Wikipedia talk:Notability (academic journals)/Archive 1
This is an archive of past discussions on Wikipedia:Notability (academic journals). Do not edit the contents of this page. If you wish to start a new discussion or revive an old one, please do so on the current talk page. |
Archive 1 | Archive 2 | Archive 3 | → | Archive 5 |
Discussion during initial formulation of proposed guideline
- Personally, I feel these are way too stringent and set standards which are incredibly hard to demonstrate because of lack of resources. Probably more than half our articles would be deleted under these standards. I would move for simpler, less verbose, and wider standards such as:
- Any journal which can conceivably be used to reference an article on Wikipedia
- All journals indexed in journal databases or covered by things such as the Journal Citation Reports, ISI Web of Knowledge, Science Citation Index, ...
- Regularly published pseudoscience/fringe journals which are considered "key publications" by a notable pseudoscientific/fringe movement. For example if there was a "Journal of Cold Fusion", that would be included, but something like "Polish Quarterly Journal of Ghost & Spirits" would be excluded.
Headbomb {ταλκκοντριβς – WP Physics} 14:10, 26 August 2009 (UTC)
- Thanks for the feedback. I modeled this draft on WP:ACADEMIC and started with the criteria listed at Wikipedia:Notability (media)#Newspapers, magazines and journals.
- I tried to be as inclusive as possible, but I fear that if we adopt a criterion like the first one you list, we may have trouble convincing the rest of the WP community to adopt our guideline.
- Concerning your second criterion, that is basically the same as what I propose (anything in WoS or SCI will be in JCR), only I explain that in footnote 2 (in the style copied from WP:PROF). Footnote 1 actually goes much further, allowing a journal to qualify even if it is not in WoS, SCI, or JCR, it just requires that it is included in the "major indexing services in its field". Footnote 3 goes even further than that, it would basically be enough to show that there are a few reasonably-well cited articles to make a journal satisfy this criterion.
- As for the fringe journals, I am not sure they should be part of the WP academic journals project, so I excluded them and referred to WP:FRINGE. However, if consensus here is that such journals are part of the subject matter of this project, then we should include something about them. Again, however, we may have problems convincing the rest of the WP community to adopt a rule stating "journals which are considered "key publications" by a notable pseudoscientific/fringe movement", because that sounds rather vague.
- Does this sound convincing? --Crusio (talk) 14:58, 26 August 2009 (UTC)
- Yes I noticed you modeled it after the Media notability, and I find that guideline to be overly specific and WP:CREEP/WP:BUREAU-smelling. These are academic journals, no need to write a thesis-like guideline, let's keep it simple and focus on keeping the good stuff in rather than the bad stuff out. There's already plenty of policies which can be invoked to keep the crap out (including the media guideline you based yourself on), I don't think there's a need to duplicate them.
- 1) WoS/Sci/JCR = Major indexing services (I used examples instead of finding what the general term was)
- 2) The fringe criteria could use some work I agree.
- 3) I think the Journals project could be enlarged to cover anything that pretends to be a WP:RS on something which could be an academic subject. It's not like there will be a WikiProject Fringe Journal created for them.
- Headbomb {ταλκκοντριβς – WP Physics} 17:39, 26 August 2009 (UTC)
- Why isn't WP:N enough? “If a topic has received significant coverage in reliable secondary sources that are independent of the subject, it is presumed to satisfy the inclusion criteria for a stand-alone article.” That sounds to me like a very reasonable criterion for determining whether an academic journal is worth a Wikipedia article or not. Do you have some concrete examples where following WP:N leads to serious problems? — Miym (talk) 22:02, 27 August 2009 (UTC)
- Unfortunately, there are plenty of examples. It is, in fact, pretty rare to find an article discussing a journal, >95% or academic journals will never be covered that way. So going with WP:N would mean that we would have to delete almost all articles on the very journals that we normally regard as reliable sources for other articles, which is not really very logical. IMHO, most academic journals are not controversial, so I don't see much problems with using primary sources for our articles on them (much like primary sources can be used to source uncontroversial things -like birth dates- in biographies of living persons). If we would go exclusively with WP:N, we would end up having only articles on journals which had created some controversy, because that would have led to "significant coverage in reliable secondary sources that are independent of the subject". Hope this makes sense. --Crusio (talk) 22:32, 27 August 2009 (UTC)
- Well, using common sense, those "reliable secondary sources" could be, e.g., journal rankings, major indexing services, journals mentioned in textbooks and surveys, etc. Can you give concrete examples of Wikipedia articles on notable journals that were deleted because people interpreted WP:N too strictly? Or some other examples of confused discussions where this guideline would help? (Please don't get me wrong, the guideline as such makes a lot of sense. I just don't want to see too many notability guidelines in cases where WP:N (+ WP:UCS) is enough in practice. Detailed guidelines for very narrow topics such as pornographic actors or academic journals is a bit too much WP:CREEP to me. And as you said, most academic journals are not controversial – so where is the need for this guideline?) — Miym (talk) 15:58, 28 August 2009 (UTC)
