Who’s loving it – and why?
There are plenty of reasons to support a thriving preprint community, said Jessica Polka, PhD, director of ASAPbio, (Accelerating Science and Publication in biology), a group that bills itself as a scientist-driven initiative to promote the productive use of preprints in the life sciences.
“Preprinting complements traditional journal publishing by allowing researchers to rapidly communicate their findings to the scientific community,” she said. “This, in turn, provides them with opportunities for earlier and broader feedback and a way to transparently demonstrate progress on a project. More importantly, the whole community benefits by having earlier access to research findings, which can accelerate the pace of discovery.”
Preprint-like data are already abundant anyway, in evidence at every scientific meeting, Dr. Polka said. “Late-breaking abstracts are of a similar status, except that the complete picture is not always fully available for everyone. A preprint would actually give you full disclosure of the methods and the analysis – way more information. On every level, these practices of sharing nonreviewed work are already in the system, and we accept them as provisional.”The disclosures applied to every preprint paper are the publisher’s way of assuring this same awareness, she said. And preprints do need to be approached with some skepticism, as should peer-reviewed literature.
“The veracity of published papers is not always a given. An example is the 1998 vaccine paper [published in the Lancet] by Dr. Andrew Wakefield,” which launched the antivaccine movement. “But the answer to problems of reliability is to provide more information about the research and how it has been verified and evaluated, not less information. For example, confirmation bias can make it difficult to refute work that has been published. The current incentives for publishing negative results in a journal are not strong enough to reveal all of the information that could be useful to other researchers, but preprinting reduces the barrier to sharing negative results,” she said.