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Academic research is publicly funded -- why isn't it publicly available?

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    Do you ever find yourself
    referencing a study in conversation
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    that you didn't actually read?
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    (Laughter)
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    I was having coffee
    with a friend of mine the other day,
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    and I said, "You know, I read a new study
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    that says coffee reduces
    the risk of depression in women."
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    But really, what I read was a tweet.
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    (Laughter)
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    That said --
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    (Laughter)
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    "A new study says drinking coffee
    may decrease depression risk in women."
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    (Laughter)
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    And that tweet had a link
    to the "New York Times" blog,
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    where a guest blogger translated
    the study findings
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    from a "Live Science" article,
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    which got its original information
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    from the Harvard School
    of Public Health news site,
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    which cited the actual study abstract,
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    which summarized the actual study
    published in an academic journal.
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    (Laughter)
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    It's like the six degrees of separation,
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    but with research.
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    (Laughter)
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    So, when I said I read a study,
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    what I actually read was 59 characters
    that summarized 10 years of research.
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    (Laughter)
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    So, when I said I read a study,
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    I was reading fractions of the study
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    that were put together
    by four different writers
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    that were not the author,
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    before it got to me.
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    That doesn't seem right.
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    But accessing original
    research is difficult,
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    because academics aren't regularly
    engaging with popular media.
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    And you might be asking yourself,
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    why aren't academics engaging
    with popular media?
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    It seems like they'd be
    a more legitimate source of information
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    than the media pundits.
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    Right?
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    (Laughter)
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    In a country with over
    4,100 colleges and universities,
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    it feels like this should be the norm.
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    But it's not.
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    So, how did we get here?
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    To understand why scholars
    aren't engaging with popular media,
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    you first have to understand
    how universities work.
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    Now, in the last six years,
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    I've taught at seven
    different colleges and universities
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    in four different states.
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    I'm a bit of an adjunct extraordinaire.
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    (Laughter)
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    And at the same time, I'm pursuing my PhD.
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    In all of these different institutions,
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    the research and publication process
    works the same way.
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    First, scholars produce
    research in their fields.
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    To fund their research,
    they apply for public and private grants
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    and after the research is finished,
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    they write a paper about their findings.
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    Then they submit that paper
    to relevant academic journals.
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    Then it goes through a process
    called peer review,
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    which essentially means that other experts
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    are checking it
    for accuracy and credibility.
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    And then, once it's published,
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    for-profit companies
    resell that information
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    back to universities and public libraries
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    through journal
    and database subscriptions.
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    So, that's the system.
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    Research, write, peer-review,
    publish, repeat.
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    My friends and I call it
    feeding the monster.
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    And you can see how this
    might create some problems.
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    The first problem is that most
    academic research is publicly funded
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    but privately distributed.
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    Every year, the federal government
    spends 60 billion dollars on research.
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    According to the National
    Science Foundation,
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    29 percent of that
    goes to public research universities.
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    So, if you're quick at math,
    that's 17.4 billion dollars.
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    Tax dollars.
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    And just five corporations are responsible
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    for distributing most
    publicly funded research.
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    In 2014, just one of those companies
    made 1.5 billion dollars in profit.
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    It's a big business.
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    And I bet you can see the irony here.
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    If the public is funding
    academics' research,
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    but then we have to pay again
    to access the results,
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    it's like we're paying for it twice.
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    And the other major problem
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    is that most academics
    don't have a whole lot of incentive
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    to publish outside of these prestigious
    subscription-based journals.
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    Universities build their tenure
    and promotion systems
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    around the number of times
    scholars publish.
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    So, books and journal articles are kind of
    like a form of currency for scholars.
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    Publishing articles helps you get tenure
    and more research grants down the road.
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    But academics are not rewarded
    for publishing with popular media.
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    So, this is the status quo.