- Well, for instance this article was transformed into a redirect despite excellent library holdings. BMJ, one of the most reputed medical journals, was tagged as needing reliable third-party sources. Molecular Medicine, a journal with an impact factor of 2.1 (actually, that was an old one, it is now 3.4) got tagged for notability. And have a look at Modern Theology (journal), its edit history, and its talk page. Many other journals (I can find examples if you like) get needlessly tagged with notability tags in this way. If we had a clear guideline for journals, these things would be less controversial. I agree with your point about WP:CREEP and agree that it applies to pornographic actors (and as far as I am concerned, to sports figures, too). But we are talking here about academic journals, which invariably are considered WP:RS when we are creating content here. It's too weird that articles on these very sources then get tagged for notability, simply because there are no (or hardly any) third-party sources. It's an unfortunate fact of life that obscure sporters and porn actors get more third party coverage than academic journals. This is also why I disagree with Headbomb about including fringe science journals and whatever. Let those be covered by WP:FRINGE. I bet that DGG could provide even more examples of reputable journals that were/are under attack for not complying with WP:N.
- A good job and a necessary one. Thanks for getting the ball rolling.John Z (talk) 13:18, 28 August 2009 (UTC)
- Yes, a very good job. Some comments:
- The indexing services listed are of different exclusiveness. SCI and SSCI, (both just a little less selective than before), very similar now to the coverage of Scopus-(which should be added to the list) are much more selective than PubMed and MathSciNet (and Chemical Abstracts and Biological Abstracts and Inspec and PsychInfo). I agree with Crusio that I would not necessarily regard being only in this later group as proof of notability, since they cover all journals in the field, at least in English, with any actual research articles. This is going to be a critical point on occasion, and I have not been altogether consistent. It amounts to a full order of magnitude difference. This will particularly affect local journals. Point 5 says this for Pub Med--checking coverage, it should say it for MathScinNet also. Point one should list only SCI, SSCI and Scopus.
- I guess we do need to say it also meets V, to anticipate objections, but I can not easily imagine a journal that we might conceivably want to include for which we could not find basic V.
- Criterion 7 should refer to specifically to size, and in both directions. Large ≠ notable, and small ≠ non-notable. (especially in the humanities).
- For non US journals, there are now better resources than worldcat which lists relative few libraries outside the US and Canada and Australia. -- see the page Book sources, which lists other regional and national catalog. There is a wonder multi-catalog gateway at Karlsruhe Virtual Catalog KVK. [1], which is what I would now probably use for anything difficult. And I would now as a matter of course search any non-US humanities periodical in Zitschriftendatenbank (ZDB) [2]--tho it only gives German libraries, they tend to be excellent for such titles.(hint: select the search under "Titelanfang"--first words of title. ) I think this has to go in the "Library Holdings " section
- The library holdings section needs to say that it has to be judged a/c what is expected for the subject.
- I do not agree with point 9. If they are in the major indexing tools they should be included--after all, not that many of them are & only the ones that pretend to some scientific style. For the ones that don't, the relevant rules are those for periodicals in general.
- What about popular journals--same thing--if they are in the major indexing tools, they count. Otherwise they still might, but using the rules for periodicals in general.
- Caveat 3 is a duplication
- We need an explicit statement that for journals that are composite sections without distinctive titles, we will almost make a combination article even if they are individually notable. For journals that have semi-distinctive titles, it would depend on the importance. For example, most of the sections of Physical Review do not have distinctive titles. Although the most important group of physics journal in the world, it is still covered in one article only. On the other hand, Journal of Physics B is actually Journal of Physics B: Atomic, Molecular and Optical Physics and therefore has a semi-distinctive title. As it is quite important, it would get a separate article. (Though I would move it to t he full title to clarify this).
- Older titles are a major problem. They would normally each of them be separately notable. Libraries have had 3 way of handling them, all with strong advantages and disadvantages
- List all of them under the original title (a common older rule in Europe)
- List all of them under the newest title (the US rule till the 1960's)
- List them in each part under its successive title. (the almost universal modern rule)
- Normally, we have been combining them all under the latest or best known title in order to bring the information together. I think there should probably be exceptions to that for some cases, In analogous situations, for cities we use the current title, e.g.Gdansk is used for the entire history of the city, but for successive governments, we usually use separate articles, and thus there is also an article for Free City of Danzig. But there are separate articles for Constantinople and Istanbul. So I think this justifies our rule to combine, but with exceptions.
