"In order to avoid errors and false incentives, studies are
published on the "Octopus" website in a completely different way than
usual. But can this solve the problems in science?
Science is constantly correcting itself. When researchers
write a study, other researchers look at it, and then even more so when it's
published. What is wrong can be corrected. For several years, a whole strand of
science has also been working on creating proposals for a new publication
system in the scientific community. Because that also contains certain things -
some would say "mistakes", others perhaps only speak of "wrong
incentives". Everyone should agree that there is room for improvement. Now
the Joint Information Systems Committee (Jisc), a British non-governmental
organization that develops and promotes new technologies for research and
teaching, has presented a "groundbreaking open research platform":
Octopus.
Octopus, so the promise, should enable the fast, free and
fair publication of research results that is open to everyone. The platform
should change nothing less than the entire incentive structure in science, says
Alexandra Freeman of the Winton Center for Risk and Evidence Communication at
the University of Cambridge, who leads Octopus.
The platform eliminates the
problem of scientific work being judged solely on its results, which can lead
researchers to choose impressive-sounding results over sound theory and
methodologies.
"It will encourage researchers to specialize in their
skills as theorists, methodologists, data collectors, analysts, implementers or
critics, rather than trying to do everything at once," Freeman said.
Researchers could thus concentrate more on the quality of their work.
In fact, the platform fits into a trend that has been
increasingly evident in the open science scene for several years: away from
result evaluation towards process evaluation. Good research instead of good
results.
In this case, good research means: cleanly derived hypotheses, a
sufficient number of test subjects, the appropriate statistical methods,
transparent reporting.
It's not as if the conventional publishing industry
completely ignores this shift in emphasis. There, too, there are journals that
attach great importance to the methodology and, for example, check the
structure of a study before the data is collected. There are magazines that
publish zero results - i.e. those that turn out differently than previously
assumed - or those that make sure that all the data is published so that
skeptics can do the math.
Why shouldn't the writing of research snippets also be
subject to constraints?
But Octopus wants to go one step further and break up the
classic article format - introduction, method section, results, discussion -
into individual parts. Researchers can therefore publish small individual
contributions on the platform in the categories: Problem, peer review,
hypothesis, protocol, result, analysis, interpretation and application.
The one
big paper that contained all of this no longer exists.
Individual contributions
can be rated from zero to five stars by other researchers.
The advantages for
researchers are said to be that they can publish their articles more quickly
and do not have to wait months for a magazine to respond. In addition, they can
only publish in areas in which they are experts: one person may be more
familiar with methods, the next with transferability to everyday life.
But is this groundbreaking? One who can try to assess is Malte Elson, junior professor for the psychology of human-machine
interaction at the University of Bochum, he does a lot of research on the
research itself. "The page describes a rather ambitious goal, namely an
alternative to the classic paper," says Elson. "What's not entirely
clear to me: What problem does it solve?"
With large research projects it can certainly make sense not
to wait until the very end with publications. "But that is already
possible, for example in dedicated technical journals for methods," says
Elson. "The benefit of an early publication of a hypothesis - which, for
example, in the social sciences is often not formalized but consists of only a
few sentences - detached from any theoretical or empirical work, is not
immediately apparent to me." In addition, according to Elson, it is not
entirely clear to him "why the writing of research snippets is not subject
to exactly the same constraints as the writing of a classic essay".
It is not yet certain that the rest of the professional
world will also consider the project as groundbreaking as those responsible for
Octopus do themselves, and that Octopus will revolutionize the publication
system. But maybe it doesn't have to be. A few advantages result from this as
well.
He likes the basic idea of making research processes
transparent, says Elson. "In this way, the public can be informed very
clearly about how research works, from the initial idea through to
application." The project is also interesting for the further training of
the researchers themselves and especially their offspring. "I could well
imagine using it in teaching future scientists," says Elson."
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