As usual, I'm logged out by the time I post.
Open Peer Review to Save the World by Philip Gibbs
Causally, everything is a set of interconnected systems of perspectives that are formed from interrelated relationships. So nothing is an isolated perspective, they tend to bleed together and overlap. Especially when "choosing" to isolate some usually non-dominant influences to make the perspective easier to monitor and manipulate.
I do not believe Phil's cited relationships will guide humanity into the future solely on their own merits. But I think they are important as part of a larger effort.
For all of the essays here, none of them are sufficient on their own to guide the future of humanity. However, "collectively" I see where many of the concepts can be fit together to form a larger actionable effort that indeed could guide the future of humanity relative to broad technological developments.
Do you really want to Steer the Future of Humanity and take action today?
Force the NSA to be managed ethically.
Maximize Freedoms and at the same time Maximize Security, do not give up one to have the other. Corruption uses the shifting of Security policies to unethically and illegally allocate resources and/or opportunities.
I know a little about the NSA and there is a lot of internal turmoil right now and a great deal of pressure from Representatives; some of which is promoting the release of information to Corporate controlled entities for what THOSE Representatives consider ethical oversight; i.e. promoting Corruption and acting in the interests of Treason.
This will hinder broad economic development because dominant corporations will further dominate significant opportunities. This translates to a suffering research budget.
Treason defined as "intentional weakening of security" for the unethical/illegal allocation of resources/opportunities
.
.
.
retweet: Part of Civil Rights is that Representation is free of Rep/Dem Treason http://tinyurl.com/lpqsur5
.
.
.
Write Reps & NSA, rare opportunity right now to force NSA to monitor and publicly report all acts of corruption/treason
Dear Philip
Thanks for your reply. In my view, your repository has created itself a deplorable reputation over the years thanks to its policies specially those related to the quality of the material published there. As I said, low and high quality research can be identified only by experts no matter the judging process. To me it is bias to say that vixra has been suppressed when, in fact, publications in vixra don't meet the minimum quality standards.
If you would like vixra to be cited and accepted by research institutions and reputable journals, you would have to solve the quality issue. In order to do this, you would have to implement filters similar to arxiv. But since vixra was created for EVERYONE (expert or not), I don't see how vixra will achieve this.
You: This is why the peer-review system has to be more efficient and reliable.
Current peer-review is ok despite its cons. For the reasons given in my previous post, I do not think your proposal will help to improve it.
You: It is no good discovering that a drug does not work after it has been sold to millions of people.
I think it is not wise to blame a reviewer or journal, and therefore, the peer-review system, for a drug that does not work.
You: I think you have missed the point about how viXra works and the principles it uses.
I know vixra very well.
You: The point is that anyone should be able to have a say.
No, not anyone but only qualified and recognized people, experts in a given field. If "anyone" would like to have a say, anyone would have to meet the minimum quality requirements. That's why there are institutions and research centers where people acquire the minimum requirements to have a say.
Good luck in the contest!
Best Regards
Israel
[deleted]
Israel, there are a lot of people who say the same things as you but it is because they have failed to see how the now paradigm for publications works. Anyone can publish now, on a blog or an e-book or whatever. It is not possible to filter out low quality material as journals used to do in the past. I see this as a good thing because in the past a lot of good papers were delayed or hidden by the old system. It does not do harm that bad papers can be read by the public. The harm comes when people wrongly judge a good paper to be bad or a bad paper to be good. That is the business for peer-review to sort out.
viXra does not try to build a reputation for quality. It never has and it never will. This is written on the web site in several places and I have lost count of the number of times I have said it in response to this kind of criticism. You cannot judge any paper on viXra merely by the fact that that is where it is, because viXra is open to anything (except documents that are off-topic and where legal issues intervene) People are gradually starting to understand this and the quantity of papers we receive is rising at about 40% per year. I do not monitor quality but my general impression is that the ratio of useful science to junk on viXra is also increasing. People still sometimes try to mock us by pointing to low quality papers they find there but that is because they are behind the wave and have not yet got the idea of how to surf it.
viXra works on the principle that publication is completely separate from peer-review. The traditional system says otherwise but that is the old dogma and the new publication paradigm usurps it. Some people will never get the new way but more are waking up to it. viXra is just one small part of the change that is happening. The bigger picture is open peer-review which is now following on the tail of open access publication.
