Re: On Metrics and Metaphysics

From: Heather Morrison <heatherm_at_ELN.BC.CA>
Date: Sun, 19 Oct 2008 17:16:17 -0700

Whether metrics are improving, and whether it is a good idea to base
decisions about quality of and funding for research and journals
entirely on usage metrics, are two separate questions.

In this post, I agree that metrics are improving with potential to
advance our understanding of scholarship, but that there are dangers
to be considered from over-reliance on usage metrics. Another idea I
would like to introduce is cost-efficiency metrics.

As Stevan points out, "metrics are becoming far richer, more diverse,
more transparent and more answerable than just the ISI JIF". There
is indeed potential to develop much richer metrics, and this is a
good thing, as it gives us a better means to research scholarship per
se.

However, there are potential dangers to scholarship from relying too
much on metrics. One important point is the distinction between
popularity (or temporary importance), and real importance to
scholarship or to the world.

Consider, for example:

Biology - species. There will always, of necessity, be a limited
pool of scientists studying any one species in danger of extinction.
Do articles and journals in these areas receive fewer citations? If
so, what happens if we reward scholars and journals on the basics of
metrics? Will these researchers lose their funding? Will journals
that publish articles in this area lose their status?

Literature - authors. There are many researchers studying
Shakespeare. A lesser-known local author will be lucky to receive
the attention of even one researcher. In a metrics-based system, it
seems reasonable to hypothesize that this bias will increase, and the
odds of studying local culture decrease.

History - the local versus the global. A reasonable hypothesis is
that historical articles and journals with broader potential
readership are likely to attract more citations than locally-based
historical studies. If this is correct, then local studies would
suffer under a metrics-based system. (In the medium to long term,
the broader studies would suffer, too, through lack of background
that can be supplied by in-depth local research).

Medicine - temporary importance: AIDS, bird flu, SARS, are all viral
diseases, horrible diseases and pandemics or potential pandemics. Of
course, our research communities must prioritize these threats in the
short term. This means many articles on these topics, and new
journals, receiving many citations. Great stuff, this advances our
knowledge and may have already prevented more than one pandemic. But
what about other, less-pressing issues, such as the resistance of
bacteria to antibiotics and basic research? In the short term, a
focus on research usage metrics helps us to prioritize and focus on
the immediate danger. In the long term, if usage metrics lead us to
undervalue basic research, we could end up with more pressing dangers
to deal with, such as rampant and totally untreatable bacterial
illnesses, and less basic knowledge to help us figure out what to do.

This is speculation, but hopefully enough theoretical substance to
illustrate that there are good reasons to think carefully about the
impact of metrics-based systems before rushing to implement them.

Cost-efficiency metrics, such as average cost per article, is a tool
that can be used to examine the relative cost-effectiveness of
journals. In the print world, the per-article cost for the small,
not-for-profit society publishers has often been a small fraction of
the cost of the larger commercial for-profit publishers, often with
equal or better quality. If university administrators are going to
look at metrics, why not give thought to rewarding researchers for
seeking publishing venues that combine high-quality peer review and
editing with affordable costs?

Any opinion expressed in this e-mail is that of the author alone, and
does not represent the opinion or policy of BC Electronic Library
Network or Simon Fraser University Library.

Heather Morrison, MLIS
The Imaginary Journal of Poetic Economics
http://poeticeconomics.blogspot.com
Received on Mon Oct 20 2008 - 04:12:06 BST

This archive was generated by hypermail 2.3.0 : Fri Dec 10 2010 - 19:49:33 GMT