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Biology needs one journal, not 4,000, says Nobel prizewinner

Aaron Ciechanover criticises profits of Nature publisher and backs mega-journal model

Published on
June 26, 2023
Last updated
June 27, 2023
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A Nobel prizewinning biologist has hit out at the 鈥渉uge amount of money鈥 made by the听Nature听group of periodicals, claiming his discipline could function with just a single mega-journal.

Speaking at the annual听Lindau Nobel Laureate Meeting, Aaron Ciechanover, the Israeli biologist who won the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 2004, took aim at the high cost of scientific publishing which, he argued, was linked to the importance attached by scientists to publishing in big-name journals.

鈥淓veryone wants to have a paper in听Cell,听Science听辞谤听Nature,听which is wrong 鈥 we are celebrating where you are published rather than what you have published,鈥 explained Professor Ciechanover at the event in southern Germany, where about 40 Nobel-winning scientists have gathered, along with hundreds of young scientists.

Professor Ciechanover, a research professor at Technion Israel Institute of Technology in Haifa, criticised the recent proliferation of journals under the听Nature听banner, of which its flagship title听Naturecharges a gold open access fee听of 鈧9,750 (拢8,290).

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Nature听has more than 120 journals and are making a huge amount of money,鈥 said Professor Ciechanover, referring to owner听听in 2021, from which it drew profit of 拢387 million.

鈥淚t is costing a quarter of million dollars on average to publish a paper,鈥 continued Professor Ciechanover on the total cost of research, adding that institutions were then hit by high page publishing costs or article processing charges.

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鈥淭hen your library has to pay a million dollars a year to pay for the right to access it,鈥 he said, adding: 鈥淭his is completely untransparent.鈥

Professor Ciechanover, whose Nobel-winning papers on cell degradation were published in relatively unheralded non-profit journals in the early 1980s, believed that 鈥渢here should be one journal for biology, not 4,000鈥.

鈥淓verything should be in one journal and it should be peer reviewed, and then test of time will show the things that work,鈥 argued the former Massachusetts Institute of Technology researcher, who said citations would help to highlight innovative or impactful research.

Deborah Sweet, vice-president for the Nature journals, said their focus 鈥渃ontinues to be on offering exceptional value鈥 and 鈥渞ecent data shows that research articles in these journals are cited 17 times more and downloaded around 27 times more than articles published in mid-tier journals鈥.

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鈥淲e get over 68,000 research papers submitted each year to Nature or a Nature research journal across a wide range of subject and interdisciplinary areas, of which we publish less than 10 per cent,鈥 she explained.

鈥淎ll of these need to be assessed and managed 鈥 not just the ones we publish. To do this, we have over 300 highly qualified specialist staff, including over 200 dedicated in-house editors personally guiding and supporting authors to ensure their final manuscript is the best it can possibly be.鈥

Professor Ciechanover鈥檚 proposal comes as the European Union considers how it can support non-profit听diamond journals, including by expanding its own open access research portal into a 鈥渃ollective, non-profit, large-scale publishing service for the public good鈥 that could offer an alternative to commercial publishers 鈥 a move not dissimilar to Professor Ciechanover鈥檚 idea.

The motion to promote听鈥渋mmediate and unrestricted open access鈥听without author fees was backed by the European Council last month, but received a mixed response from the League of European Research Universities, which noted that the scale of the proposed project was 鈥渕assive鈥 and a 鈥渟ingle pan-European system is not likely to work successfully鈥.

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jack.grove@timeshighereducation.com

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Reader's comments (1)

I ffully agree with the Nobrllaureat

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