Preprint: Difference between revisions
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==History== |
==History== |
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Since 1991, preprints have increasingly been distributed electronically on the [[Internet]], rather than as paper copies. This has given rise to massive preprint databases such as [[arXiv]] and [[HAL (open archive)]] etc. to [[institutional repository|institutional repositories]]. The sharing of preprints goes back to at least the 1960s, when the [[National Institutes of Health]] circulated biological preprints. After six years the use of these [[Information Exchange Groups]] was stopped, partially because journals stopped accepting submissions shared via these channels.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Cobb |first1=Matthew |title=The prehistory of biology preprints: A forgotten experiment from the 1960s |journal=PLOS Biology |date=16 November 2017 |volume=15 |issue=11 |pages=e2003995 |doi=10.1371/journal.pbio.2003995|pmid=29145518 |pmc=5690419 }}</ref> |
Since 1991, preprints have increasingly been distributed electronically on the [[Internet]], rather than as paper copies. This has given rise to massive preprint databases such as [[arXiv]] and [[HAL (open archive)]] etc. to [[institutional repository|institutional repositories]]. The sharing of preprints goes back to at least the 1960s, when the [[National Institutes of Health]] circulated biological preprints. After six years the use of these [[Information Exchange Groups]] was stopped, partially because journals stopped accepting submissions shared via these channels.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Cobb |first1=Matthew |title=The prehistory of biology preprints: A forgotten experiment from the 1960s |journal=PLOS Biology |date=16 November 2017 |volume=15 |issue=11 |pages=e2003995 |doi=10.1371/journal.pbio.2003995|pmid=29145518 |pmc=5690419 }}</ref> |
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In 2016, several new preprint servers were proposed by [[CrossRef|Crossref]], [[Center for Open Science|Centre for Open Science]] and ASAPbio.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.crossref.org/blog/getting-ready-to-run-with-preprints-any-day-now/|title=Getting ready to run with preprints, any day now |date=2016-08-16 |website=Crossref Blog |access-date=2018-09-06}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=http://asapbio.org/summary-of-a-central-preprint-service-model|title=Creation of a Central Preprint Service for the Life Sciences |website=asapbio.org |publisher=ASAPbio |access-date=2016-08-18}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.insidehighered.com/blogs/library-babel-fish/acceleration-open-access|title=The Acceleration of Open Access |website=Inside Higher Ed |access-date=2016-10-31}}</ref> |
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In January 2017, the [[Medical Research Council (United Kingdom)|Medical Research Council]] announced that they will now be actively supporting preprints beginning in April 2017.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://mrc.ukri.org/news/browse/the-mrc-supports-preprints/ |title=The MRC supports preprints |publisher=Medical Research Council |date=2017-01-03|website=www.mrc.ac.uk|access-date=2018-09-06}}</ref> Also in January 2017, [[Wellcome Trust]] stated that they will now accept preprints in grant applications.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://wellcome.ac.uk/news/we-now-accept-preprints-grant-applications|title=We now accept preprints in grant applications |publisher=Wellcome|website=wellcome.ac.uk|access-date=2017-01-10}}</ref> In February 2017, a coalition of scientists and biomedical funding bodies including the [[National Institutes of Health]], the Medical Research Council and the Wellcome Trust launched a proposal for a central site for life-sciences preprints.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Callaway |first=Ewen |title=Heavyweight funders back central site for life-sciences preprints|journal=Nature|volume=542 |issue=7641 |pages=283–284 |language=en|doi=10.1038/nature.2017.21466|pmid=28202994 |bibcode=2017Natur.542..283C|date=2017-02-16 |s2cid=4466963 }}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=http://asapbio.org/principles|title=Principles for establishing a Central Service for Preprints: a statement from a consortium of funders {{!}} ASAPbio|website=asapbio.org|language=en-US|access-date=2017-02-13}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=http://asapbio.org/asapbio-newsletter-vol-7|title=ASAPbio newsletter vol 7 – Funders sign onto principles for preprint development, RFA released, scientific society town hall {{!}} ASAPbio|website=asapbio.org|language=en-US|access-date=2017-02-14}}</ref> In February 2017, [[SciELO]] announced plans to set up a preprints server – SciELO Preprints.