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New boost for preprints after acceptance by ERC

European Research Council says move is to support open access and get round often lengthy publishing process

Published on
August 9, 2018
Last updated
August 9, 2018
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Scientists have welcomed an official by the European Research Council that it will accept preprints as evidence of academics鈥 previous work when applying for grants.

Preprints are first-draft papers yet to be peer-reviewed and published in a journal. They have long been used in fields such as physics to facilitate early discussion of results and to circumvent the often-lengthy journal review process.

In finally accepting preprints from applicants, the ERC鈥檚 scientific council said that it wanted to 鈥渟ignal support鈥 for open-access publishing. Preprint platforms 鈥 such as arXiv, which focuses on mathematics and physics, and receives more than 鈥 are generally free to access, whereas many journals remain closed without a subscription.

Another reason for the change, the council continued, was because 鈥渋n some fields, especially for frontier research, the timeliness of scholarly communication is crucial 鈥 the publication cycle can be too long鈥.

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, a Lisbon-based neuroscientist, said on Twitter that the change was 鈥済reat news for in Europe!鈥

But it was also pointed out on Twitter that the ERC, in accepting preprints, has only just caught up with other funders 鈥 the US National Institutes of Health started accepting them last year to allow researchers to 鈥渁ccelerate dissemination and enhance the rigor of their work鈥.

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The ERC also said that next year it would pilot聽allotting 鈥渓ump sums鈥 to researchers in an experiment to see what happens if spending bureaucracy is reduced drastically. The idea is to 鈥渢est reduction of administrative burden and increase in implementation efficiency鈥, it聽said.

Lump-sum grants will be used first in the ERC鈥檚 proof of concept scheme, which aims to spin out socially or commercially useful innovations from existing ERC projects.

david.matthews@timeshighereducation.com

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