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ResearchFish Again

One of the things I definitely don’t miss about working in the UK university system is the dreaded Researchfish. If you’ve never heard of this bit of software, it’s intended to collect data relating to the outputs of research grants funded by the various Research Councils. That’s not an unreasonable thing to want to do, of course, but the interface is – or at least was when I last used it several years ago – extremely clunky and user-unfriendly. That meant that, once a year, along with other academics with research grants (in my case from STFC) I had to waste hours uploading bibliometric and other data by hand. A sensible system would have harvested this automatically as it is mostly available online at various locations or allowed users simply to upload their own publication list as a file; most of us keep an up-to-date list of publications for various reasons (including vanity!) anyway. Institutions also keep track of all this stuff independently. All this duplication seemed utterly pointless.

I always wondered what happened to the information I uploaded every year, which seemed to disappear without trace into the bowels of RCUK. I assume it was used for something, but mere researchers were never told to what purpose. I guess it was used to assess the performance of researchers in some way.

When I left the UK in 2018 to work full-time in Ireland, I took great pleasure in ignoring the multiple emails demanding that I do yet another Researchfish upload. The automated reminders turned into individual emails threatening that I would never again be eligible for funding if I didn’t do it, to which I eventually replied that I wouldn’t be applying for UK research grants anymore anyway. So there. Eventually the emails stopped.

Then, about three years ago, ResearchFish went from being merely pointless to downright sinister as a scandal erupted about the company that operates it (called Infotech), involving the abuse of data and the bullying of academics. I wrote about this here. It then transpired that UKRI, the umbrella organization governing the UK’s research council had been actively conniving with Infotech to target critics. An inquiry was promised but I don’t know what became of that.

Anyway, all that was a while ago and I neither longer live nor work in the UK so why mention ResearchFish again, now?

The reason is something that shocked me when I found out about it a few days ago. Researchfish is now operated by commercial publishing house Elsevier.

Words fail. I can’t be the only person to see a gigantic conflict of interest. How can a government agency allow the assessment of its research outputs to be outsourced to a company that profits hugely by the publication of those outputs? There’s a phrase in British English which I think is in fairly common usage: marking your own homework. This relates to individuals or organizations who have been given the responsibility for regulating their own products. Is very apt here.

The acquisition of Researchfish isn’t the only example of Elsevier getting its talons stuck into academia life. Elsevier also “runs” the bibliometric service Scopus which it markets as a sort of quality indicator for academic articles. I put “runs” in inverted commas because Scopus is hopelessly inaccurate and unreliable. I can certainly speak from experience on that. Nevertheless, Elsevier has managed to dupe research managers – clearly not the brightest people in the world – into thinking that Scopus is a quality product. I suppose the more you pay for something the less inclined you are to doubt its worth, because if you do find you have paid worthless junk you look like an idiot.

A few days ago I posted a piece that include this excerpt from an article in Wired:

Every industry has certain problems universally acknowledged as broken: insurance in health care, licensing in music, standardized testing in education, tipping in the restaurant business. In academia, it’s publishing. Academic publishing is dominated by for-profit giants like Elsevier and Springer. Calling their practice a form of thuggery isn’t so much an insult as an economic observation. 

With the steady encroachment of the likes of Elsevier into research assessment, it is clear that as well as raking in huge profits, the thugs are now also assuming the role of the police. The academic publishing industry is a monstrous juggernaut that is doing untold damage to research and is set to do more. It has to stop.

In the Dark · The Researchfish Scandal
Mehr von In the Dark
Antwortete im Thread

@tomkalei

Du hast die #Linguistik vergessen. Die sind fast ok. Wir haben Teile, die wie Mathe ohnehin selbst LaTeX machen, weshalb das einfacher ist als in den restlichen Geisteswissenschaften.

Wir haben einen großen Verlag, der Diamond OpenAccess ist (weder Leser*innen noch Autor*innen zahlen) und wir haben die ganzen Journals von den Societies, die OA anbieten oder OA sind.

