bioRxiv: Trends and analysis of five years of preprints - Anderson - - Learned Publishing - Wiley Online Library

peter.suber's bookmarks 2020-02-21

Summary:

Abstract:  bioRxiv was founded on the premise that publicly posting preprints would allow authors to receive feedback and submit improved papers to journals. This paper analyses a number of trends against this stated purpose, namely, the timing of preprint postings relative to submission to accepting journals; trends in the rate of unpublished preprints over time; trends in the timing of publication of preprints by accepting journals; and trends in the concentration of published, reviewed preprints by publisher. Findings show that a steady c.30% of preprints remain unpublished and that the majority is posted onto bioRxiv close to or after submission – therefore giving no time for feedback to help improve the articles. Four publishers (Elsevier, Nature, PLOS, and Oxford University Press) account for the publication of 47% of bioRxiv preprints. Taken together, it appears that bioRxiv is not accomplishing its stated goals and that authors may be using the platform more to establish priority, as a marketing enhancement of papers, and as functional Green OA, rather than as a community‐driven source of prepublication review.

 

Link:

https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1002/leap.1265

From feeds:

Open Access Tracking Project (OATP) » peter.suber's bookmarks

Tags:

oa.new oa.preprints oa.biorxiv oa.biology oa.repositories oa.repositories.preprints oa.trends oa.history_of oa.versions oa.case oa.case.repositories oa.speed

Date tagged:

02/21/2020, 15:40

Date published:

02/21/2020, 10:41