It is difficult to gauge how many people are coming over to the new concept but there are signs that lots of people are. Your old idea that people need to have qualifications to have a say is a dying one. The UK government has offered a £10 million prize to anyone who can make progress on a problem that threatens humanity (climate change, resistant bugs etc) They have asked the public to decide what issue to tackle and are encouraging anyone to compete for the prize, whether academic, corporation or just independent scientist/inventor, it does not matter. Some people say that this is the wrong approach but they are doing it because other public prizes have already worked and they want to see how far the idea can be taken.
Of course expertise and qualifications will always be important for research but you also have to count the paths that do not follow the classical route, as in Douglas Singleton's path integral metaphor.
Some new experiments in publication do try to restrict their input to academics. I think those are the systems that will ultimately fail, not the open repositories like viXra. Philica is already sinking because it tried to set a minimum quality standard for submission and failed. I think arXiv will ultimately find that its filter is its biggest limitation. Microsoft's Academic search also failed miserably because they restricted its scope too much. Google scholar does better because they accept papers from almost anywhere. They bowed to pressure from academics to filter out viXra but as our scope grows they will either have to change that or they will suffer for the omission. Figshare has no filter and is doing very well. viXra is boomimg despite actively setting itself up as the place for arXiv rejects and encouraging anyone to submit. A filter is not a prerequisite for success. Journals used to be open to anyone but now they are quietly starting to filter out submissions from academic outsiders without even reading the papers. They are part of the old paradigm and if they cant find a new business model based on the new one they will die. Open access, Open publication and Open peer review are the future.
I wish you good luck in the contest too.
That was me, thought I was logged in...
Philip,
Thank you for a very interesting essay. I found your list of biases particularly to the point, because I agree with you that finding ways to minimize the effect of biases (by improving peer review and by other means) is crucial if we want humanity to optimally steer the future. Being aware of biases and actively fighting them is certainly one of the main goals that education should aim at, especially in the futurocentric perspective that I propose in my essay.
Good luck in the contest!
Marc
Dear Phillip
It is said that nowadays we are in the age of information just because by clicking we have access to whatever we like, good or bad. The fact that we have access won't change the perception of quality in research. There is a list of more than 200 new open-access journals in physics with a terrible reputation. People who seek quality in research will go to places were good quality is published, the others will be ignored, simply because there is too much information that one cannot handle it all and visit all websites. I'm not saying that all publications in vixra are not good, I'm just saying that vixra does not guarantee a minimum of quality. So, there is no big difference between vixra and any other blog find in the internet.
Please take a look at this manuscript: http://vixra.org/pdf/1405.0315v1.pdf. Look at the graphs, presentation, etc. Perhaps this manuscript has something interesting to say but the quality speaks for itself. This is not science. A professional will never publish a paper like this one. When arxiv started to receive this kind of manuscripts, its quality and reputation started to reduce, that's why arxiv implemented filters. Arxiv maintains good quality standards as a repository. This is the great difference between vixra and arxiv.
You: Your old idea that people need to have qualifications to have a say is a dying one.
I don't think so. One cannot expect that a layman who doesn't know basic calculus solve a problem that requires knowledge in differential geometry or higher mathematics. I'm afraid your example does not apply to physics or any other science.
You: The UK government... ...it does not matter.
I'm sure a layperson will not win the prize.
You: They are part of the old paradigm and if they cant find a new business model based on the new one they will die. Open access, Open publication and Open peer review are the future.
