Randy Schekman says his lab will no longer send papers to Nature, Cell and Science as they distort scientific process
Ian Sample, science correspondent @ The Guardian,Randy Schekman, centre, at a Nobel prize ceremony in Stockholm. |
Randy Schekman, a US biologist who won the Nobel prize in physiology or medicine
this year and receives his prize in Stockholm on Tuesday, said his lab
would no longer send research papers to the top-tier journals, Nature,
Cell and Science.
Schekman said pressure to publish in "luxury"
journals encouraged researchers to cut corners and pursue trendy fields
of science instead of doing more important work. The problem was
exacerbated, he said, by editors who were not active scientists but
professionals who favoured studies that were likely to make a splash.
The
prestige of appearing in the major journals has led the Chinese Academy
of Sciences to pay successful authors the equivalent of $30,000
(£18,000). Some researchers made half of their income through such
"bribes", Schekman said in an interview.
Writing in the Guardian, Schekman raises serious concerns over the journals' practices and calls on others in the scientific community to take action.
"I
have published in the big brands, including papers that won me a Nobel
prize. But no longer," he writes. "Just as Wall Street needs to break
the hold of bonus culture, so science must break the tyranny of the
luxury journals."
Schekman is the editor of eLife,
an online journal set up by the Wellcome Trust. Articles submitted to
the journal – a competitor to Nature, Cell and Science – are discussed
by reviewers who are working scientists and accepted if all agree. The
papers are free for anyone to read.
Schekman criticises Nature,
Cell and Science for artificially restricting the number of papers they
accept, a policy he says stokes demand "like fashion designers who
create limited-edition handbags." He also attacks a widespread metric
called an "impact factor", used by many top-tier journals in their
marketing.
A journal's impact factor is a measure of how often its
papers are cited, and is used as a proxy for quality. But Schekman said
it was "toxic influence" on science that "introduced a distortion". He
writes: "A paper can become highly cited because it is good science - or
because it is eye-catching, provocative, or wrong."
Daniel Sirkis,
a postdoc in Schekman's lab, said many scientists wasted a lot of time
trying to get their work into Cell, Science and Nature. "It's true I
could have a harder time getting my foot in the door of certain elite
institutions without papers in these journals during my postdoc, but I
don't think I'd want to do science at a place that had this as one of
their most important criteria for hiring anyway," he told the Guardian.
Sebastian Springer,
a biochemist at Jacobs University in Bremen, who worked with Schekman
at the University of California, Berkeley, said he agreed there were
major problems in scientific publishing, but no better model yet
existed. "The system is not meritocratic. You don't necessarily see the
best papers published in those journals. The editors are not
professional scientists, they are journalists which isn't necessarily
the greatest problem, but they emphasise novelty over solid work," he
said.
Springer said it was not enough for individual scientists to
take a stand. Scientists are hired and awarded grants and fellowships
on the basis of which journals they publish in. "The hiring committees
all around the world need to acknowledge this issue," he said.
Philip Campbell,
editor-in-chief at Nature, said the journal had worked with the
scientific community for more than 140 years and the support it had from
authors and reviewers was validation that it served their needs.
"We
select research for publication in Nature on the basis of scientific
significance. That in turn may lead to citation impact and media
coverage, but Nature editors aren't driven by those considerations, and
couldn't predict them even if they wished to do so," he said.
"The
research community tends towards an over-reliance in assessing research
by the journal in which it appears, or the impact factor of that
journal. In a survey Nature Publishing Group conducted this year of over
20,000 scientists, the three most important factors in choosing a
journal to submit to were: the reputation of the journal; the relevance
of the journal content to their discipline; and the journal's impact
factor. My colleagues and I have expressed concerns about over-reliance
on impact factors many times over the years, both in the pages of Nature
and elsewhere."
Monica Bradford,
executive editor at Science, said: "We have a large circulation and
printing additional papers has a real economic cost … Our editorial
staff is dedicated to ensuring a thorough and professional peer review
upon which they determine which papers to select for inclusion in our
journal. There is nothing artificial about the acceptance rate. It
reflects the scope and mission of our journal."
1 comment:
A Man of Science!
If it is not obvious to the outsider that there has been something seriously wrong with science, it has been obvious for decades to the insiders. The insiders are very reluctant to discuss this topic with outsiders and if they were they would be committing professional suicide. It seems as if change can only be lead from above, one would need to receive a Nobel prize before one can make such statements.
True change, nevertheless, can only be initiated and be organized from below, from those graduate and post-graduate students, lab-assistants, technicians, that work hard, 6-7 days a week to make the lab director great, so (usually a He not a She) can one day receive his Nobel prize. Sometimes so clueless about the importance of the findings and the methodology in detail that it takes the laboring team weeks of work to brief Him before His presentation.
We are being repetitive but listen again, it is the sound of your world crumbling, it is the sound of our world rising!
http://socialphysicsinstitute.blogspot.com/2013/11/the-treacherous-world-of-modern.html
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