<ref>{{Cite news|url=http://blog.scielo.org/en/2017/02/22/scielo-preprints-on-the-way/#.WK2Q6jsrI2w|title=SciELO Preprints on the way |date=2017-02-22|newspaper=SciELO in Perspective|access-date=2017-02-22|language=en-US}}</ref> In March 2017, the National Institutes for Health issued a new policy encouraging research preprint submissions.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://grants.nih.gov/grants/guide/notice-files/NOT-OD-17-050.html|title=NOT-OD-17-050: Reporting Preprints and Other Interim Research Products|website=grants.nih.gov|language=en-US|access-date=2017-03-25}}</ref><ref>{{Cite news|url=http://www.sciencemag.org/news/2017/03/nih-enables-investigators-include-draft-preprints-grant-proposals |title=NIH enables investigators to include draft preprints in grant proposals|date=2017-03-24|work=Science {{!}} AAAS|access-date=2017-03-27 |language=en}}</ref> In April 2017, Center for Open Science announced that it will be launching six new preprint archives.<ref>{{Cite web |url=https://cos.io/blog/public-goods-infrastructure-preprints-and-innovation-scholarly-communication/|title=Public Goods Infrastructure for Preprints and Innovation in Scholarly Communication|website=cos.io|language=en|access-date=2017-04-19}}</ref> |
In January 2017, the [[Medical Research Council (United Kingdom)|Medical Research Council]] announced that they will now be actively supporting preprints beginning in April 2017.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://mrc.ukri.org/news/browse/the-mrc-supports-preprints/ |title=The MRC supports preprints |publisher=Medical Research Council |date=2017-01-03|website=www.mrc.ac.uk|access-date=2018-09-06}}</ref> Also in January 2017, [[Wellcome Trust]] stated that they will now accept preprints in grant applications.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://wellcome.ac.uk/news/we-now-accept-preprints-grant-applications|title=We now accept preprints in grant applications |publisher=Wellcome|website=wellcome.ac.uk|access-date=2017-01-10}}</ref> In February 2017, a coalition of scientists and biomedical funding bodies including the [[National Institutes of Health]], the Medical Research Council and the Wellcome Trust launched a proposal for a central site for life-sciences preprints.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Callaway |first=Ewen |title=Heavyweight funders back central site for life-sciences preprints|journal=Nature|volume=542 |issue=7641 |pages=283–284 |language=en|doi=10.1038/nature.2017.21466|pmid=28202994 |bibcode=2017Natur.542..283C|date=2017-02-16 |s2cid=4466963 }}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=http://asapbio.org/principles|title=Principles for establishing a Central Service for Preprints: a statement from a consortium of funders {{!}} ASAPbio|website=asapbio.org|language=en-US|access-date=2017-02-13}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=http://asapbio.org/asapbio-newsletter-vol-7|title=ASAPbio newsletter vol 7 – Funders sign onto principles for preprint development, RFA released, scientific society town hall {{!}} ASAPbio|website=asapbio.org|language=en-US|access-date=2017-02-14}}</ref> In February 2017, [[SciELO]] announced plans to set up a preprints server – SciELO Preprints.<ref>{{Cite news|url=http://blog.scielo.org/en/2017/02/22/scielo-preprints-on-the-way/#.WK2Q6jsrI2w|title=SciELO Preprints on the way |date=2017-02-22|newspaper=SciELO in Perspective|access-date=2017-02-22|language=en-US}}</ref> In March 2017, the National Institutes for Health issued a new policy encouraging research preprint submissions.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://grants.nih.gov/grants/guide/notice-files/NOT-OD-17-050.html|title=NOT-OD-17-050: Reporting Preprints and Other Interim Research Products|website=grants.nih.gov|language=en-US|access-date=2017-03-25}}</ref><ref>{{Cite news|url=http://www.sciencemag.org/news/2017/03/nih-enables-investigators-include-draft-preprints-grant-proposals |title=NIH enables investigators to include draft preprints in grant proposals|date=2017-03-24|work=Science {{!}} AAAS|access-date=2017-03-27 |language=en}}</ref> In April 2017, Center for Open Science announced that it will be launching six new preprint archives.<ref>{{Cite web |url=https://cos.io/blog/public-goods-infrastructure-preprints-and-innovation-scholarly-communication/|title=Public Goods Infrastructure for Preprints and Innovation in Scholarly Communication|website=cos.io|language=en|access-date=2017-04-19}}</ref> |
Revision as of 10:12, 26 December 2020
In academic publishing, a preprint is a version of a scholarly or scientific paper that precedes formal peer review and publication in a peer-reviewed scholarly or scientific journal. The preprint may be available, often as a non-typeset version available free, before and/or after a paper is published in a journal.
