May
18
Facing up to Father: The pleasures and pains of a Cotswold childhood
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New book by David Worlock. Pre-order now at Marble Hill Publishers or Amazon.
A small Cotswold farm is the setting for a classic struggle of wills. Robert Worlock, eccentric and demanding, resolutely maintains the old ways, determined above all to make his son into a farmer fit to take over the family acres. His son, David, is equally determined not to be bullied into something he neither wants nor likes. His childhood becomes a battleground: can he find a way to make his father love him without denying his right to determine his own life?
Apr
15
“10 reasons why the science research journal has passed its sell-by date “
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Two weeks ago, at this year‘s UKSG conference in Brighton, I took part in a debate, co-hosted by Toby Green, co-founder of coherent digital, Sarah Main, vice president of academic relations at Elsevier and myself. My proposal was roughly in line with the title of this blog. The debate was run twice , and on each occasion I promised the audience that I had 10 reasons behind my argument that it was time to change the science scholarly communication ecosystem .Of course, we never got round to discussing all of the reasons, but I promised that if there was any room left on the door of the church at Wittenberg then I would post my theses there in good Lutheran fashion . So here they now are!
1 Open access has plateaued and is beginning to decline. The system created to increase accessibility by lowering costs is being rejected on cost grounds. it’s volume based publishing model does not inspire trust.
2 The peer review system is broken and is losing the confidence of researchers , funders and consumers.
3 Users look in vain for a central retraction index and a transparent system to comprehensively log withdrawn articles
4 Publishing journals is still too slow for the purposes of the fastest moving sectors within science and technology
5 The cost of publishing in journals are too great to be sustained by the research community, and the benefits too little to encourage funders to meet the bill.
6 Many of the issues could be resolved if journal publishing offered the complete integrity– protection from papermills, bogus AI generated content et cetera – that users assume and expect
7 The need to standardise metadata,PIDs, and standard content coding (ISCC, C2 PA et cetera) maybe easier to accomplish in self publishing software than in existing publisher systems.
8 Giving recognition and validation to researchers and research institutions, whether for grant awards or job preferment, is better performed outside of journal branding and citation indexing systems which are too easily gamed and manipulated.
9 The research article/report/paper itself needs to change. Pre-registration of hypothesis and methodology prior to research commencement will be one factor. The need to associate articles with experimental data and other evidential material currently not handled by publishers is another. research findings also need to be associated with code, videos, images, audio material, blogs and other elements..
10. Researchers in many disciplines cannot afford the time to read papers in full. As a result, machine to machine communication becomes vital, and is not aided by current systems. The classic research article is a narrative form in a world with increasing the few human readers. Machines do not appreciate narrative: they perform better on world structured data clearly marked with metadata.
Conclusion: since the beginning of the digital age scholarly research publishing moved into a time lock, becoming outwardly digital while preserving the systems and structures of print in perpetuity. AI will change all of that, disintermediating redundant parts of the process and automating others.
Mar
28
On starting to get worried about freedom of scientific expression.
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I have known Jan Velterop for 30 years. At Elsevier, at Springer, at Nature ( before the two were conjoined) and the Academic Press. Always the admirable enthusiast for change and development. Always the man of principle. When he warns, I listen. I was appalled by his latest warning:https://blog.scielo.org/en/2025/03/26/global-science-in-danger/. I think that everybody should read this and take it seriously.
I try not to write here about political issues. Each to his own. “Great leaders” are full of bombast, empty press releases and ambitious but often impractical executive commands. often the more important things that governments do are never taken seriously at the time. I think for example that since the time in the 1990s when the US government of the day made its defence network Darpanet available to the world as the Internet, seeking the science communication, the trade and information advantages which would arise from such a gift. A subtle blend of generosity and self interest.The world has altered as a result in a way which public and political society has never fully recognised. We can talk about globalisation and supply chains, but we are, whether we acknowledge it or not, now a global communication society. Different. countries may try to handle this in different ways, but, by and large, this genie cannot be put back into the bottle. In science, and in the science ecosystem of communication and knowledge transfer with which I have been greatly concerned for at least 40 years, this is particularly true. Science is collaborative and global. Whatever demands are made by politicians, scientists have two speak to each other: they blog, they share thoughts and hypotheses, often sharing data as well as insights. When politicians try to constrain the thinking of one group in one country there are impacts on all groups everywhere .
Jan in his article raises the issues of the NSF list of terms which, if found in the funding proposals or research papers of US scientist dependent upon federal funding will raise questions and provoke examination by officials. This is what particularly worries me. The list has been widely quoted, but here are a selection of the terms:
- Advocacy
- Antiracist
- Barrier
- Biases
- Cultural relevance
- Disability
- Diverse backgrounds
- Diversity
- Diversified
- Ethnicity
- Excluded
- Exclusion
- Equity
- Female
- Gender
- Hate speech
- Historically
- Implicit bias
- Inclusion
- Inclusive
- Inequities
- Institutional
- Intersectional
- Male dominated
- Marginalized
- Minority
- Multicultural
- Oppression
- Polarization
- Racially
- Segregation
- Socioeconomic
- Systemic
- Trauma
- Underrepresented
- Underserved
- Victims
- Women
Readers will readily see the agenda. Some, I have no doubt, will sympathise with it and some will not. As an historian and writer and the worker for many years in information and communication, I have to say that the worrying thing for me is not the words to be“examined“. It is the idea of the examination itself. Just as I know that the big noises at the top of the political tree will one day exhaust themselves, so I fear deeply the release of an enduring examining bureaucracy with narrowly framed ideas and aims seeking to censor, restrict and discriminate. The Western world rightly decried the totalitarian regimes of Hitler, of Stalin and of Mao. Looking back on those dreadful periods of history, it is the thought control, and the bureaucratic apparatus created by willing men and women serving these leaders. They proved adept at finding new ways to effectively stifle unrestricted expression in their society. All of this starts in every instance with a list of words, things that you must not say, things that mark you out as “different“. The Orwellian overtones are what I find so chilling. Surely we are not about to replay 1984 from an election result in 2024?
In the last 15 years of blogging “From the bottom of my Garden“ there has been one consistent theme. Trust and identity. We need to know who we are communicating with and we have to trust that their communications have not been pressured framed, adjusted or tampered with in any way. if this is what is threatened by the various moves of the US administration in recent months, then the situation is very serious indeed.
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