Free Neuropathology 1:1 (2020) |
Editorial |
Free for authors,
free for readers, free from publisher, free |
Werner Paulus |
Institute of Neuropathology, University Hospital Muenster, Muenster,
Germany |
Corresponding author: Werner Paulus, Institute of Neuropathology, Pottkamp 2, 48149 Muenster, Germany |
Submitted: 05 December 2019 Published: 01 January 2020
|
As reader, author,
referee and editor I have often discussed and reflected upon the nature
of the "perfect" journal - what are the qualities that make up a great
scientific journal? The following ingredients came to my mind:
•
excellent science
•
interesting and relevant content
•
high visibility
•
a high impact factor
•
short turnaround times (from submission to first decision, from
accept to online publication)
•
fair reviews
•
no unnecessary major revisions just to satisfy referees
•
a responsive and supportive editorial office
•
insightful editors
•
no subscription rates for readers (open access)
•
low (ideally no) article processing fees for
authors
•
a convenient and easy electronic submission system
•
high technical standard (figures, copyediting, layout)
•
a clear and informative website
•
electronic tools for enabling interaction between authors and
readers
I am not aware of a
journal that fulfills all of these requirements. Since the great
majority of established journals are published by commercial publishers,
some of these features are out of control of the editor, such as quality
of copyediting, layout design, time until online publication, charges
for authors and/or readers, promotion, and appearance and content of the
website. However, there is no need for these latter features to fall
into the responsibility of the publisher. Should scientists be willing
to perform these activities themselves, they are in principle well
capable to found, shape and run a wonderful journal that fulfills the
expectations of the scientific community. It was precisely this insight
that sparked the development of Free Neuropathology.
Why is the new
journal called Free Neuropathology? The word "free" bears various
meanings. First, it means no cost, like in "free beer". Accordingly, the
journal is free of cost for everyone. When discussing the name, a few
colleagues expressed concern that "free" may have a connotation of "poor
quality", because something without price might be considered as having
no value. I am not convinced of this argument, because some of our
highest ethical values cannot be bought for money (and thus are for
free), and because some
Universities with the word "free" in their name are among the most
distinguished academic institutions, such as Frije Universiteit
Amsterdam and Freie Universität Berlin. Second, "free" means having the
freedom to do something your own way. In fact, at Free Neuropathology we
are able to decide on every aspect of the journal without having to obey
non-scientific paper-shufflers, and we put much emphasis on freedom from
unnecessary formalities and bureaucracy that increasingly abound in the
publishing business. Third, we encourage authors to submit not only
original papers, letters and reviews, but also opinion pieces, critiques
and annotations, because we feel that frank views, open-minded
discussion and critical analysis of prevailing approaches and trendy
hypotheses are integral parts of science. In the end, the name of the
journal reflects a mix of freebie, freedom and liberty.
Free for authors and
free for readers
Most scientists,
scientific organizations and politicians believe that publishing is
expensive and that someone has to pay for the publication process,
either the reader through subscription models or the author through
open-access models. I believe that there is a third option if the
activities of the publisher are rendered by scientists working in the
field of the journal, i.e. by authors, referees and editors who have put
the most time, energy and enthusiasm into the journal anyway. It is true
that some technical infrastructure and manpower is necessary to keep a
journal running and that this is not without cost, but compared to the
time that scientists spend as voluntary referees and editors (let alone
the work of authors), the additional time and expenses for taking over
the publishers´ classical activities are moderate and they can easily be
covered by scientific institutions. Furthermore, while in past years
handling of manuscripts, layout and printing of journals required
considerable time, staff, technical skills and money, digital publishing
has made these activities easier, increasingly automated and cheaper. At
Free Neuropathology we take advantage of the Open Journal Systems
platform for the management of peer-reviewed academic journals. Many
thanks to the developers of this open-source software and to my
university library!
Green Open Access
means self-archiving of the accepted version of the manuscript in the
authors´ format. In the Gold Open Access model, articles are made
immediately and freely available, while authors must pay article
processing fees. Diamond Open Access (also referred to as Platinum Open
Access), as will be employed at Free Neuropathology, means that the
whole process, including submission, handling by the editorial team,
peer review, copyediting, layout and retrieving full text content, is
completely free. These tasks are taken over by colleagues who provide
high quality editorial, peer reviewing and publishing services. Free
Neuropathology´s Diamond Open Access model is based on the enthusiasm of
volunteers who love to be engaged in the scientific publication process,
thereby serving science and society. We also believe that volunteers
will enjoy career benefits and recognition from institutions for doing
the work. Our young members of the Layout/Copyediting board feel that
this is a great opportunity to learn about publishing and a great way to
expand personal networks.
