Re: predatory journals and conferences article in NY Times

+1
The Nominations in the Semantic Asset Utilization Category:
Best catch: Milton
Best Intelligent Life in Journalism Discovery: NOAA "New York Times"

Best Village Idiot Impersonation, don't believe it for a minute: Phil "I'm just a ..."
Best Monte Carlo Simulation Marksmanship: Leon "... Mission Creep"



________________________________
 From: Leon Derczynski <leon@dcs.shef.ac.uk>
To: Phillip Lord <phillip.lord@newcastle.ac.uk> 
Cc: ProjectParadigm-ICT-Program <metadataportals@yahoo.com>; "public-lod@w3.org" <public-lod@w3.org>; semantic-web <semantic-web@w3.org> 
Sent: Tuesday, April 23, 2013 6:05 AM
Subject: Re: predatory journals and conferences article in NY Times
 


IIRC, impact factor was only ever intended as an heuristic for librarians when making marginal decisions over which journals to subscribe to on behalf of their institution. Everything else is but mission creep.

All the best,


Leon



On 23 April 2013 12:38, Phillip Lord <phillip.lord@newcastle.ac.uk> wrote:


>It's high time universities stopped judging academics by *where* they
>have published rather than *what*.
>
>We already have a form of rating for journals. It's called impact
>factor. It doesn't work, because judging papers by their place of
>publication is nonsensical.
>
>Linked data and semantic web technologies provide opportunities, I
>think, to handle the metadata associated with scientific publication, to
>represent the knowledge in academic publications, and to do so without
>the necessity for a centralised authority.
>
>But, then I am a researcher with a metanl narrow focus, so what do I
>know?
>
>Phil
>
>
>ProjectParadigm-ICT-Program <metadataportals@yahoo.com> writes:
>> This is a problem which manifests itself in every discipline and it preys on
>> basic human needs for recognition. The current publishing world of academia
>> itself is to blame partially.
>>
>> Because in each field of science scientists and researchers usually have a
>> short list of peer-reviewed journals and conferences in their mental narrow
>> focus, only librarians typically have a (often not much) better overview of
>> available reputable journals and conferences in respective fields.
>>
>> It is high time for a global registry of scientific publishers and their
>> respective journals and a form of rating and grading them.
>>
>> Linked data and semantic web technologies provide opportunities to create such
>> rating and grading systems, and maybe an item for a separate W3C Community
>> Group?
>>
>>  
>> Milton Ponson
>> GSM: +297 747 8280
>> PO Box 1154, Oranjestad
>> Aruba, Dutch Caribbean
>> Project Paradigm: A structured approach to bringing the tools for sustainable
>> development to all stakeholders worldwide by creating ICT tools for NGOs
>> worldwide and: providing online access to web sites and repositories of data
>> and information for sustainable development
>>
>> This email and any files transmitted with it are confidential and intended
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>
>--
>Phillip Lord,                           Phone: +44 (0) 191 222 7827
>Lecturer in Bioinformatics,             Email: phillip.lord@newcastle.ac.uk
>School of Computing Science,            http://homepages.cs.ncl.ac.uk/phillip.lord
>Room 914 Claremont Tower,               skype: russet_apples
>Newcastle University,                   twitter: phillord
>NE1 7RU
>
>


-- 
Leon R A Derczynski
Research Associate, NLP Group

Department of Computer Science
University of Sheffield
Regent Court, 211 Portobello
Sheffield S1 4DP, UK

+45 5157 4948
http://www.dcs.shef.ac.uk/~leon/ 

Received on Tuesday, 23 April 2013 13:36:02 UTC