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The true costs involved in open access publication (assuming no paper
copies) really come down to the labor of the editors and reviewers. This is
something that we have been supplying as a free service - whether it be to
for-profit publishers or societies (or funding agencies). It is an absolute
necessity to have a good peer-review/editing system in place to ensure the
integrity of our science and because tenure and promotion systems at most
institutions use a researcher's peer-reviewed publication record as a
primary evaluation measure.

So, assuming peer-review must be maintained, what is the cost in terms of
person-hours to actually review and edit a typical science publication?
Back of the envelope, bare minimum, I would say for a publication would
involve 2 reviewers X 8 hours + 1 editor X 8 hours, and assume that a
manuscript requires revision so double that. BARE MINIMUM then is 48 hours
for peer review. What do you want to set as a rate? Let's say $100/hour
(it's easy to argue a bit less or a lot more). Feel free to disagree, but I
don't believe a peer reviewed open-access publication can be produced for
less than $4800. If there are professional editors out there, they will
probably tell me I'm way low on that estimate.

Who bears this cost of quality, open-access, science publication is
something that needs to be addressed. Currently the majority of the expense
is born by the institutions who pay our salaries (if you review papers
during work hours) or by our families (if you review your papers on
weekends and on family vacations...as many of us do).

side note: For K12 education research, evaluation of materials is a
professional service that is explicitly required in many grant proposals. I
find it interesting that evaluation of materials through scientific
peer-review is assumed to be free, or at least is a hidden cost in grant
proposals. One wonders how the latter system developed, anyone know the
history of peer-review?



On Thu, Mar 19, 2015 at 9:40 AM, Davis, R Laurence <[log in to unmask]>
wrote:

>   Thanks all for this interesting and important discussion. My two cents
> is publish in society journals. They meet all the "rules", they are, in a
> sense, owned by us, they keep their costs as low as possible, and they
> exist to further science, not to put money in the pockets of shareholders.
> As GSA and other scientific societies struggle with how to combine this
> mission with the new publishing realities, there may also be opportunities
> for new, more specialized versions of the classic journals that may target
> narrower audiences and complete with some of the for profit journals. Look
> at how many Journal of Geophysical Research sections there are.
>
>  Larry Davis
>  --
> *************************************************************************
> R. Laurence Davis, Ph.D.
> Professor of Earth and Environmental Sciences and
> Coordinator Undergraduate Program in Environmental Sciences
> Department of Biology and Environmental Sciences
> University of New Haven
> 300 Boston Post Road
> West Haven, Connecticut 06516
> <[log in to unmask]>
> Office: 203-932-7108    Fax: 203-931-6097
> *************************************************************************
>
>
>


-- 
Mark A. Chandler
Columbia University - NASA/GISS
2880 Broadway, New York, NY 10025
(608) 445-0166