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Re: Homer Simpson at the NIH
- To: <liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu>
- Subject: Re: Homer Simpson at the NIH
- From: "Joseph J. Esposito" <espositoj@gmail.com>
- Date: Mon, 6 Aug 2007 01:20:22 EDT
- Reply-to: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
- Sender: owner-liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
Chuck,
There is evidence that free access leads to cancellations of subscriptions, but the publishers who experience these cancellations are understandably reluctant to discuss them, as it could lead to a cascade of cancellations. Try this for an announcement: "Since we made part of our material open access, we have seen our subscriptions drop. Here is a list of institutions that no longer subscribe. Why doesn't your library join the bandwagon?"
Cancellations take place at the margin, not the center. No one is going to cancel Science or Nature. What's at risk are second- and primarily third-tier publications, and they only become at risk when a library approaches the limit of its budget. Since a library will always want to purchase more than it can afford to, the question becomes which publications to take, which to reject. The first-tier publications get in easily, but journals outside the elite circle may not be so lucky. If a librarian sees that a third-tier journal is wholly available in open access 12 months after publication, that journal may get cancelled in favor of a journal of comparable quality that has no open access policy. It is immaterial whether that policy is mandated by the NIH or any other body. OA, in other words, is but one of many things that could tip matters in the direction of cancellation for certain publications. Other tipping factors may include the availability of a journal through an online aggregator such as ProQuest.
Of course, someone may say, Who cares if OA is only having a negative impact on third-tier journals? Good point, but this undermines the entire rationale for OA, which is to make MORE material available. Since libraries buy the good stuff first, OA can only mean making more materials of inferior quality available. I won't engage the question of what makes a journal first-tier, second-tier, whatever. Librarians know, and they make well-informed discriminations.
A couple-three years ago I made a presentation on this topic at a HighWire client conference. To judge by the number of requests I got afterward for copies of the slides, I think the presentation struck a chord with the distinguished society publishers in attendance. They know what is happening to them. Many of them are fortunate that their publications are comfortably in the first tier and thus secure.
Another aspect of OA after an embargo is that it makes it hard to introduce new products unless you can put them into a Big Deal. New journals start at the margin, right where librarians are studying their expenditures very carefully. Thus OA militates against editorial innovation, even as it favors the largest, most successful publishers.
The problem with OA is simply that it is good intentions but bad economics. Of all the forms of OA, the very worst is what the NIH is proposing, the catch-and-release variety, as it conceals the pernicious aspect of not requiring that people allocate resources--time, energy, money--in consumption.
Joe Esposito
----- Original Message -----
From: "Hamaker, Charles" <cahamake@uncc.edu>
To: <liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu>
Sent: Saturday, August 04, 2007 8:34 AM
Subject: RE: Homer Simpson at the NIH
But there still isn't any evidence that free access to published articles outside the journal impacts journal subscription base. In my experience with researchers, for citation purposes they must have access to the original article. Would citation of the NIH copy be sufficient for documentation purposes in an article? Would norms of citation change that much? I can't believe it would be sufficient for that purpose. If it can't be substituted for the actual journal article, where's the competition with the original. Or am I misunderstanding something fundamental about the proposal? The notification use of the article gets enhanced, the citation stays with the original-no? Or are publishers arguing that for citation purposes the NIH copy will be sufficient?
Chuck Hamaker
Associate University Librarian Collections and Technical Services
Atkins Library
University of North Carolina Charlotte
Charlotte, NC 28223
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