[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]
RE: Errors in author's versions
- To: <liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu>, <liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu>
- Subject: RE: Errors in author's versions
- From: "David Goodman" <David.Goodman@liu.edu>
- Date: Wed, 26 Jul 2006 11:45:01 EDT
- Reply-to: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
- Sender: owner-liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
Dear Cliff, Yes, it is sometimes necessary to rewrite an author's manuscript, and, yes, authors make amusing typographical mistakes. Librarians for their part tend to be amused by publisher claims of perfection, for we have been dealing with the wrong citations in copy-edited, proof-read published papers since the beginning of our profession. But I agree, the authors left to themselves would do even worse. But we are talking about differences in scientific content between posted and published versions. Among the few substantial differences I have seen between versions, is where a publisher dropped a line of a table. Should we therefore insist the the author manuscript always be permanently available, so the reader can check whether the publisher made any mistakes? Cliff, if you know any instance where there have been significant scientific errors in the posted version, but not the published, please cite the examples, because not one has been shown, neither by you, by Anthony, by Lisa, or by Peter. Peter even emphasized that he did not know of any. Find one, any of you. It will be good to have something concrete to discus. I posted in the first place to see if I was mistaken, for I had not expected to find them so similar. They were proposed to collect counter-examples. I expected some and am disappointed in one sense that they have not yet been found, for I had planned to analyze them. To say that versions could differ profoundly, when no cases have been found, is misleading, because any type of any single version could have an error. To claim that authors' versions are inadequate in content, you need to show that they do have an increased occurrence of errors beyond those occurring in all published material. It could be proven that a type of material does contain errors by finding one, and one could then proceed to determine the frequency. What I have proposed are propositions that can be falsified. For example, if my propsition had been that published peer-reviewed articles never contain fraud, it could easily have been falsified. ======================= All of this said, I agree on the true practical point: There should be no need for authors' versions, at least after the date of publication. The version available to all should be the version as published--and then, if necessary, publicly corrected. However, some on this list will now disagree, for, as I see it, the need for authors versions is a make-shift. It is only necessary because of publisher unwillingness to allow the best version to be posted. It may be a more reliable make-shift than any of us thought, but it will always be an unnecessary complication. May proper OAJournals soon replace it. Dr. David Goodman Associate Professor Palmer School of Library and Information Science Long Island University dgoodman@liu.edu dgoodman@princeton.edu -----Original Message----- From: owner-liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu on behalf of Cliff Morgan Sent: Tue 7/18/2006 7:07 PM To: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu Subject: RE: Errors in author's versions David Goodman wrote: "perhaps all the controversy is obsolete about what version to deposit, and all the discussion about exactly what name to use for what version." The published version may well differ considerably from the author's accepted manuscript (known in SHERPA/RoMEO terminology somewhat counterintuitively as the "post-print"). Sometimes the variations are fairly trivial (e.g. conformance to journal house style) but they can certainly go as far as substantive editing, especially if the author is a non-native speaker. Both Lisa Dittrich and Peter Banks have made this point - that you can make no general pronouncements about whether subsequent versions differ significantly or not: sometimes they do, sometimes they don't, depending on the state of the author's manuscript. There's no point in saying that the published version *never* differs significantly nor that it *always* differs significantly: the point is that it *probably* differs in some way, and *may* differ profoundly.... Identifying versions does matter because versions do vary, and using unambiguous terms to identify the different versions is useful because it is not always clear what is meant when people use terms such as "final edited version", for example. ... The PMC distinctions remain pertinent. Cliff Morgan Chair NISO/ALPSP WG on JAV ____________________________
- Prev by Date: Re: Publishers and the doctrine of Good Works
- Next by Date: RE: Maximising research access vs. minimizing copy-editing errors
- Previous by thread: Re: Errors in author's versions
- Next by thread: Re: Errors in author's versions
- Index(es):