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The Value of OA
- To: "liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu" <liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu>
- Subject: The Value of OA
- From: Peter Banks <pbanks@bankspub.com>
- Date: Mon, 2 Apr 2007 18:03:48 EDT
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Rick Anderson's editorial in the most recent Learned Publishing (http://www.alpsp.org/ngen_public/article.asp?aid=723) is an excellent summary of the potential benefits and costs of open access. However, like most commentators, Anderson takes the value of OA as a given: "There is no question that OA offers potentially significant benefits to society. All other things being equal, free public access to scientific information is clearly a good thing." I think that this common assumption merits a far more critical examination than it has received. The assumption that the more information, the better, is shared by the OA movement's new partner FreeCulture.org, whose manifesto states: "Through the democratizing power of digital technology and the Internet, we can place the tools of creation and distribution, communication and collaboration, teaching and learning into the hands of the common person -- and with a truly active, connected, informed citizenry, injustice and oppression will slowly but surely vanish from the earth." One has to admire the youthful optimism of that lofty statement, as Utopian in its own way as the Port Huron Statement of an earlier generation of radical students. But communications is already in the hands of the common person; any idiot (including me) can have a blog, a Web page, or a podcast. I haven't noticed injustice, oppression, or ignorance retreating much. If anything, the democratization of communications has given a platform to the zealous, the partisan, and sometimes the deranged. The 'connected, informed citizenry' often seems to use Internet technology for tasks like deconstructing the latest American Idol episode or speculating on the death of Anna Nicole Smith. But even if democratic communications probably won't save mankind for its worst tendencies, can access to scientific information accelerate research, improve clinical practice, or increase the understanding by patients and the public of science and medicine? In talking with researchers at major research institutions, I have yet to meet a single one who felt that access to information was a limiting factor in research. Perhaps free access to information will help those in less connected locations -- non-research colleges, remote medical practices, developing countries. Perhaps. It would be good to actually examine this idea rather than accepting it as a given. It might be that free access to original research has a small effect -- but some other form of Internet communication would have a far more significant effect. Suppose, for example, that every clinician had access to information such as that in the Cochrane Collaboration and could easily and efficiently access the latest and best evidence-based medicine. Isn't that likely to be of far greater value than assuming that physicians have time to wade through primary literature? (They don't.) As for the public and patients, there has been too little examination of how lay people use and misuse Internet information. This is NOT a paternalistic argument for withholding information, so please don't accuse me of elitism. It is an argument to critically examine how people use information, and to elucidate the ways in which it either empowers or misleads them. One has only to troll the many Internet message boards about various diseases to appreciate how often patients attempt to use the literature to self-diagnose or self-medicate, sometimes delaying seeking a medical consultation for ominous symptoms for months or years. Again, perhaps access to the primary literature would have a small effect, but some other form of translation (clinically significant research with translational materials, say) might have a much greater effect. The study of how information changes research, practice, and understanding is too important to remain unexamined or to remain the untested given of the open access movement. (PS "The Port Huron Statement" is under strict copyright protection by the University of Virginia. That is, the defining statement of 1960s student radicalism is effectively in a glass case in a museum. Watch out, Free Culture, before you, too, become a cultural artifact.) Peter Banks Banks Publishing Publications Consulting and Services pbanks@bankspub.com www.bankspub.com www.associationpublisher.com/blog/
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