Sep 22nd 2005 
>From The Economist print edition
Free access to scientific results is changing research practices

IT USED to be so straightforward. A team of researchers working together in the 
laboratory would submit the results of their research to a journal. A journal 
editor would 
then remove the authors' names and affiliations from the paper and send it to 
their 
peers for review. Depending on the comments received, the editor would accept 
the 
paper for publication or decline it. Copyright rested with the journal 
publisher, and 
researchers seeking knowledge of the results would have to subscribe to the 
journal.

No longer. The internet—and pressure from funding agencies, who are questioning 
why commercial publishers are making money from government-funded research by 
restricting access to it—is making free access to scientific results a reality. 
This week, 
the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) issued a 
report 
describing the far-reaching consequences of this. The report, by John Houghton 
of 
Victoria University in Australia and Graham Vickery of the OECD, makes heavy 
reading for publishers who have, so far, made handsome profits. But it goes 
further 
than that. It signals a change in what has, until now, been a key element of 
scientific 
endeavour.

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The value of knowledge and the return on the public investment in research 
depends, 
in part, upon wide distribution and ready access. It is big business. In 
America, the core 
scientific publishing market is estimated at between $7 billion and $11 
billion. The 
International Association of Scientific, Technical and Medical Publishers says 
that 
there are more than 2,000 publishers worldwide specialising in these subjects. 
They 
publish more than 1.2m articles each year in some 16,000 journals.

This is now changing. According to the OECD report, some 75% of scholarly 
journals 
are now online. Entirely new business models are emerging; three main ones were 
identified by the report's authors. There is the so-called big deal, where 
institutional 
subscribers pay for access to a collection of online journal titles through 
site-licensing 
agreements. There is open-access publishing, typically supported by asking the 
author 
(or his employer) to pay for the paper to be published. Finally, there are 
open-access 
archives, where organisations such as universities or international 
laboratories 
support institutional repositories. Other models exist that are hybrids of 
these three, 
such as delayed open-access, where journals allow only subscribers to read a 
paper 
for the first six months, before making it freely available to everyone who 
wishes to see 
it.

All this could change the traditional form of the peer-review process, at least 
for the 
publication of papers. The process is organised by the publisher but conducted, 
for 
free, by scholars. The advantages afforded by the internet mean that primary 
data is 
becoming available freely online. Indeed, quite often the online paper has a 
direct link 
to it. This means that reported findings are more readily replicable and 
checkable by 
other teams of researchers. Moreover, online publication offers the opportunity 
for 
others to comment on the research. Research is also becoming more collaborative 
so 
that, before they have been finalised, papers have been reviewed by several 
authors. 
This central tenet of scholarly publishing is changing, too. 



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