| Literature DB >> 36225341 |
Dasapta Erwin Irawan1, Hilyatuz Zahroh2, Iratxe Puebla3.
Abstract
Southeast Asia is an emerging force of open access scholarly output. For example, Indonesia is in a tight competition with United Kingdom as the largest publisher of open access journals and the second largest producer of open access articles in the world (according to DOAJ and the COKI OA Dashboard, respectively). However, this support for open practices is not yet reflected in institutional research policies in Southeast Asian countries, which still rely on criteria influenced by world university rankings that focus on publication outputs and do not incorporate elements related to research culture, integrity, or open science. Preprints have gained increasing attention across disciplines in the last few years, but they are still not included in institutional policies in SouthEast Asia. This paper discusses the potential for preprints to be a driving force for open science and for quality and integrity in scholarly outputs from Southeast Asia. There is a fledgling preprinting culture in the region, catalyzed by the RINarxiv preprint server in Indonesia and the Malaysia Open Science Platform. We argue that preprints have many advantages: opportunities for open access and for researchers to maintain copyright to their work, wide dissemination, encouraging feedback and critical thinking, and community governance. With these advantages, preprints can become a fast and open communication hub between researchers and all stakeholders in the research process. We recommend regulatory and practical steps to incorporate preprints into science policy and researchers' practices as an effort to promote research integrity, open data and reproducibility.Entities:
Keywords: Southeast Asia; diversity; open access; open science; preprints; reproducibility; research integrity
Year: 2022 PMID: 36225341 PMCID: PMC9548629 DOI: 10.3389/frma.2022.992942
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Res Metr Anal ISSN: 2504-0537
Regional scope preprint servers.
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| 1 | RINarxiv |
| Indonesia and SE Asia |
| 2 | Arabixiv |
| Arab region/peninsula |
| 3 | ChinaXiv |
| China |
| 4 | Scielo Preprints |
| Latin America |
| 5 | AfricaRxiv |
| Africa continent |
| 6 | Jxiv |
| Japan |
| 7 | IndiaRxiv |
| India and South Asia |
Figure 1RINArxiv infographic from May 21, 2020 until June 30, 2022.
Benefits of preprints to the different stakeholders involved in research.
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| 1 Promote a common understanding of open science, benefits & challenges, diverse paths to open science | 2 Develop an enabling policy environment for open science | 3 Invest in open science infrastructures & services | 4 Invest in human resources, training, education, digital literacy & capacity building for open science | 5 Foster a culture of open science & align incentives for open science | 6 Promote innovative approaches for open science at different stages of the scientific process | 7 Promote international & multi-stakeholder cooperation in open science | |
| Funders | Preprints are an immediate proof of productivity, allowing the evaluation of the most immediate research outputs at the end of the grant period. | ||||||
| Preprint are free and provide a low-cost open access option; a wider range of outputs can be shared, bringing a higher return on investment for grants. | |||||||
| Preprints support FAIR dissemination, they make the latest research results widely findable and accessible, reducing the risk of duplication or unnecessary repetition. | |||||||
| Research Institutions | Preprints provide wide reach and increased transparency to the dissemination of the latest research findings, which can drive institutional reputation. | ||||||
| Preprint servers align to many of the goals and purposes of institutional repositories. | |||||||
| Preprints enable interactions across stakeholders earlier in the research process. | |||||||
| Academic Journals | Editorial policies that accept preprints support wide & early sharing of research outputs. | Opportunities to innovate | |||||
| Preprints provide early exposure to the work and drive early citations when the journal article appears. | |||||||
| Research Community | Preprints provide researchers new ways and freedom to share their work. | Preprints enable early interactions & collaborations among researchers. | |||||
| The assessment is focused on the scientific content and free of journal-title proxies, which helps develop critical thinking and review skills. | |||||||
| Preprint offers solution for researchers with limited APC funding. They can publish the manuscript in a non-OA journal and upload the preprints or author's accepted version to preprint server as the OA version. | |||||||
| Society | Preprints allow broad dissemination | Non-specialized readers, such as the public or journalists, can comment or engage with the preprint directly. | Preprints remove barriers for citizen science groups to share their work. | ||||
Figure 2Preprints as a central communication hub in the research ecosystem.