September 2007 ArchiveWednesday, 26 September
Write yer congresscritters.
The senate will vote during the week beginning October 15 on a bill that changes the NIH Open Access deposit policy from a request (which has generated about 5% compliance) to a mandate. This would be a leap forward for OA and science, not only in the US but throughout the world. If you're a US resident, please take a few minutes to write to your Senators in support of this bill. (Letters should arrive by close of business Oct 12.) The American Library Association has made it trivially easy to contact your congresscritters about this: go to their action alert, fill in your zip code, write a brief letter and hit send. For help in composing a letter, see Peter Suber's collection of talking points, background and other resources. Below is the letter I sent. Dear Congresscritter, Sunday, 16 September
What are these things?
![]() Well, one answer is that they are MEFs -- mouse embryo fibroblasts -- since that's what I started with. Only the cells pictured are pretty clearly not regular fibroblasts; they look more like neurons or macrophages of some kind. MEFs are a mixed population, consisting of whatever grows out of a dissociated (minced) mouse embryo minus the head, so there are some early neural and immune cells in the mix. The cells pictured are what remains after selection with either G418 or puromycin -- I was making stably transfected cells, and this is one of the control plates. So what I'm wondering is, would a brief period of exposure to a selective agent like puro be a good way to isolate naturally resistant populations, and what would those populations contain? (Of course, whatever these things are, the most likely explanation for their resistance is terminal differentiation, so they're simply dying more slowly -- I haven't tried taking away the selective agent to see whether they will multiply.) Any ideas, lazyweb? Tuesday, 11 September
satori, rinse, repeat
I've noticed that whenever I come all over jackass, it's because there's something wrong with my position -- when I'm secure about something I seldom resort to snark. Outright venom, sure; snide formality and similar oily tricks, no. Case in point: I took an uncalled-for swipe at Maxine (again because I hadn't thought my own position through properly), and though I've apologized, I ought not be surprised or feel put-upon if people point to that incident as an example of bad online manners. But I feel bad about it, so mention of it gets me all defensive. This is doubly daft, since not only is such a response self-evidently counterproductive, I have no particular fear of being wrong. I'm a scientist: it's in my nature and my training to attach no value judgement to being right or wrong: what matters is to see as clearly as possible and make the best models we can. So being wrong in public holds no terrors for me; it's being a jackass that is embarrassing, and -- catch 22, or something! -- I do that when I suspect I'm wrong. Don't most people figure this stuff out when they're about 12? Oy. On the silver lining side, catching myself tending to snottery would be a good early warning that I'm wrong or uncertain about something, if I did it before being a jackass. I remember reading somewhere that all satori have to be repeated before they take hold, so maybe writing them down will also help... Monday, 10 September
Reply to Timo Hannay.
Timo Hannay on Nascent, branching off from a discussion of intemperate responses to PRISM: A case in point is the criticism that my NPG colleague, Maxine Clarke, faced when talking about "open access" projects at NPG. Not everyone shared her definition of open access and she was accused by some bloggers of using the term as a marketing slogan. (Peter Murray-Rust, who made the original point, later recanted when he understood that Maxine was being genuine, so I don't take issue with him.)Mr Hannay does, presumably, take issue with me. I will apply Hanlon's Razor and assume Mr Hannay did not bother to read beyond the post he linked, since the very next is this one: In the entry below, I was not sufficiently careful to avoid Nature-bashing, or the implication that Maxine Clarke was morphing, werewolf-like, into some kind of publisher pitbull. Thanks to Pedro, bdf and RPM for responses which made this clear.The elision there includes the list of NPG's OA-related activities that Mr Hannay goes on to point out. The next post on my blog is this one in which I quote Peters Suber and Murray-Rust some more regarding OA definitions and conclude, in what I am happy to have readers interpret as a further step back: I take Peter S to be saying that it's inevitable that "Open Access" will come to mean, in general use, more things to more people than strict BOAI, and we will not achieve anything by making arseholes of ourselves over it. (Even if that's not quite the way Peter S would put it, that's the way I've come to look at the situation.) There's no point in picking quarrels we don't have to have. It's enough to be more careful in our own usage, for which purposes suffixes a la Peter MR should prove very useful when we need extra precision. I don't think we need invent terms ("fuzzy") just yet -- "OA (specific licence, with hyperlink if writing online)" and "OA (free to read)" should