DGG ( talk ) 23:20, 7 September 2009 (UTC)
- I think we're ready to go live. DGG ( talk ) 04:11, 14 September 2009 (UTC)
- What's the best way to do that? Do I simply move this into project space or is there a special procedure I should follow? --Crusio (talk) 11:53, 14 September 2009 (UTC)
- I have moved the proposal and it is now "life". --Crusio (talk) 15:37, 26 September 2009 (UTC)
Opinion about the actual proposal
I think this works. It matches what we usually do. DGG ( talk ) 21:13, 7 October 2009 (UTC)
- Really? Any academic journal older than 3 years meets these Notability requirements. The proposal suffers from inadequate Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences engagement. Fifelfoo (talk) 07:00, 13 October 2009 (UTC)
- I agree with DGG that it works: we have used it in AFD to keep a journal and to delete others and almost all agreed with the outcomes. As a biologist, it certainly is possible that I neglected some Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences aspects. I would be delighted if you could give us some suggestions how to improve that. --Crusio (talk) 08:44, 13 October 2009 (UTC)
Discussion after going "live"
- I would remove three sentences from the criteria: The journal has produced award winning work because award is unclear (e g is it any grant?) and the the link to jounalism awards seems irrelevant for academic works, plus I can't see when the other criteria wouldn't suffice; Publications that primarily carry advertising and only have trivial content may have relevant details merged to an article on their publisher (if notable) because I think merging like this makes navigating harder, and the text about the journal will be just as problematic in the publisher's page as in its own page, and what does advertising have to do with anything? according to some weird US law, all journals with publication fees only consist of ads; For journals which have made substantial impact outside academia, but in their academic capacity, the appropriate criteria for that sort of notability apply as an alternative. If notable only in another capacity entirely, use the general criteria for that field. because this idea is repeated four times in the guideline. I think the notes and examples section captures deletion discussions well, so the less text in other sections that take focus away from it the better in my opinion. Narayanese (talk) 07:53, 30 September 2009 (UTC)
- I think these are good suggestions. If nobody disagrees, I'll implement them. --Crusio (talk) 10:44, 30 September 2009 (UTC)
- Done. --Crusio (talk) 11:34, 3 October 2009 (UTC)
Capitals in title
Why "Wikipedia:Notability (Academic Journals)" instead of "Wikipedia:Notability (academic journals)" like all other notability guidelines? See Category:Wikipedia notability guidelines, Category:Wikipedia proposals. — Miym (talk) 11:45, 3 October 2009 (UTC)
- You're absolutely right. I have moved the page. --Crusio (talk) 11:54, 3 October 2009 (UTC)
Medline/Pubmed
It may be a bad idea to warn that some of the publications in MEDLINE/PubMed aren't peer reviewed when such records comprise, if I remember correctly, less than 0.1% of the records in their databases. 98.210.193.221 (talk) 22:04, 12 October 2009 (UTC)
- Do you have a source for that? Do you know how we can find out which ones are peer reviewed and which ones are not? Thanks. --Crusio (talk) 08:47, 13 October 2009 (UTC)
- http://www.nlm.nih.gov/pubs/factsheets/jsel.html has some information, but not the statistic. It's somewhere around there. 98.210.193.221 (talk) 19:02, 16 October 2009 (UTC)
- Ulrich's. Fifelfoo (talk) 12:49, 19 October 2009 (UTC)
Criteria 3
Could examples for Criteria 3 be provided (meaning added to the list on the main page)? After [this discussion, I can agree to disagree, but I think part of the problem is that Criteria 3 doesn't have much in the way of examples. --Firefly322 (talk) 12:45, 19 October 2009 (UTC)
- That criterium indeed looks like the weakest one and could perhaps be phrased a bit better, too ("some sort"...). I'm at a meeting in the US, so I have currently no time for this myself. Suggestions are welcome! --Crusio (talk) 13:09, 19 October 2009 (UTC)
- I should probably try and give a suggestion, but I wouldn't want to upset our detente. :-) --Firefly322 (talk) 13:54, 19 October 2009 (UTC)
- Don't worry about that, it wouldn't :-) Might be good to get another opinion on that one anyway. --Crusio (talk) 17:20, 19 October 2009 (UTC)
- Alright I wrote it on the main page. Feel free to check and correct it. --Firefly322 (talk) 17:43, 19 October 2009 (UTC)
- I can't come up with an example that would qualify by #3 but is otherwise non-notable ((MHO) but how about... that Social Text would qualify by #3 alone for the historical role it played in the Sokal affair, or that Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society would qualify for being the venue for Newton or Darwin's papers? Pete.Hurd (talk) 15:38, 19 October 2009 (UTC) (who is not in Chicago talking Science and drinking beer, but wishes he was...)