I think, there is no "new one" at all. Open access is not well established yet and I don't think it will. It has shown to be worse than traditional publication and it is jeopardizing science reputation by publishing bad quality science. Lets see if you are right in the following years!
Best Regards
Israel
Dear Tihamer,
The group Nicolas Bourbaki claimed having made set theory the basis of all mathematics; and they were accepted in textbooks and by teachers of mathematics.
Claude Shannon has been known and respected for information theory. However, his view on past and future as well as Alfred Nobel's view on mathematics were at odds with current tenets. See my previous essay too.
When I wrote outsider, I didn't mean the opposite of insider but someone outside of the mainstream.
What about your three suggested crucial technologies, I think your optimistic approach is better than pessimism. You might just be a bit too optimistic. Anyway, we both will perhaps agree on that technology is not our fate, not our destiny but rather a challenge to everybody everywhere: Let's contribute to the preconditions for intelligent and satisfying life in peace as intended by Alfred Nobel!
Regards,
Eckard
Dear Phillip,
You discuss the topic of open peer review thoroughly, and while important, I do not think it is enough. This is because many policy makers suffer from one or more of your listed (and other) biases, and they make the decisions that steer humanity, for better or worse. Unless you address their biases, merely creating a pool of 'objectively true' information is of limited use. Consider the matter of climate change.
I suggest three further biases to be important: Attention bias: There is just so much data to attend to that critical information is often overlooked. We tend to attend to things we attend to. Deciding what to attend to, deciding what is important, is often the most difficult decision. Policy makers often attend to the concerns of their supporters, rather than the objective demands of reality, yet which is more important, and critical?
This suggests another bias: Investment bias: You tend to believe what you are paid to believe.
And a third is locality bias: You tend to believe what is near and immediate is more important than what is distant in space and/or time. This bias must be overcome if we are to develop truly global solutions.
Hmm: Checking the WEB shows a more complete list of biases to be quite long: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_biases_in_judgment_and_decision_making
but this merely emphasizes your main point.
In a democracy, we are supposedly all peers, but a democratic system of review has its own failings. Some sort of filtration and transformation of data and information is necessary. Imperfections in the evaluation system should be sought out and corrected, and complaints addressed. And we should all do our part to help.
A very readable and coherent essay, though.
Good luck in the contest.
Sincerely,
Charles
Charles, thanks for your interesting points.
I agree that a traditional democracy is not the solution for open peer-review. I do think that the process has to be open to comments from all-comers, but that does not mean the truth is decided by a democratic vote. Some kind of up-down voting system may be part of the solution but it has to be applied to individual points and comments so that a collective logic can be formed. I think that if someone points out a biased argument or provides a more logical alternative then some people recognize that. The system needs to find the experts who are best at judging in a particular field and give them more power in that field. I dont know the best way to make it work. I think it requires some experiment.
Hi Philip,
I just wanted to reach out and say thank you for the consideration you put into your work. I, too, am an advocate for transparency in the sciences (whether institutional or otherwise), as anything else is obstructive to the sort of progress humanity may need, in order to evade the many existential threats you were attentive enough to mention. Thank you for that, and for an otherwise very well-written, and well-thought-out discussion (both in your essay and throughout the comments that followed it).
Wishing you well in the competition, and hoping to hear from you soon.
Best regards.
=)
Dear Philip,
I've commented on your fine essay above, but as you were favorably inclined to Douglas Singleton's application of a physics metaphor to the problem, I'd like to again invite you to read my essay, which also applies physics ideas to the topic.
Congratulations for continuing to stay near the top of the rankings.
Best,
Edwin Eugene Klingman
Hi Philip,
Thanks for your essay. I agree that bias is a persistent and important problem, and, as an academic author myself, have seen how it plays out.
I think you might find some connections with my essay on computationally intelligent personal dialogic agents. I developed a prototype with a grant from the National Science Foundation as part of research on approaches to team training. One of the goals of the dialogic system is to reduce bias, and I have shown some positive results in terms of group outcomes in problem solving.