cover most cases.It seems to me entirely unfair and misleading to link to the first of my posts without also linking the next two. I think Mr Hannay is also in error in describing this post from Jean-Claude as a "followup" to the posts above; I think that Jean-Claude was referring to much more recent and clear-cut abuses outlined by Peter Murray-Rust. Mr Hannay also goes on to say that Some people are just too quick to assume base motives, and employ words like "boycott" as if they were punctuation marks.I do not know who that is aimed at, but as for my own reference to a boycott, I do not think it unreasonable or precipitous to consider such action against publishers who do not distance themselves from PRISM and similar efforts. Why should it be up to me to determine who is and is not part of PRISM? Update: Peter Murray-Rust did a better job than me of responding to the Nascent post: he rightly led with the important part, which is that Nature is not endorsing PRISM. That's no surprise, but I think it important to be explicit and public about who is and who is not backing PRISM. Also, now I feel bad about the snotty "Mr Hannay" stuff. I use people's first names here as a rule, even when I've never met them, because a blog is an informal conversation and because I think it fosters a sense of civil fucking discourse. I know perfectly well that Timo is on the side of the angels (viz, on the side of science!) when it comes to scientific communication, and it follows that his comments -- and criticisms -- on this issue are made in good faith. So, er, *shuffles feet*, sorry Timo. Wednesday, 05 September
Nature mission statement update
Since I spend a fair bit of time excoriating publishers, it's only fair that I take note of those who act in good faith. In response to the blogospheric reaction to the Nature mission statement, Maxine Clarke asked the appropriate persons to update the NPG web page (as you remember, Bob, the journal site already made clear the necessary distinction between the original and updated statements). Accordingly, the NPG page now reads: Nature's original mission statement was published for the first time on 11 November 1869. The journal's original mission statement was revised in 2000. The original mission statement is reproduced below:and there follows the same version of the original that was on the page last time I looked. It's nitpicking to note that I prefer the way the journal does it, with the updated statement immediately visible and a link to the pdf of the original. The new page removes any confusion as to which mission statement now obtains. Maxine also asked for the print edition of the journal to follow the online version and make both versions of the mission statement obvious. This will necessarily take more time than updating a web page, and I don't have the latest Nature to hand so I don't know if the print change has gone through yet. I will update again as soon as I find out. So, many thanks to Maxine for responding to somewhat barbed criticism in such a constructive manner.
PRISM and PMR
I'm swamped, but two quick points: 1. I'm not going to try to keep up with reactions to PRISM here, unless I think I have something potentially useful to add. If you want a news stream, read OAN or watch my PRISM tag on Simpy -- I'll grab everything I notice. 2. Peter Murray-Rust is blogging up a storm on publisher policies, copyright and Open Access:
There is a great deal of confusion regarding publisher policies and the rights of readers, scholars, institutions &c. I hope that publishers will agree with me that Peter MR is doing a sterling job of getting these issues out into the open, where they can be clarified -- to everyone's benefit. Saturday, 01 September
More on PRISM: let's not take this lying down.
Jonathan Eisen has got the right idea, listing the entire members' directory of the AAP and calling on academics to consider a boycott if those entities will not at least request dissociation from the PRISM program (as Rockefeller University Press has done) or its discontinuation. You can also read the members' list on the AAP site, and Peter Suber points out that we should pay particular attention to their Professional and Scholarly Publishing division: I suspect that AAP/PSP did not consult its members before launching PRISM. But in any case the members should know that the launch of PRISM tarnishes them, alienates authors, readers, and referees, and, if successful, will only harm science by entrenching rather than removing access barriers to the results of publicly-funded research.Peter is commenting there in response to someone else who has got the right idea, Peter Murray-Rust, who (as a Cambridge faculty member) has written to Cambridge University Press; his letter is an excellent example of what everyone should do who has any connection, professional or personal, with any of the AAP/PSP member companies, so I quote it here in full: Open Letter to Stephen Bourne, Chief Executive Cambridge University PressThis letter hits every necessary nail squarely on the head:
Update: in comments on Jonathan's post, CSHL Press has repudiated PRISM. Good for them, and I hope they will make a formal public statement to the same effect -- for instance, on their website. |
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