Free from publishers
Virtually everyone
in science criticizes the high profit margins and pricing policies of
commercial publishers. It has been estimated that the major fifty-seven
academic publishers generate a combined revenue of 60 billion € per
year, with profits in the range of 20 to 50%. Increases in subscription
fees by 60% per year for individual journals are not unusual – the more
prestigious the journal, the more impertinent the increase. While from
an economical point of view this is understandable because shareholders
and private equity must be satisfied; however, the excessive cash
outflow endangers science. This scenario is even more absurd, because
scientists working voluntarily as authors, referees and members of
editorial boards do the bulk of the work, thereby serving as useful
dupes for publishing houses and maximizing the profit of people who have
zero interest in science per se.
The authors, who are
largely funded by governments, even offer their work to publishers for
free, who then sell it back to government-funded institutions at
astronomical prices. Publishers are inventive in obfuscating their
business models. The cash flow is often organized in a way so that the
individual scientist does not see the problem, because subscription fees
or article processing charges are covered by universities or funding
agencies. Needless to say that, in the end, all scientists have to pay
the bill because the money transferred to publishers needs to be
detracted from personnel, infrastructure and funding of scientific
institutions. Furthermore, publishers have invented a variety of new
services that nobody needs, in order to justify their prices. Finally,
publishers sell not only their few top journals but also bunches of
hundreds of low-impact or irrelevant journals to large scientific
organizations. Nobody is in need of these journals, but all scientists
have to pay for them. Established publishers tend to condemn so-called
predatory publishers because they rip off scientists, but do they mean
themselves?
Let me relate to you
a parable (it´s a bit lengthy and needs pondering, so if you have little
time feel free to skip to the next paragraph): An artist has created a
painting after spending years of work, money, creativity, care and
enthusiasm. Because this is the way it has always been, the artist does
not try to sell the opus, but prefers to donate it to a company called
JumpArtize, which is owned by private equity that operates amusement
parks and museums. The businesspeople of JumpArtize do not understand
art nor do they appreciate it, but they are very good at making the most
money out of it. Artists must pay art processing charges (APC) for the
art they donate, and they find this OK because JumpArtize builds and
maintains museums, frames and dusts the paintings, employs staff
(custodians, cleaners, clerks), and counts how often each piece of art
is mentioned in newspaper articles and social media, resulting in the
ArtificialFactor®. Alternatively, artists can commit to lifelong work
for one week per year in one of JumpArtize´s amusements parks as clowns
or as animate figures in haunted houses (Open Joy Program). Many artists
love to become famous and they try to endow their artwork to the most
prestigious museums boasting the highest ArtificialFactor®. JumpArtize
asks several art historians to evaluate the offered paintings and to
write up art critiques within two weeks for free, which they happily
accept because they consider the invitation to be an honor. Admission
fees for the museum are high at about 120 € and they rise by 30 % every
year, but the public accepts this because art is considered to be high
value and because prices for dusters have increased recently. The
artists themselves must also pay admission fees to see their own works,
but they are allowed to hang a low-quality poster of their paintings in
their private rooms. Some museums of JumpArtize offer free entrance for
everyone if artists are willing to defray the costs of running the
museum and serve as building workers for JumpArtize´s new 20-story
headquarters building. Politicians and several national academies of
fine arts are very proud of having successfully negotiated with
JumpArtize that artists are allowed to terminate work in haunted houses
by the age of 80 (Plan Artistique or in short Plan A). Meanwhile
JumpArtize, including all fun parks, museums and artwork has been sold
to another private equity investor for double the original price. If you
find this scenario absurd or crazy, what does it mean for the behavior
of scientists?
Scientists,
librarians and politicians complain about costs of journals but at the
same time they continue to support commercial publishers. Science
politicians have been very proud of negotiations or declarations such as
Plan S or DEAL, whereby article processing charges are limited or
somewhat reduced, but in the end they have surrendered. Financially
supporting journals by national or international funding organizations
(such as Gates Open Research) is also not helpful, because funding is
usually restricted to a limited period of time, so that permanent
structures which are mandatory for scientific journals are endangered.
