Paul Litvak wrote a thoughtful piece on the limitations of the scientific journal article and the advantages of a proposed new genre or structure.
https://www.paullitvak.com/p/the-future-of-academic-journals

The new structure he describes is similar to one I proposed in 2012: one that would disaggregate claims and connect each one to the current evidence. See my 2012 essay, "The idea of an open-access evidence rack."
http://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:HUL.InstRepos:32988193

One difference is that his would use #AI. Mine would use #crowdsourcing. But his could also use crowdsourcing and mine could also use AI.

Another is that his seems meant to stand alone. Mine is meant to be a dynamic collection of "perpetually updated, public footnotes" that might stand alone or might be cited, as footnotes, by articles, books, and any other new genres that might come along.

#Genres #ScholComm

The future of academic journals?

Why journals lose their grip when scientific claims become legible

In One Lifetime

@petersuber @icymi_law Peter, this is the first time I’ve come across your idea! we had a similar one at the start of the pandemic: crowd sourced argument/evidence maps….

https://arxiv.org/abs/2212.14714

Managing Expert Disagreement for the Policy Process and Beyond

In this paper, we outline a new proposal for communicating scientific debate to policymakers and other stakeholders in circumstances where there is substantial disagreement within the scientific literature. In those circumstances, it seems important to provide policy makers both with a useful, balanced summary that is representative of opinion in the field large, and to transparently communicate the actual evidence-base. To this end, we propose the compilation of argument maps through a collective intelligence process; these maps are then given to a wide sample of the relevant research community for evaluation and summary opinion in an IGM style IGM style poll (see igmchicago.org), which provides a representative view of opinion on the issue at stake within the wider scientific community. Policymakers then receive these two artefacts (map and poll) as their expert advice. Such a process would help overcome the resource limitations of the traditional expert advice process, while also providing greater balance by drawing on the expertise of researchers beyond the leading proponents of particular theories within a field. And, the actual evidence base would be transparent. In this paper, we present a pilot project stepping through the map building component of such a policy advice scheme. We detail process, products, and issues encountered by implementing in the OVA (Online Visualisation of Argument tool, ova.arg-tech.org) an argument map with sample evidence from the behavioural literature on communicating probabilities, as a central issue within pandemic.

arXiv.org
@UlrikeHahn @icymi_law
Ulrike, thanks for pointing this out. I missed it at the time. I'm glad to see support for these similar proposals coming from such different directions. Although I'm semi-retired, I'd be happy to take part in discussions on their further evolution.
@petersuber @icymi_law we kind of lost momentum as the reception wasn’t particularly warm trying to publish this in mainstream journals, but maybe that was just the wrong route! It would be nice to talk about this and maybe get some better ideas about possible paths forward…