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My scientific specialty is chronobiology (circadian rhythms and photoperiodism), with additional interests in comparative physiology, animal behavior and evolution. I am not an MD so I cannot diagnose and treat your sleep problems. As well as writing this blog, I am also the Online Discussion Expert for PLoS. This is a personal blog and opinions within it in no way reflect the policies of PLoS. You can contact me at: Coturnix@gmail.com


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« Harold Varmus is everywhere! | Main | Introducing: The Replacements! »

Open Access in the developing world - yes, it is a Good.Thing.

Category: Open Science
Posted on: March 2, 2009 11:18 PM, by Coturnix

A few days back a paper came out (not OA, sorry), with a keen grasp of the obvious: Open Access is useful for those living in countries where they do not have much access. Duh! Furthermore, those who barely do any science at all, i.e., in the least developed countries, don't cite, so there is no difference between OA and TA there. And yet more, their methodology was fraught with errors galore. I am happy to report that this paper was debunked by several people already - so check them out:

Evans and Reimer greatly underestimate effect of free access

Research highlights from Dr. Obvious: Tracking the citation advantage of open-access publication in the developing world

A Global Perspective On The Open Access Effect

The Evans & Reimer OA Impact Study: A Welter of Misunderstandings

Perils of Press-Release Journalism: NSF, U. Chicago, and Chronicle of Higher Education

Especially those last two by Stevan Harnad are thorough and detailed. Don't believe something just because it has been published!

Also a discussion here.

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Comments

1

Good, maybe it will motivate some more journals to Open Up.

Posted by: Mona Albano | March 8, 2009 1:33 AM

2

Another thread here

Posted by: Coturnix | March 17, 2009 12:30 PM

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