At first glance, journals that are owned by scientific societies and
published by commercial publishers may be in a more comfortable
position, because societies can replace the publisher in case of
disagreement or disservice. However, the problem is that scientific
societies usually develop dollar signs in their eyes as soon as the
publisher offers sharing part of the profit. This corrupts science. I am
deeply convinced that the purpose of scientific journals is publishing
science, ideally the best science, but definitely not making money, for
whomsoever.
There are other good
reasons for proceeding without publishers. We, the scientists and
developers of a journal, will be in a position to decide on website,
layout, copyediting and promotion, and we no longer depend on
publishers´ decisions which are led by financial considerations. For
example, publishers tend to decline suggestions of modifying individual
journal websites because, for economical or branding reasons, they want
the websites of their hundreds or thousands of journals to appear
identical. Publishers promote journals at commercial exhibitions at
scientific meetings (often largely unnoticed by scientists), while
scientists know their field, their colleagues and the appropriate
communication channels better than publishers do. Scientists therefore
could perform more efficiently and more cost-effectively in undertaking
these classical publishers´ activities. It is true that publishers have
much more experience because at least the handful of oligopolistic
publishers have published thousands of journals before. But we will
learn and we will learn fast. And yes, we may be somewhat naïve, we will
make mistakes and some technical issues will not work perfectly right
from the start, but in my experience scientists work more efficiently
and creatively than publishers´ staff, and in the end our approach will
be successful.
Publishers like to
talk about ethics. They request from authors disclosures of potential
conflicts of interest such as shareholding of family members in relevant
companies, they ask for reference numbers of ethical committees, they
request statements of author contributions, and they analyze papers
using software for detecting plagiarism and manipulation of figures.
While these activities may be considered to be measures for increasing
quality and transparency (as well as subscription rates and article
processing fees), publishers play the role of science police, thereby
undermining the general credibility of scientists and considering them
as potential cheaters and criminals. To be clear, I find that ethical
standards and guidelines are important, but they should be developed and
released by scientific societies and not by individual publishers who
just try to increase sales and the prestige of their products.
Publishers stress the highest ethical standards, but in the end they are
interested in nothing more than profit and they harness scientists in
their dull business. Commercial publishers have had a detrimental effect
on science. Publishing scientific work together with commercial
publishers should be discontinued for reasons of economy, quality and
ethics.
Free formatting
Many scientists are
concerned and annoyed by the increasing number of formal requirements
when submitting papers, such as rigid regulations on references, tables,
figures, organization of manuscript, font type/size, abbreviations and
nomenclature. We believe that most of these regulations are unnecessary
and they detract from the gist of the purpose, i.e. prompt publication
of good science. At Free Neuropathology authors can format their paper
as they like, as long as formatting is consistent within the paper and
the paper has been well written and carefully prepared.
Free opinion
Controversial
discussion and deviating views represent an integral part of science,
which is often somewhat neglected for technical, psychological and
political reasons. At Free Neuropathology we have implemented features
so that authors and readers can take part in scientific discussion. We
encourage the submission of “Opinion Pieces” which are in a separate
category of papers in this journal. This is a channel for expressing
personal but scientifically founded views on hypotheses, terminology,
key papers, opinion making, politics or anything else related to
neuropathology. In addition, and in order to stimulate discussion on
papers published in Free Neuropathology, we use the open-source software
Hypothesis which basically introduces an annotation layer over any
paper. After signing-in and clicking the arrow on the right side of the
browser window, the Hypothesis side-bar will appear and you will be able
to provide sentence-level comments, add critique, share information and
engage in discussion. Finally, even the editor can express frank views
in editorials or social media channels -- this cannot be taken for
granted under other circumstances.
Feel free to join
If you support our concept and share our spirit: feel free to join the
movement. When you have interesting data in the fields of human or
experimental neuropathology: submit an Original Paper to Free
Neuropathology. When you have concisely written up something as a
letter: consider Free Neuropathology for prompt publication. When you
have strong views about a controversial issue or if you disagree with
anything in the field: send us an Opinion Piece. If you like grassroots
movements and soft revolutions: support and recommend Free
Neuropathology. If you would like to become actively involved in our
editorial activities, if you are willing to share your technical skills,
or if you have comments, questions, critique, ideas or stimulating
suggestions: send me a note. |