Difference between revisions of "Wikis in scholarly publishing"

From Species-ID
Jump to: navigation, search
m (Wikis in scholarly communication)
m (Wiki Journal)
Line 36: Line 36:
 
== Wiki Journal ==
 
== Wiki Journal ==
 
''Main page: [http://www.science3point0.com/coaspedia/index.php/User:Daniel_Mietchen/Talks/APE_2011/WikiJournal WikiJournal].''
 
''Main page: [http://www.science3point0.com/coaspedia/index.php/User:Daniel_Mietchen/Talks/APE_2011/WikiJournal WikiJournal].''
 +
*Criteria for [http://en.wikiversity.org/wiki/Wikiversity:Journal_of_the_future Journal of the future]
 +
 
== Editorial policies ==
 
== Editorial policies ==
 
''Main page: [http://www.science3point0.com/coaspedia/index.php/User:Daniel_Mietchen/Talks/APE_2011/Editorial_policies Editorial policies].''
 
''Main page: [http://www.science3point0.com/coaspedia/index.php/User:Daniel_Mietchen/Talks/APE_2011/Editorial_policies Editorial policies].''

Revision as of 12:39, 19 February 2011

Start · Quotes · Background · Wikis as science communication platforms · WikiRepository · Sample_article · WikiJournal · Editorial policies · Obstacles · Outlook · Alternatives · Q & A · Paper · Video

About

This page serves to draft a contribution to a special issue of Services and Use that is dedicated to the APE 2011 conference at which this talk was given. The issue will be Open Access, authors retain copyright, and our drafting the paper on this wiki has been approved by the publisher. In the spirit of wiki collaboration, we invite others to join the drafting. For some sample articles covering earlier APE conferences, see here. Submission deadline is March 1, 2011.

Title

Science as a wiki

Authors

Daniel Mietchen, Gregor Hagedorn, Konrad U. Förstner, Mark Hahnel and Lyubomir Penev

Others are welcome to join in!
See also Template:Publication to wiki notice TESTING.

Abstract

Wikis provide an environment that allows to collect, structure, maintain and update knowledge in a coherent fashion, yet their potential for formal publications has not been systematically explored so far. What roles can they play in scientific discourse? What have we learned about their “internal life”? Where do Wikis work – where not? How do wikis relate to “generally accepted knowledge”? And what are the signals that build trust in such results or contributions? How do researchers select and focus contributions: pick up what is new and relevant and skip the irrelevant and redundant? Where do wikis impact publishing, where do they replace it, what can be learned for publishers?

Introduction


Wikis in scholarly communication

Wiki Journal

Main page: WikiJournal.

Editorial policies

Main page: Editorial policies.

add citability

Semantification

Sample article

Wiki Repository

Main page: WikiRepository. See here for an example article. Not just OA "articles" but also suitably licensed blog posts and other stuff.

Business models

Main page: Business models.

Obstacles

Main page: Obstacles.

  • Usability - not everyone has the skills to work with wikisyntax. solution: WYSIWYG modes
  • Small contributions e.g. gene annotations are not increasing the considered reputation of scientists. A measurement system and consideration of it is needed.

Alternatives

Main page: Alternatives.

Outlook

Main page: Outlook. Refer to some more Beyond the PDF stuff, especially on data publishing.

References

We will link to online references directly, leaving their metadata in the footnotes as usual. All links shall be archived with WebCite.

Figures

Charges for colour figures apply, for which we do not have funds.

Multimedia

Multimedia embeds shall not be possible on the journal site, but they can be integrated with the paper if hosted elsewhere.

Unsorted

This section contains stuff that may be useful during the writing process. It will be deleted when the article is finished.

  • Scientific reputation building via microcontributions