circumstances? With Nature, it means Nature conducted a peer review, to determine whether the article met Nature's quality standards. the self-archived article is the same as the peer reviewed article in the journal. The archived article will also mention the general citation from the journal. It may even link to that journal. This still does not allow me to clarify completely a specific quotation from the journal. But the article in the repository has clearly been perr reviewed. No problem there. Is the author's institution to conduct yet another "peer review" on the same peer-reviewed article, to determine whether it has met that institution's quality standards? Why? I never said that. And would this mean that all postprints in that IR meet the same quality standards (Nature's)? I never even began to come close to this issue. Please read what I write carefully. Sounds closer to in-house vanity publishing to me, except that it's more like in-house vanity RE-publishing. I suppose so, but it does not concern me. I never said that. This is science-fiction. I think this line of thinking is not only unrealistic but incoherent -- and, most of all, unnecessary, since it is trying to "solve" a non-existent problem: What work to cite when you have access only to the OA postprint of a published article? The answer is obvious: You cite the *published article*, and add the OA postprint's URL to the citation for those who cannot afford access to the publisher's proprietary version. (And quote passages by paragraph number.) The proposed solution is not satisfactory. It is not satisfactory because, when I give a reference to a precise quote, I must add the page number. Now, this page number may mean nothing to citation calculators, but it means a whole lot to the reader and to the conventions carefully taught in class about ways to cite a quotation in a scholarly piece of work. Adding a URL is not enough. For example, if someone wants to quote my quotation, that person should be able to quote an original source, not a derivative. If that person does not have access to the journal either, the problem I initially encountered recurs for that second author. Jean-Claude Guédon Stevan Harnad On Tue, Sep 30, 2008 at 4:54 PM, Jean-Claude Guédon <jean.claude.gue...@umontreal.ca> wrote: > Quoting means extracting a passage from a text and inserting it within > another text one is writing. It is often placed within quotation marks, but > not always as quoting conventions obey complex and variable rules. Citing > means giving a reference for a quoted text, or for some facts or opinions > found in another article, book, etc. This distinction has been dealt with > repeatedly in the past. > > Even if I follow Stevan's distinction, I need both to quote and cite (in > Stevan's sense of the words) when I work and I cannot be satisfied with only > citing. I am not the only to have this need. Consequently, not having access > to the citable version prevents me from doing all of my work because the > precise location of what I need remains unknown to me. However, if an IR > declares that an article under its stewardship is also citable, then, I can > do all my work, including giving a precise location for a quotation, or a > fact, or an opinion, etc. This simply means that I recognize the IR as a > publication instrument, i.e. it makes documents public and not simply as a > collection of texts open to reading and nothing else. In fact, limiting IR > texts only to reading would contravene the requirements for something to be > truly in open access. > > At this junction, the question of which version(s) is (are) reference > versions emerges. I submit that articles archived in IR's can become > references as much as the version appearing in a journal. > > There is a well-known precedent for this. Articles are sometimes reprinted > in a different journal or an anthology. Once this is done, either version > can be cited and is cited. Sometimes, it is the reprinted version that > becomes the better known citation. > > Stevan may not like this line of reasoning because it blurs the distinction > he tries so hard to maintain between journals and IR's. His thesis is that > IR's and journals can coexist simply because they do not fulfil at all the > same functions. However, this is Stevan's thesis, not a universally > accepted situation and it cannot be mistaken for a fact. A more sensible > representation of reality is to state that the functions of journals and > IR's, although not identical, overlap. We can then discuss the amount of > overlap. > > To say this amounts to claim a publishing role for IR's and for > self-archiving. I claim that role. The fact that IR's can be harvested by > powerful search engines supports the thesis that depositing an article in an > IR is a form of publishing. Only if IR's worked like the drawer of my desk > (which I gladly leave in open access to anyone wanting to access it), could > we say that it is not a form of publishing. IR's are not shy silos of > knowledge that just sit there, in open access, but with no way to attract > attentiuon to themselves. on the contrary, they can be found and used thanks > to some Google scholar or OAIster. > > The relationship between an article published in a journal and another > version residing in a repository is quite different from that between an > original piece of art and a copy. I believe Walter Benjamin has meditated > significantly on this topic (The Work of Art in the Age of its Technological > Reproducibility). The article in the repository is not a copy of an original > article; it is a version of an article. The journal article is also a > version, another version, and nothing more. The article is identified by its > title XXXX and its author(s) YYYYY and its content. This is how copyright > law would identify it. The ways in which a given version is branded depends > on a number of variables (authors' names, authors' institutions, journal > titles, etc. ). For the moment, IR's do not yet know very well how to > brand, but nothing prevents thinking about ways to achieve this result. > Personally, I believe we should be thinking hard about this precise issue. Jean-Claude Guédon Université de Montréal