Liquid Publications: Scientific Publications meet the Web
Our Manifesto: Changing the way scientific knowledge is produced, disseminated, evaluated, and consumed
Brief description
The world of scientific publications has been largely oblivious to the
advent of the Web and to advances in ICT. Even more surprisingly, this
is the case even for research in the ICT area: ICT researchers have
been able to exploit the Web to improve the (production) process in
almost all areas, but not their own. We are producing scientific
knowledge (and publications in particular) essentially following the
very same approach we followed before the Web. Scientific knowledge
dissemination is still based on the traditional notion of “paper”
publication and on peer review as quality assessment method. The
current approach encourages authors to write many (possibly
incremental) papers to get more “tokens of credit”, generating often
unnecessary dissemination overhead for themselves and for the community
of reviewers. Furthermore, it does not encourage or support reuse and
evolution of publications: whenever a (possibly small) progress is made
on a certain subject, a new paper is written, reviewed, and published,
often after several months. The situation is analogous if not worse for
textbooks.
The LiquidPub project proposes a paradigm shift in the way scientific knowledge is created, disseminated, evaluated and maintained. This shift is enabled by the notion of Liquid Publications, which are evolutionary, collaborative, and composable scientific contributions. Many Liquid Publication concepts are based on a parallel between scientific knowledge artifacts and software artifacts, and hence on lessons learned in (agile, collaborative, open source) software development, as well as on lessons learned from Web 2.0 in terms of collaborative evaluation of knowledge artifacts.
This project is inspired by the broader and evolving vision (yes, the vision is liquid too) that is available at liquidpub.org - and that’s why the short description in this page is similar to the one on liquidpub.org.
Targets
The immediate targets are the scientific research communities and the
world around them, including publishers that, in a liquid world, will
need to develop novel services and business models. In the medium term
the results of this project will become applicable also to forms of
knowledge different from scientific knowledge, including corporate
knowledge, the scholarly knowledge taught in schools (extending the
trend that we are witnessing, for instance, with Wikipedia), and the
preparation, evaluation and execution of EU projects like this one,
with reduction of evaluation time and cost, improvement of the
evaluation quality, and optimization of the proposal preparation effort.
Status
Results and additional reading material (case studies, surveys, and the
like) will be made available from this web site. The project also is
creating an open source development effort and a platform to manage
liquid publications and their evaluation.
Some ideas that inspired the work in this project are available here: LiquidPub paper-latest.pdf
Partners



