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Re: The value of open access & update to the Dramatic Growth of Open Access



On 4/3/07, Heather Morrison <heatherm@eln.bc.ca> wrote:

Indeed, if one wants to understand issues relating to lack of access, talk to people who lack access, not people who have it. This includes most of us; researchers at major research institutions in the world's wealthiest countries form a very small proportion of the world's population.
I would like to complement this assertion. Even the richest researcher working in the richest institution needs universal access to the scientific literature, not as much for himself or herself but for his or her (or most likely someone else's) computer program.

We can build today computer programs to mine the literature and discover a lot of otherwise hidden structure and hidden clustering in the whole of the literature. This can only be done by computers, feeding them the full text of all articles. With today's fragmented access policies the said very rich researcher can access, as a human, the papers he or she wishes to read, but can't feed all the paper's full text in a computer program to discover the hidden structures and connections. Even he or she looses a wealth of information.

Hence, even the richest researcher, working at the richest institution, needs universal access but no one has such a thing today. Open Access would surely be the best way to get universal access for everyone. How to get (universal) Open Access though, well, that seems to be a rather elusive subject.

Imre Simon
http://www.ime.usp.br/~is/