I'd appreciate a rating, if you can do that, since I am a bit short on ratings.
Thanks,
Ray
Dear Peter,
I'm doubtful that one could effectively make an author anonymous to the referees: I'm afraid that in the vast majority of the cases the identity of most authors would be completely apparent to the referees from what they write. However, young or first-time authors would be guaranteed fair treatment by such a system, and also it would guarantee that, if the editors decides to reject your paper before sending it through peer-review, they had to read the paper (or at least the abstract!) and couldn't reject a paper just on the basis of the author's reputation. What do you think?
best,
Flavio
Hello Philip, May I post a short, but sincere critique of your essay? I'd ask you to return the favour. Here's my policy on that. - Mike
Philip,
Having had rating problems with my Firefox browser and with some 5 days remaining, I am revisiting essays I've read to see if rated. I find that I rated yours on 4/30.
Glad to see your essay is doing well. Given time, I would like to see your thoughts on my essay: http://www.fqxi.org/community/forum/topic/2008
Jim
[deleted]
Hello Dr. Gibbs,
Thank you for your essay proposal based on open peer review. I concur with you that the human mind is fraught with biases which cloud our judgement. While the wisdom of the crowd can sometimes be shown to be equivalent in predictive power to an expert, I am not sure how well it can be applied to the scientific endeavor. Even if we had a broader scientific consensus than we do currently, I'm not sure we will ever achieve a complete consensus, nor does it imply that a correct course of action would be chosen in regards to that consensus. I would like to believe otherwise, but I don't have that much faith in the rationality of my fellow humans.
Regardless of my criticisms, though, I do believe that the academic and scientific endeavors require updates to their operational mechanisms, especially where elimination of bias is concerned and verification and accuracy can be improved. These improvements certainly wouldn't hurt any future I would choose for our species.
Thanks,
Mark
[deleted]
Mark,
I believe open peer review is an important part of business incubation. Much more than just on-subject discussion results, leading to moments of inspiration being produced in other diverse subject areas. Types of inspirations resulting might involve: diverse related products to develop, marketing insights, ethical concerns, synergy with other research ...
Open peer review is very much a part of Staged peer review with business incubation tools.
Staged Peer Review & Business Incubator
But unless something actively and physically is pursued, of what use is this discussion; or any discussion ...
Contributors here have diverse perspectives, and most, obviously thoughtful people. Therefore, everything presented in these essays has the potential to contribute productively toward any overall goal; within staged constraints. A person with a passion to provoke anarchy is most likely going to disrupt product development and make it impossible to produce a product to fund further efforts. However, that same anarchist is an important controls feedback function for philosophical discussions about ethics related to what should be considered about the uses and abuses of the product when developed.
Most business people want to jump onto a path that most directly provides them with the greatest return on investment. The problem is that without negative feedback the initial business resources are used up before sustainable systems can be put in place to establish a stable AND sustainable cash flow. As an example, the lowest risk investment on average is a franchise, but only one in 20 franchises become sustainable. The diverse types of influences on a business start-up takes time and a slow trickling of resources so that unforeseen influences can be characterized and incorporated into the business control systems. But meetings and efforts without useful outcomes is wasted resources and undeveloped opportunities.
The following was a national headline for the James-Rivers Paper Company journal. Related to unproductive meetings without an Action-Item Log and related Action-Item Worksheets to capture and track meeting productivity:
"If you are going to listen, do something" ~Thomas Dunn
Philip,
I hope the new deadline allows you to get to mine. I do understand if QM turns you off, it would do anybody, but unification is important enough to our future to peek at a logical version. I've condensed the solution in the last few posts of my blog. The experiment (end notes) allowed comprehension by all ages down to 11!
As you're aware I feel both our essays should be a bit higher, but as we also know, the judges take no account of peer score places. I'm interested in all viewpoints in any case and would respect yours.
Best of luck in the final judging anyway.
Peter