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by flom
5244 days ago
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My understanding is that most publications are not heavily cited, and address very specific problems. I'm curious as to how you plan on creating incentives for qualified people to review the papers in their field which focus on problems outside of their present research interests. To give a personal example: I used to work in a research group that applied techniques of a field called geometric control theory to the problem of modeling flocks of birds. There are not that many geometric control theorists in the world, and their interests range from robotics, to circuits, to modelings schools of fish. Right now, there are journals of control theory that force their reviewers to review all submissions, regardless of their personal interests. How do you plan on emulating that? In other words, there need to be incentives for geometric control theorists who work on modeling schools of fish to spend a few days of their time grinding through the proofs of some grad student's paper in modeling bird flocks, which he needs for his thesis. |
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Something doesn't have to be heavily cited for it to start getting traction, just as a website, or blog post, doesn't have to get heavily linked for it to get some traction. A friend might find the paper and share it via Twitter, their blog, or Academia.edu; this is how the social review process works on Twitter and Facebook. It might sound slow: you might wonder 'won't it take ages for a paper to get traction like that?'. But in reality, when you have social platforms like Facebook and Twitter, content can be surfaced, and whip around the world, at incredible speeds. The journal peer review process, by contrast, is several orders of magnitude slower.
The web is known for having a long tail of content: lots of content that appeals to certain niches of people. It is part of the magic of the web's discovery channels that this long tail content gets routed to the niches who care about it - via search, Facebook etc. The fact that academics overwhelmingly use the web now for research discovery is testament to how good a job the web's discovery channels are doing at surfacing good content in highly niche areas.