History
Since 1991, preprints have increasingly been distributed electronically on the Internet, rather than as paper copies. This has given rise to massive preprint databases such as arXiv and HAL (open archive) etc. to institutional repositories. The sharing of preprints goes back to at least the 1960s, when the National Institutes of Health circulated biological preprints. After six years the use of these Information Exchange Groups was stopped, partially because journals stopped accepting submissions shared via these channels.[1]
In January 2017, the Medical Research Council announced that they will now be actively supporting preprints beginning in April 2017.[2] Also in January 2017, Wellcome Trust stated that they will now accept preprints in grant applications.[3] In February 2017, a coalition of scientists and biomedical funding bodies including the National Institutes of Health, the Medical Research Council and the Wellcome Trust launched a proposal for a central site for life-sciences preprints.[4][5][6] In February 2017, SciELO announced plans to set up a preprints server – SciELO Preprints.[7] In March 2017, the National Institutes for Health issued a new policy encouraging research preprint submissions.[8][9] In April 2017, Center for Open Science announced that it will be launching six new preprint archives.[10]
At the end of the 2010s, libraries and discovery tools increasingly integrate Unpaywall data, which indexes millions of preprints and other green open access sources and manages to serve over half of the requests by users without the need for subscriptions.[11]
Role
Academic practices
Publication of manuscripts in a peer-reviewed journal often takes weeks, months or even years from the time of initial submission, owing to the time required by editors and reviewers to evaluate and critique manuscripts, and the time required by authors to address critiques. The need to quickly circulate current results within a scholarly community has led researchers to distribute documents known as preprints, which are manuscripts that have yet to undergo peer review. The immediate distribution of preprints allows authors to receive early feedback from their peers, which may be helpful in revising and preparing articles for submission.[12]
Most publishers allow work to be published to preprint servers before submission. A minority of publishers decide on a case-by-case basis or interpret the Ingelfinger Rule to disqualify from submission.[13]
Stages of printing
While a preprint is an article that has not yet undergone peer review, a postprint is an article which has been peer reviewed in preparation for publication in a journal. Both the preprint and postprint may differ from the final published version of an article. Preprints and postprints together are referred to as e-prints or eprints.[14]
The word reprint refers to hard copies of papers that have already been published; reprints can be produced by the journal publisher, but can also be generated from digital versions (for example, from an electronic database of peer-reviewed journals), or from eprints self-archived by their authors in their institutional repositories.
Tenure and promotion
In academia, preprints are not likely to be weighed heavily when a scholar is evaluated for tenure or promotion, unless the preprint becomes the basis for a peer-reviewed publication.[15]
Some important results[16] in mathematics have been published only on the preprint server arXiv.[17][18] After nearly a century of effort by mathematicians, between 2002 and 2003 the mathematician Grigori Perelman published a series of preprint papers on the arXiv where he presented a proof of the Poincaré conjecture.[19][20][21] Perelman was offered both the prestigious $1 million Millennium Prize and the Fields Medal for the mentioned work published exclusively on arXiv, but he declined both prizes.[22]
Types of preprint servers
The preprint servers can be grouped in three categories: general (accepting practically all preprints, frequently with bias towards some topic, publisher e.g. Authorea), field-specific (e.g. bioRxiv, ChemRxiv) and regional (e.g. AfricArxiv, Arabixiv). Additionally, preprints can be categorised by the owner (private publishing company e.g. PeerJ PrePrints, libraries e.g. EarthArXiv, universities e.g. arXiv or independent non-profit organisations e.g. HAL). While many preprint servers appeared, some had been terminated. The canceled servers were oparated mainly by profit publishing companies (e.g. Nature Publishing Group closed Nature Precedings or O'Reilly&SAGE closed PeerJ PrePrints) or were regional (e.g. INArxiv limited to Indonesia). Moreover, multiple writing platforms (e.g. Authorea) developed separate preprint servers as a part of their service. For more complete list (over 60 preprints servers) see: List of academic preprint repositories.
See also
- List of academic preprint servers
- Cogprints
- Cryptology ePrint Archive
- List of academic journals by preprint policy
- Offprint
- Prepress
- ScientificCommons
References
- ^ Cobb, Matthew (16 November 2017). "The prehistory of biology preprints: A forgotten experiment from the 1960s". PLOS Biology. 15 (11): e2003995. doi:10.1371/journal.pbio.2003995. PMC 5690419. PMID 29145518.