Zum Beispiel die Zeitschrift für Sprachwissenschaft von der #DGfS ist auch DiamondOA, @glossa gibt es international. Die haben sich vom #Elsevier-Zeitschrift #Lingua neu gegründet.

Ihr müsst nur die Herausgeber-Boards dazu bringen, die Zeitschriften neu zu gründen. Scholar-owned. Die Marken müssen bei uns bleiben. Verstehe auch nicht, wieso Mathematiker*innen sich für diese Boards hergeben. Die #Mathematik war ja Vorreiter.

„Ganz am Ende (manchmal Jahre später) hat man dann seinen Verlagsbienchenstempel "Dein Paper wurde bei Famous Journal akzeptiert" und dann posten die das nochmal nur mit hässlicherem Typesetting, neu eingebauten Tippfehlern und ganz und gar nicht accessible unter einer URL die sich jederzeit ändern kann. Von Permalinks hat da noch nie jemand was gehört, da muss dann die DOI her.“

Du, die haben Jahrhunderte Erfahrung!

Aber genau so ist es. Was da für Zeit verplämpert wird für Proofreading usw. Die schicken das nach Indien, wo alle Symbole kaputt gemacht werden. Die Menschen vom Handbuch #Semantik können Lieder davon singen. Das sind enorme Kosten, die wir tragen (bzw. die Steuerzahler*innen), damit die Verlage sich das einstecken können.

Funder email:
“Information entered on Researchfish is collected on behalf of the funders and cannot be used for commercial purposes.”

Good to clarify this since #Researchfish is a product from Interfolio, who were acquired by the RELX company #Elsevier in 2022. As such they have a unique market advantage in handling data which is potentially commercially sensitive and that has been disclosed by grantees under mandate.

"Fundamentally, this is about what sort of system of #scholarly communication the research community (funders, institutions, individual researchers) wishes to be part of [...and...] in the spirit of not wasting a crisis, this represents an opportunity to reset the power imbalance between #libraries (and their institutions), and #publishers."

Why are universities ending the #Elsevier open access agreements?

blogs.lse.ac.uk/impactofsocial #scholcomm #OpenAccess

Impact of Social Sciences · Why are universities ending their Elsevier open access agreements?After recent reporting that three UK universities had ended their transitional open access agreements with the publisher Elsevier, Peter Barr explains why academic libraries are making these decisi…

Lyall, A., Ortiz, M. & Billo, E., (2025) “Greenwashing at Elsevier: A political ecology of corporate publishing”, Journal of Political Ecology 32(1): 6276. doi: doi.org/10.2458/jpe.6276

Journal of Political EcologyGreenwashing at Elsevier: A political ecology of corporate publishingThe largest science publishing corporations, including Elsevier, Wiley, Taylor & Francis, Springer, and Sage, are key partners for the oil, gas, and coal industries insofar as they distribute scientific research and data that facilitate fossil fuel exploration, production, and distribution. Critical researchers seldom trace fossil fuels and, in turn, the climate crisis to the publishing corporations that they generally rely upon to distribute their own research. We argue that corporate publishers produce the invisibility of their connections to fossil fuels through changing practices of greenwashing both in the public sphere and within firms. We detail marketing and management practices in the case of the largest science publisher in the world: Elsevier. On the one hand, we examine evolving forms of green marketing. On the other hand, building on recent calls for political ecologies of labor, we highlight the proliferation of 'greenwashing rituals' within the firm – i.e., performative, management-sponsored dialogues and actions regarding climate change. We suggest that researchers continue to expand frameworks for critiquing the fossil fuel industry to include auxiliary industries such as corporate publishing.

#Showerthought 🤔

1. #Business #paywall? 😫

2. #CommercialScience wall 🤢

3. #OpenScience delight 😍

delightful.club/delightful-ope

"Commercial science" is a good term to denounce this shady practice that withholds knowledge and wisdom discovered with public money in order to use it for #HyperCapitalism and its greed fests.

Yes, you #Elsevier & co.

delightful.clubdelightful open scienceDelightful curated lists of free software, open science and information sources.