Abstract

The academic publishing industry is set to celebrate 350 years of peer-reviewed scientific journals. However, there are significant shifts in the practice of scholarship, as scholars and citizens alike participate in an increasingly digital world. Is the scholarly article still fit for its purpose in this data-driven world, with new interdisciplinary methodologies and increasing automation? How might it be enhanced or replaced with new kinds of digital research objects, so as not to restrict innovation but rather create a flourishing sense-making network of humans and machines? The emerging paradigm of social machines provides a lens onto future developments in scholarship and scholarly collaboration, as we live and study in a hybrid physical-digital sociotechnical system of enormous and growing scale.

Highlights

  • The question might reasonably be asked: is this model of scholarly communication still fit for purpose? Yet it has been robust in the face of change

  • While the web was invented at CERN to enhance science communication – incidentally affecting so much of our lives as a consequence – scientific publication still looks remarkably as it did in years past

  • This article looks at this dilemma: at the shifts in scholarship due to the increasing scale of digital research and societal engagement; the fitness of today’s scholarly article for its purpose; and at how we might enhance the idea of the article so as not to restrict innovation

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Summary

The future of scholarly communications

The academic publishing industry is set to celebrate 350 years of peer-reviewed scientific journals. There are significant shifts in the practice of scholarship, as scholars and citizens alike participate in an increasingly digital world. Is the scholarly article still fit for its purpose in this data-driven world, with new interdisciplinary methodologies and increasing automation? How might it be enhanced or replaced with new kinds of digital research objects, so as not to restrict innovation but rather create a flourishing sense-making network of humans and machines? The emerging paradigm of social machines provides a lens onto future developments in scholarship and scholarly collaboration, as we live and study in a hybrid physical-digital sociotechnical system of enormous and growing scale Is the scholarly article still fit for its purpose in this data-driven world, with new interdisciplinary methodologies and increasing automation? How might it be enhanced or replaced with new kinds of digital research objects, so as not to restrict innovation but rather create a flourishing sense-making network of humans and machines? The emerging paradigm of social machines provides a lens onto future developments in scholarship and scholarly collaboration, as we live and study in a hybrid physical-digital sociotechnical system of enormous and growing scale

Introduction
DAVID DE ROURE
Scholarship at scale
Shifts in scholarship
End of the article
Full Text
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