Nature article on time to publication

An article by Kendall Powell entitled “Does it take too long to publish research?” appears in the February 11, 2016 issue of Nature. ASAPbio attendees (including Leslie Vosshall and Maria Leptin) and organizer Ron Vale are quoted, and the meeting is mentioned: This month, a group of more than 70 scientists, funders, journal editors and publishers are meeting…

Meeting objectives

The rationale for ASAPbio Most scientists agree that the research in biology could be accelerated and improved if scientific publishing was made easier, faster, and more transparent. On the evening of February 16th and all day on the 17th, ~70 members of the science community, young and old, leaders and trainees, and representatives of journals,…

Vice President

What is your current role? Tell us a bit about your line of research I just started my own research group in the Cell Biology and Biophysics Unit at the European Molecular Biology Laboratory (EMBL). My group focusses on the ‘evolutionary cell biology’ of the nucleus: searching for fundamental principles of nuclear organisation using comparative…

Pre-prints: building a practical guide and Q&As for junior scientists

Samuel L. Díaz-Muñoz Center for Genomics and Systems Biology and Department of Biology, New York University Pre-prints of research articles have been proposed as a way to advance scientific progress, establish priority of discovery, and ameliorate some of the current shortcomings of the peer review process. All these traits are intended to accelerate the pace…

Sharing Preprints and Publishing Papers: a Symbiosis

Bernd Pulverer EMBO Press, Meyerhofstrasse 1, Heidelberg, Germany bernd.pulverer@embo.org Print servers allow the efficient sharing and discussion of scientific findings without restriction or delay. Quality assurance through peer review and editorial processes are more important than ever, given the rapid growth and increased complexity of scientific information. I will argue that both processes can work…

Coupling Pre-Prints and Post-Publication Peer Review for Fast, Cheap, Fair, and Effective Science Publishing

Michael Eisen1,2 and Leslie B. Vosshall 3,4 1 Department of Molecular and Cell Biology and 2 Howard Hughes Medical Institute, University of California, Berkeley, CA. 3 Laboratory of Neurogenetics and Behavior and 4 Howard Hughes Medical Institute, The Rockefeller University, New York, NY. mbeisen@berkeley.edu; leslie@rockefeller.edu Research papers are the primary tangible and lasting output of…

The role of preprints in publishing

Vitek Tracz and Rebecca Lawrence F1000, Middlesex House, 34-42 Cleveland St, London, W1T 4LB, vitek@sciencenow.com, rebecca.lawrence@f1000.com We support the adoption of preprints in biomedicine, as one of a number of innovations that will help to accelerate scientific progress. However, we believe that simply adopting preprints on their own, whilst retaining the existing traditional journal publishing…

Program

HHMI Headquarters, Chevy Chase , MD Start: Feb. 16, 5 pm End: Feb. 17, 6 pm Program Accelerating Science and Publication in Biology (ASAPbio) February 16 5 pm                     Reception, Great Hall, HHMI Headquarters 6 pm                     Dinner, Dining Room 7:00-7:40 pm       Opening Remarks and Meeting Objectives, Auditorium Advance Material:  “Accelerating Scientific Publication in Biology”…

Attendees (2016 preprint meeting)

Yochai Benkler Harvard Law School Co-Director, Berkman Center for Internet & Society Jeremy Berg U. Pittsburgh Associate Senior Vice Chancellor for Science Strategy and Planning, Former NIGMS DIrector Stefano Bertuzzi American Society of Microbiology Executive Director, ASM Needhi Bhalla UC Santa Cruz Associate Professor Peter Binfield PeerJ Co-founder, PeerJ Philip Bourne NIH Associate Director for…

Preprint reading

The following articles are curated by ASAPbio; please let us know about any important articles covering the history of preprinting, adoption rates and/or impact on science communication that are not already in this list. Update June 25, 2019: We have started tagging online content that describes the impact of preprints on science and/or science communication…

Resources

When talking about preprints, please feel free to reuse and build on the following resources, templates and master copies of ASAPbio resources, as per licence conditions: ASAPbio work is usually released for reuse under CC-BY licence (please reuse with attribution, no permission required but we love to hear if you’ve found it useful and any…