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Alex Holcombe's blog

open science, open access, meta-science, perception, neuroscience, ...
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Author Alex O. Holcombe

I made the below slide for a talk in 2012 to show that the biggest corporate scientific publishers are outrageously profitable.  But that was 3 years ago. How do they look now? Outdated figures, created in 2012 The 40% figure for Wiley in my original slide at left may have been “overinflated”, as a helpful someone explained on twitter.

Published
Author Alex O. Holcombe

Elsevier has a history of unethical behaviour: Elsevier created fake medical journals to promote Merck products. Elsevier sponsored arms fairs for the international sale of weapons. Elsevier sponsored a bill that would have eliminated the NIH mandate that medical research be make freely available within 12 months of publication.

Published
Author Alex O. Holcombe

There has been renewed interest in fast-track fees, after Nature Scientific Reports began piloting their use. Back in 2011, we wrote a protest letter to seven journals that were using fast-track fees at that time (some have since discontinued). The original website where we posted the letter is defunct, so I am re-posting here. We write to ask that you discontinue the policy of fast-tracking submissions for a fee.

Published
Author Alex O. Holcombe

Nature Scientific Reports has adopted is piloting fast-tracking for a fee. Four years ago, I noticed that several journals had adopted such a policy. I raised a number of concerns, such as What happens if the fast-tracking period elapses and a reviewer hasn’t gotten their review in yet? Will the decision about the manuscript be made without that review? How is the additional money used? Does any go to reviewers?

Published
Author Alex O. Holcombe

I started tweeting under the name VisFact, in addition to my normal account. To make vision science more interesting to undergrads, I frequently contrast human visual abilities with those of various animals. Vision is so important that some animals have evolved eyes bigger than their brain. So vision is definitely important enough to deserve this twitter account!

Published
Author Alex O. Holcombe

Below is the text of a recent open letter I signed, spearheaded by Jon Tennant. Here he explains why he spearheaded the below letter to the AAAS requesting they make changes to their policy regarding their new open access journal, Science Advances. Dear  AAAS, This is an open letter concerning the recent launch of the new open access journal, Science Advances.

Published
Author Alex O. Holcombe

At first, I was underwhelmed by this one. But what it does is demonstrate the existence of stretch receptors in our system for the sensation of touch. Running an object (like a stick, or a pen) along the fine teeth of a comb, causes successive teeth of the comb to deflect laterally. There is no appreciable up-and-down component to the teeth’s movement, just the side-to-side movement.