The information on this page is very old and out of date.
It is provided here only as an archive.
June 1995:
Mission
Foster research and instruction by providing a more direct linkage between the writers and readers of scholarly materials.
Use innovative network tools for capture, publishing, retrieval, reading and presentation.
Affect the economics of provision of scholarly information to researchers, especially science, technology and medical (STM) research information.
Ensure that the nascent marketplace for electronic communication among scholars does not develop along the semi-monopolistic lines of current STM publishing.
Build new technological, economic and programmatic partnerships with others investigating related problems.
Startup Strategy
Partner with scholarly societies and university presses.
Partner with other universities and publishers to do 'whole job.'
Partner with technology and publishing industry to leverage tools, techniques.
Provide testbed for longer term efforts to build upon and experiment with.
Network-Based Scholarly Publishing: A Prospectus
The Problems:
The problems of scholarly publishing - particularly for science,
technology and medical information (STM) - are well documented:
It takes too long for authors to get work into the literature because of the author, reviewer, publisher, library, reader handoffs.
It is difficult and time consuming for readers to sort through all that is published.
It is increasingly expensive for libraries to acquire STM materials, which are advancing in price to research libraries at four to six times the c.p.i.
It is becoming impractical for publishers to deliver a timely and complete product that meets the needs of research scientists.
As single events, these problems are each frustrating to scholars and
those who serve them. In combination, these impediments are a
significant barrier, and challenge the productivity and quality of
science.
The Projects:
The Network Publishing project, dubbed "The HighWire Press,"
provides models of solutions for these problems by taking advantage
of the special circumstances of scholarly communication - as distinct
from entertainment or trade publishing - in the context of a University
community: the writers and readers of scholarly materials are in the
same profession, writing for each other, they are located in similar
environments; and they do not seek profit from their publishing
activities, which are a means to an end for them. Because of
network-based communication technologies, the apparatus of a large
publishing operation is becoming unnecessary for communication of
scholarly results; this is true for the same reason that desktop
publishing technologies a decade ago allowed a shift from large
design and composition shops to desktop authorship backed up by
small, responsive print shops. Essentially, our projects
attempt to "re-engineer" traditional scholarly publishing to focus
on formal, structured communication among the community of
scholars.
The Goals:
Our first year's goal is to work with a small number of scholarly
societies and university presses - preferably those who have
significant faculty links to Stanford - to deliver the members'
research results electronically as an adjunct to print publication.
We expect to accomplish three significant publications in the first
year, proving that significant results that benefit the societies'
members can be achieved today, through action not just talk.
Our longer term goal is to package the technologies and techniques from
the first year's products and deliver those to scholarly societies - a
sort of "digital franchise" - so these societies can undertake to meet
their own members' communication requirements. Societies could
choose to operate these technologies or outsource the operation to
agents such as Cadmus. But in all cases the scholars themselves
would control the means of publication and distribution for their own
ends.
Our expectation is that this will have both direct and indirect effects
on scholarly communication. The societies that participate will
quickly improve their members' research communication, and may soon
after see a shift of information flows to them as they are able to
deliver information that is greater in volume, lower in cost, more
timely, and more useful in the digital world of the laboratory. We
expect indirect, second-order effects on the for-profit publishers
of STM materials over time; they will be faced with competition they
hadn't seen before: competition that is high-quality, faster and more
flexible, less expensive, and community-owned and operated.
The Approach:
Our business and technical approaches coincide: for each publication,
SUL/AIR's HighWire Press will partner with a scholarly society and cost-share in the
product-development process. While the projects will be managed by
Stanford - acting as a type of systems integrator to take advantage
of Stanford's powerful confluence of scientists, librarians and
technologists - significant work is being outsourced to electronic- and
print-publishing organizations. All the technology in use will be
off-the-shelf, based on rapidly-evolving industry standards. This
approach keeps local leverage high while keeping the Stanford-based
operating components low; a model "networked organization."
Each project will take advantage of Stanford academic expertise in the
scientific content of the publications, and will involve a number
of faculty and advanced students in validation of the usability and
value of the electronic publication. In addition, because open,
easily available technologies will be used, HighWire Press
projects could also offer significant testbed opportunities to
digital library research projects.
The Timetable:
Our first network publication project - the Journal of Biological
Chemistry - was launched on February 1, 1995, with the goal of delivering
a demonstration at the annual conference of JBC's readers in mid-May.
During the development of the prototype, four significant events
occur in which scientists validate usability and value of the network
presentation of the publication. After a successful demonstration,
the prototype was released to research scientists on the Internet
via the World Wide Web for three to six months of evaluation. During this
time, the prototype will be brought to production levels of
performance and reliability in which the ongoing weekly cycle of
publishing is supported.
While the prototype-to-production phase for JBC is moving forward, a
second and third publishing project will be negotiated and launched.
Likely partners are the Stanford Press and Annual Reviews, Inc. With
each, we would define a three-month to twelve-month demonstration
project, followed by a phase in which the demonstration is moved to
wide, production availability.
The JBC is published by the American Society for Biochemistry and
Molecular Biology, and is the core journal for scientists in this
field. JBC publishes about 1,000 pages of science per week - 80-100
articles. The technical challenges in the project come from both the
volume of publishing and the complexity of the material. First, to
keep up with 1,000 pages of science per week, our production process
must be well-tuned; second, the content is intensely graphical, with
mathematical and chemical notations, line art and graphics, and
photographs of "gels" that scientists use to separate different types
of biological molecules.
The project is fortunate in having the largest concentration of members
of JBC's editorial board at any one institution, giving us
significant opportunities to ensure our approach meets the needs of
research scientists. In particular, we are working with Prof. Robert
Simoni, postdoc Todd McGee, and Prof. Doug Brutlag. Prof. Simoni,
with the assurance of a population biologist, predicts that the
printed form of the publication will not be sustainable within about
three years because of the volume of literature that must be
published; it must find another form to grow in, or suffer some loss
in quality or prestige. Todd McGee represents a young generation
of scientists for whom use of digital media for dissemination of
research is an assumption, not a part of a debate. And Prof. Brutlag
is unusual in using the JBC in his teaching activities; he believes
the networked version will change the way in which he prepares and
delivers curriculum. About a half-dozen additional scientists are
involved in the project's usability evaluations.