Lecture workshop 2 am open access and altmetrics
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Transcript of Lecture workshop 2 am open access and altmetrics
Slowing the pace on applying
metric techniques on Open
Science
Dr. Thed van Leeuwen, Dr Rodrigo Costas and Clifford Tatum, Msc
Contribution to the 2:AM workshop on Altmetrics,
Amsterdam, 08-10-2015
Issue of this lecture
• CWTS received a call on “Trends and drivers of Open Science” in Europe.
• Starting assumptions of the call: – Open Science is a well-established practice across the scientific
landscape, …
– that can be measured all along the full cycle of the knowledge production process, and …
– tools for that become more and more available.
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The advent of metrics in relation to
science policy issues
2
time
1950’s Start of metrics, Kuhn, De Solla Price
1960’s
1970’s
Science Citation Index, Garfield
Applying metrics in national NSF reports
1980’s Academic metrics units starting up
1990’s
2000’s
2010-2015
Applying metrics in Europe
Science mapping in Europe
Open Science and Altmetrics as next big policy issues
Rise of performance indicators & bibliometrics
Externally: Increasing need for formalised measures:
• ‘Push’ from science policy (from 1970s onwards)
• Independent of peer review
• New Public Management / Neo-liberalism (from 1980s onwards)
Internally: Growing pressure on the research community:
• Researchers part of international community, …
– Peer review
• ... but also part of local institutions
– Specific management practices (yearly appraisals, external evaluations)
• Institute managers not always part of international expert community
• From the 1990’s: tighter forms of management
– Distance
Research cycle, or knowledge
production process
4
Analysis
Publication
Review
Data gathering
Conceptualization
Research cycle & Open Science Trends
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Analysis
Publication
Review
Data gathering
Conceptualization
Citizens science
Open Code
Pre-Print
Open Access
Data intensive
Open labbooks/
Open Data
Open annotation
Scientific blogs
Collaborative
Alternative reputation systems
bibliographies
workflows
Adding altmetric techniques to the Open
Science model *
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Analysis
Publication
Review
Data gathering
Conceptualization
Citizens science
Open Code
Pre-Print
Open Access
Data intensive
Open labbooks/
Open Data
Open annotation
Scientific blogs
Collaborative
Alternative reputation systems
bibliographies
workflows
DOAJ List
RoarEprints.org
ArXiv
RunMyCode.org
SciStarter.com
FigShare.com
MyExperiment.org
dataDryad.org
OpenAnnotation.org
Researchgate.com
Mendeley.com
AltMetric.com
Academia.edu
SlideShare.com
ImpactStory.com
SlideShare.com
* Thanks to colleagues from Technopolis
Some conclusions …
• Classical bibliometrics mainly focuses on the output and impact related issues.
• Altmetric techniques describe other elements of the knowledge production process.
• But, not in all domains of scholarly activity has Open Science landed already to the same extent.
• Nor are the altmetric techniques and data already matured so far to be used to the full extent in a science policy context.
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… and more conclusions …
• The application in the Open Science model of various altmetric techniques throughout the whole knowledge production process means a further metricization of the monitoring and measuring of research activities.
• Conducting the study would mean to legitimize the assumption that Open Science has indeed been accepted across the whole scientific landscape.
• Furthermore, the study would also have such a legitimizing effect on the usage of altmetrics along the full knowledge production process
• Are Open Science advocates as well as altmetrics researchers in favor of this development ?
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