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RE: Flashback to 1971: formalizing informal communication channels
- To: <liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu>
- Subject: RE: Flashback to 1971: formalizing informal communication channels
- From: "Pikas, Christina K." <Christina.Pikas@jhuapl.edu>
- Date: Mon, 24 Mar 2008 19:00:29 EDT
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I use the Garvey and Griffith model to organize some of my thoughts about scholarly communication (and about information retrieval in the sciences while functioning as a librarian); but their model, just like any other model, makes some important simplifications and doesn't fully cover all areas of scholarly communication in the sciences. For example, in CS, conferences are frequently more important than journal articles and are the final product. There has been a lot of research looking at the impacts of ICTs on informal scholarly communication, including whether or how making informal communications accessible - even codifying them to an extent - impacts science. As an example, many hopeful articles in the early '90s proposed that this would end peripherality and enable researchers in colleges, in less developed countries, etc., to participate on an equal footing. Not so (of course). This was a question asked of the science bloggers at the session I moderated at ASIST: whether or how blogging could enable remote participation in the invisible college. (BTW - G & G led a team at JHU looking at this issue... They are just the famous ones on the team...) The UNISIST model is also useful, as is its update by Sondergaard, Andersen & Hjorland (2003) In any case, based on my reading and study of informal scholarly communication (most likely to become the area for my dissertation), I do not see mandating deposition of manuscripts as formalizing the informal. In the scholarly communication process, by the time it gets to journal article manuscript stage, it has already come a long way from the data and has been popularized to an extent for a larger audience. Yes, it was an advantage of membership in the invisible college to get mailed or otherwise notified of pre-prints in your area, but I think that will still happen prior to depositing the manuscripts. Ah, my brain is goo from working straight through the weekend - I hope this makes sense. Christina K. Pikas, MLS (but no doubt answering this e-mail as University of Maryland iSchool doctoral student, *not* professional librarian representing the place of work indicated in my e-mail address :) Sondergaard, T. F., Andersen, J., & Hjorland, B. (2003). Documents and the communication of scientific and scholarly information - revising and updating the UNISIST model. Journal of Documentation, 59(3), 278-320. -----Original Message----- From: owner-liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu [mailto:owner-liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu] On Behalf Of Toth, Joe Sent: Sunday, March 23, 2008 10:45 PM To: 'liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu' Subject: RE: Flashback to 1971: formalizing informal communication channels Phil's observation hardly rambles--and departures from the pedestrian are prized by a list-lurker like me. My thanks for the offering. Garvey and Griffith offer a sharp reminder of the organizing power of a discipline, which is designed to structure consideration by vetting observations, assertions, conclusions, and other claims to truth in accredited ways: through refereed journal publishing; holding conferences and symposia; promulgating standards, guidelines and best practices; and so on. But the more I think of this excerpt, the more it smacks of tory history in its willingness to label only as "judicious" a process that at times may also be arbitrary, retrograde, or discriminatory. Leslie White was right when he said that "science is 'sciencing'", and my less than original point is that the "institution of science" amounts to a bunch of people engaging in a wide variety of practices related to what we might call scientific enquiry motivated by desires to solve problems, make money, safeguard truth, investigate the unknown, and so forth into the sustained and varied drive of the ego. Converting informal information into formal knowledge certainly is a long process, but in this bazaar of activities, it probably is not as judicious as Garvey and Griffith think it is. And to Phil's question about keeping separate formal and informal communication processes, perhaps the issue is more about establishing a continuum of work products for practitioners for them to ascribe value to what they encounter. I mean, has the enterprise of physics or economics been hurt or helped by the speedy transmission of informal information through e-mail, e-print servers, and institutional repositories? And has the presence of both sanctioned/published and unsanctioned/pre-pub materials in an IR really begun to dismantle science's walls of rigor? --Joe Toth Middlebury College -----Original Message----- From: owner-liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu Sent: Friday, March 21, 2008 9:22 PM To: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu Subject: Flashback to 1971: formalizing informal communication channels In the early 1970s, the American Psychological Association entrusted two psychologists, William D. Garvey and Belver C. Griffith to make sense of the "crisis in scholarly communication." In doing so, they embarked on research to first better understand the communication processes of researchers -- both the *informal* where most of the communication among peers is done, and the *formal* which describes the traditional journal and book publication process. In one of their first published reports [1], the psychologists warn about formalizing the informal communication channels. They write, "accelerating the flow of scientific information in the informal domain and expanding its dissemination is a problem precisely because it occurs in systems that obscure the boundary between the informal and formal domains. This boundary is one that science has deliberately erected to curtail, temporarily, the flow of information until the information has been examined against the current state of knowledge in a discipline. Non-scientists view procedure of curtailment as ultra-conservative; experienced, practicing scientists perceive it as the essential feature of science....The long judicious procedure by which this conversion is made is unique to science. To reorganize it for the sake of speed, or for open communication with other spheres of intellectual endeavor, would almost certainly dismantle the institution of science as we know it today." (p.362) Manuscript depositing mandates (e.g. Harvard, NIH, etc.) could be seen as essentially formalizing the informal. Most of the discussion surrounding the debates have been on immediate effects (the time and resources devoted to archiving, the mechanisms required to streamline the process). Little has been devoted to possible unintended consequences of such mandates. Unintended consequences are not necessarily negative [2], and I don't want to imply that I'm implying an argument against institutional archiving. Still, is there reason to argue (like Garvey and Griffith) that we should strive to keep the informal and formal communication processes separate? --Phil Davis [If these graduate student ramblings are tiresome, I'm happy to return to more pedestrian dialogs]. [1] Garvey, W. D., & Griffith, B. C. (1971). Scientific communication: Its role in the conduct of research and creation of knowledge. American Psychologist, 26(4), 350-362. [2] Merton, R. K. (1936). The Unanticipated Consequences of Purposive Social Action. American Sociological Review, 1(6), 894-904.
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