{{cite journal}}
: CS1 maint: unflagged free DOI (link) - ^ "The MRC supports preprints". www.mrc.ac.uk. Medical Research Council. 2017-01-03. Retrieved 2018-09-06.
- ^ "We now accept preprints in grant applications". wellcome.ac.uk. Wellcome. Retrieved 2017-01-10.
- ^ Callaway, Ewen (2017-02-16). "Heavyweight funders back central site for life-sciences preprints". Nature. 542 (7641): 283–284. Bibcode:2017Natur.542..283C. doi:10.1038/nature.2017.21466. PMID 28202994. S2CID 4466963.
- ^ "Principles for establishing a Central Service for Preprints: a statement from a consortium of funders | ASAPbio". asapbio.org. Retrieved 2017-02-13.
- ^ "ASAPbio newsletter vol 7 – Funders sign onto principles for preprint development, RFA released, scientific society town hall | ASAPbio". asapbio.org. Retrieved 2017-02-14.
- ^ "SciELO Preprints on the way". SciELO in Perspective. 2017-02-22. Retrieved 2017-02-22.
- ^ "NOT-OD-17-050: Reporting Preprints and Other Interim Research Products". grants.nih.gov. Retrieved 2017-03-25.
- ^ "NIH enables investigators to include draft preprints in grant proposals". Science | AAAS. 2017-03-24. Retrieved 2017-03-27.
- ^ "Public Goods Infrastructure for Preprints and Innovation in Scholarly Communication". cos.io. Retrieved 2017-04-19.
- ^ Dhakal, Kerry (15 April 2019). "Unpaywall". Journal of the Medical Library Association. 107 (2): 286–288. doi:10.5195/jmla.2019.650. PMC 6466485.
- ^ "Breaking Down Pros and Cons of Preprints in Biomedicine". Absolutely Maybe. 2016-05-01. Retrieved 2018-01-12.
- ^ "Taking the online medicine". The Economist. ISSN 0013-0613. Retrieved 2016-03-23.
- ^ "Self-archiving FAQ". EPrints.
- ^ Callaway, Ewen; Powell, Kendall (2016-02-18). "Biologists urged to hug a preprint". Nature. 530 (7590): 265. Bibcode:2016Natur.530..265C. doi:10.1038/530265a. PMID 26887471.
- ^ Kaufman, Marc (July 2, 2010), "Russian mathematician wins $1 million prize, but he appears to be happy with $0", Washington Post
- ^ Perelman, Grisha (November 11, 2002). "The entropy formula for the Ricci flow and its geometric applications". arXiv:math.DG/0211159.
- ^ Nadejda Lobastova and Michael Hirst, "Maths genius living in poverty", Sydney Morning Herald, August 21, 2006
- ^ Perelman, Grisha (November 11, 2002). "The entropy formula for the Ricci flow and its geometric applications". arXiv:math.DG/0211159.
- ^ Perelman, Grisha (10 March 2003). "Ricci flow with surgery on three-manifolds". arXiv:math.DG/0303109.
- ^ Perelman, Grisha (July 17, 2003). "Finite extinction time for the solutions to the Ricci flow on certain three-manifolds". arXiv:math.DG/0307245.
- ^ Kaufman, Marc (July 2, 2010), "Russian mathematician wins $1 million prize, but he appears to be happy with $0", Washington Post
External links
This article's use of external links may not follow Wikipedia's policies or guidelines. (December 2017) |
- Eysenbach G. "The impact of preprint servers and electronic publishing on biomedical research". Curr Opin Immunol. 2000 Oct;12(5):499–503
- Eysenbach G. "Challenges and changing roles for medical journals in the cyberspace age: Electronic pre-prints and e-papers". J Med Internet Res 1999;1(2):e9
- Electronic Preprints and Postprints, in Encyclopedia of Library and Information Science. Marcel Dekker.
- Inefuku, Harrison W. "Pre-Print, Post-Print or Offprint? A Guide to publication versions, permissions and the digital repository." Ames, IA: Digital Repository @ Iowa State University, 14 January 2013.
- Journal policies on preprints from Nature Precedings forum
- Pre-print, post-print, definitions and terms as defined by SHERPA (organisation)
- Preprint, Postprint as defined by Crossref
- Preprint FAQ by ASAPbio.