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    The current academic ecosystem.
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    But I don't think it has to be this way.
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    We can make some simple changes
    to flip the script.
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    So, first, let's start
    by discussing access.
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    Universities can begin
    to challenge the status quo
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    by rewarding scholars for publishing
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    not just in these
    subscription-based journals
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    but in open-access journals
    as well as on popular media.
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    Now, the open-access movement
    is starting to make some progress
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    in many disciplines,
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    and fortunately, some other
    big players have started to notice.
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    Google Scholar has made
    open-access research
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    searchable and easier to find.
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    Congress, last year, introduced a bill
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    that suggests that academic
    research projects
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    with over 100 million or more in funding
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    should develop an open-access policy.
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    And this year, NASA opened up
    its entire research library to the public.
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    So, you can see this idea
    is beginning to catch on.
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    But access isn't just about being able
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    to get your hands
    on a document or a study.
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    It's also about making sure
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    that that document or study
    is easily understood.
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    So, let's talk about translation.
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    I don't envision this translation to look
    like the six degrees of separation
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    that I illustrated earlier.
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    Instead, what if scholars were able
    to take the research that they're doing
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    and translate it on popular media
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    and be able to engage with the public?
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    If scholars did this,
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    the degrees of separation
    between the public and research
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    would shrink by a lot.
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    So, you see, I'm not suggesting
    a dumbing-down of the research.
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    I'm just suggesting that we give
    the public access to that research
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    and that we shift the venue
    and focus on using plain language
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    so that the public
    who's paying for the research
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    can also consume it.
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    And there are some other benefits
    to this approach.
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    By showing the public
    how their tax dollars
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    are being used to fund research,
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    they can begin to redefine
    universities' identities
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    so that universities' identities
    are not just based on a football team
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    or the degrees they grant
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    but on the research
    that's being produced there.
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    And when there's a healthy relationship
    between the public and scholars,
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    it encourages public
    participation in research.
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    Can you imagine what that might look like?
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    What if social scientists
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    helped local police redesign
    their sensitivity trainings
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    and then collaboratively wrote
    a manual to model future trainings?
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    Or what if our education professors
    consulted with our local public schools
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    to decide how we're going to intervene
    with our at-risk students
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    and then wrote about it
    in a local newspaper?
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    Because a functioning democracy
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    requires that the public be
    well-educated and well-informed.
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    Instead of research happening
    behind paywalls and bureaucracy,
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    wouldn't it be better
    if it was unfolding right in front of us?
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    Now, as a PhD student,
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    I realize I'm critiquing
    the club I want to join.
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    (Laughter)
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    Which is a dangerous thing to do,
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    since I'm going to be on the academic
    job market in a couple of years.
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    But if the status quo in academic research
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    is to publish in the echo chambers
    of for-profit journals
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    that never reach the public,
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    you better believe
    my answer is going to be "nope."
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    I believe in inclusive,
    democratic research
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    that works in the community
    and talks with the public.
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    I want to work in research
    and in an academic culture
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    where the public is not only seen
    as a valuable audience,
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    but a constituent, a participant.
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    And in some cases even the expert.
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    And this isn't just about
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    giving you guys access to information.
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    It's about shifting academic culture
    from publishing to practice
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    and from talking to doing.
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    And you should know
    that this idea, this hope --
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    it doesn't just belong to me.
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    I'm standing on the shoulders
    of many scholars, teachers,
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    librarians and community members
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    who also advocate for including
    more people in the conversation.
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    I hope you join our conversation, too.
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    Thank you.
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    (Applause)
Title:
Academic research is publicly funded -- why isn't it publicly available?
Speaker:
Erica Stone
Description:

In the US, your taxes fund academic research at public universities. Why then do you need to pay expensive, for-profit journals for the results of that research? Erica Stone advocates for a new, open-access relationship between the public and scholars, making the case that academics should publish in more accessible media. "A functioning democracy requires that the public be well-educated and well-informed," Stone says. "Instead of research happening behind paywalls and bureaucracy, wouldn't it be better if it was unfolding right in front of us?"

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
09:44

English subtitles

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