Why publish and be so damned hard to find?

Outdated practices and lack of simplicity result in ‘unfindable’ work, Carole Goble tells Jisc Digital Festival 2015

三月 19, 2015

Source: Getty

Next stop, obscurity: ‘the square root of bugger-all people’ read most work

The way in which academic papers are published makes much research “unfindable”, while scholars’ lack of transparency about their research methods renders many of their conclusions highly questionable.

This is the view of Carole Goble, a professor in the School of Computer Science at the University of Manchester, who last week addressed the Jisc Digital Festival 2015 (Digifest) conference in Birmingham, organised by Jisc, the UK’s higher education IT consortium.

She told delegates that the current “knowledge-turning mechanism”, whereby researchers publish in journals “PDFs and the odd Excel [spreadsheet]”, resulted in the “burying” of data and research, rendering them “unfindable”.

Professor Goble told Times Higher Education that she knew of young researchers who wished to present their data more clearly and visibly and who wanted to dedicate time to achieving that. “Their [supervising] professors have said: ‘Well, what are you doing wasting your time doing that?’ You could be writing a paper.”

Researchers who were failing to embrace more forward-thinking methods of publication needed re-education, she continued.

Too often, she told delegates, academics sought to write extremely complicated papers, based on elaborate methods, in the hope of ensuring that their research was submitted to the research excellence framework – even though this approach meant that their work was read by “the square root of bugger-all people”. The current system, she said, meant “RIP” for research papers: “rest in publication”.

Interviewed for a THE podcast, Professor Goble said that pressure to produce overly complicated work sometimes stemmed from a desire to avoid “academic trolling” – bullying by scholars who are critical of someone’s work.

“[You can be] trolled because you made something straightforward, because you wanted a community to understand it, when your job was to make it look clever,” she said.

To describe how this could work, she gave the example of one of her own papers. “I could have presented a paper about ‘the detailed denotational semantics of the lander calculus used underneath the workflow engine’, or I could have just said, ‘here is a workflow engine and this is how to use it’. But that kind of useful and highly cited paper is [often viewed as] merely ‘useful’, as opposed to ‘academic’.”

According to Professor Goble, another problem in research is that of academic rivalry, particularly in some disciplines, stifling collaboration.

“In biology, if I am looking at the function of a gene and you are looking at the function of a gene, then the first person to publish wins,” she said. “You are not going to get a paper [if you are] the second person to discover the purpose of this gene…which leads to this very defensive, quite competitive publishing world.”

Professor Goble had a low opinion of the approach many researchers take to software, suggesting that even when papers are read, opacity about research methods meant that conclusions had to be treated with caution.

She cited research by the Software Sustainability Institute that suggested that one-fifth of academics who develop their own software for use in research have had no training in programming. “If we have broken software, we have broken science,” she said.

Listen to the podcast interview with Carole Goble

chris.parr@tesglobal.com

Access denied: students complain of below-par ICT services

Students continue to be disappointed with the technology provision offered by their university.

This is according to a panel discussion at the Jisc Digital Festival 2015 (Digifest), held in Birmingham last week. Several students participating in the session raised concerns including a lack of signposting to the useful technology that is available and frustration with university email accounts that were difficult to access on mobile devices.

One of the student panel members, Mark Ormesher, a second-year computer science student at King’s College London, said: “My own personal laptop has better software on it than the university machines, in most cases. The only IT service I really use often at the university is the printers.”

He also complained that there had been problems with access to some websites that students wished to use to share documents, and he bemoaned the insufficient use of lecture-capture technology.

“All the modules I have had so far at King’s, either the room doesn’t support [lecture capture] or the lecturer themselves has chosen not to activate it for us.”

A King’s College spokeswoman said that the institution has about “2,400 hours of captured lectures” available, and that it was “in the process of upgrading the current facilities”. She added that the university provides all staff and students with Microsoft Office 365, which includes the file-sharing programme OneDrive, and that other online file-sharing services were accessible on campus.

Helen Beetham, who leads Jisc’s digital student study examining expectations of the digital campus environment, told Times Higher Education that national surveys showed that student satisfaction with ICT provision was generally “high”.

Her co-researcher, Dave White, who is also head of technology enhanced learning at the University of the Arts London, added: “The views expressed in the session show that as institutions we need to carefully manage student’s expectations as we strive to meet them.”

Chris Parr

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