- Pete has made an excellent start. Awesome. --Firefly322 (talk) 16:03, 19 October 2009 (UTC)
- I can't come up with an example that would qualify by #3 but is otherwise non-notable ((MHO) but how about... that Social Text would qualify by #3 alone for the historical role it played in the Sokal affair, or that Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society would qualify for being the venue for Newton or Darwin's papers? Pete.Hurd (talk) 15:38, 19 October 2009 (UTC) (who is not in Chicago talking Science and drinking beer, but wishes he was...)
- Excellent suggestions indeed! --Crusio (talk) 17:18, 19 October 2009 (UTC) (who is in Chicago talking science, killing his back, and having a Coke - too early for beer :-)
Notes and Examples #10
Criterion 3 may be satisfied for defunct as well as extant journals. Journals that have major contributions from historically notable scholars or journals that have been the focus of historical analysis can be covered under this criterion.
This seems to suggest that notability can be inherited. If a journal pushed hard for the acceptance of a new field of research or theory (e.g., plate tectonics or fractals), then I would say that it has "has served some sort of historic purpose or has a significant history." Major contributions from notable scholars, but in such a way as to satisfy criterion 3 rather than criteria 1 or 2, however, is mere notability by association. RJC TalkContribs 18:53, 19 October 2009 (UTC)
- It would seem to me that notable anytime in history means encyclopedically notable, as Notability is not temporary. Pete.Hurd (talk) 19:12, 19 October 2009 (UTC)
- Do journals actually ever "push" anything? Outside of article selection and peer-review, aren't they supposed to remain and expected to be neutral? (Normally allowing those who publish in their pages to interact, disagree, and correct one another?) Perhaps like wikipedia they are merely a means of publishing that attempt to be objective and have no inherent point of view. --Firefly322 (talk) 21:10, 19 October 2009 (UTC)
I don't object to the idea that notability isn't temporary. Rather, it is the second statement that seems wrong: journal X is notable because the über-notable Y published there a lot, whether the journal is defunct or active, seems a stretch. As to the complete neutrality of the peer-review process, I don't know that bears on this question. In any case, whom the editor sends a manuscript to can have a large impact on the reviews generated; peer-review makes journal articles better than blog posts, but it isn't quite neutral or pure. RJC TalkContribs 22:29, 19 October 2009 (UTC)
- "Do journals actually ever "push" anything?" well, you can see in the history of psychology how different schools of thought had to establish their own journals before they could get going. If the behaviorists hold a virtual monopoly over the major journals, stifling alternative views, then cognitive psychology journals could be viewed as pushing an anti-behaviorist viewpoint once they get established. I would suggest that new journals have generally been founded by societies that study a particular subject that is not adequately represented in existing journals, those societies will have paradigms, those paradigms will be pushed by the society's journal in the way Firefly suggests, but rarely will it be overtly obvious to the outsider why that society is distinct from previous ones in the discipline. My 2c on that. I'm happy with condition #3 reading something like "for example, journal X is notable because the über-notable Y published there a lot" and leaving out the extant/extinct bit. I really have no strong views on whether condition 3 ought to be part of the guideline, and probably won't have an opinion until I see that condition used on test cases. Pete.Hurd (talk) 22:48, 19 October 2009 (UTC)
Alright, Pete, and others, what if the example read as follows:
“ | 10. Criterion 3 may be statisfied if the journal has significant contributions (e.g., a well-cited and/or well-discussed article) from historically notable scholars or has been the focus of historical analysis. | ” |
Feel free to check and correct it. --Firefly322 (talk) 01:08, 20 October 2009 (UTC)
- These examples are still too weak to establish notability of an entire journal. Verbal chat 04:48, 20 October 2009 (UTC)
My preferred version would restore the bit about defunct journals and remove the bare presence of notable contributors as conferring notability:
“ | 10. Criterion 3 may be satisfied for defunct as well as extant journals. Journals that have been the focus of historical analysis can be covered under this criterion. | ” |
AGF
Hi, can I remind editors to WP:AGF and not make unfounded accusations, especially in edit summaries. I have been watching this page and following its development since Crusio first tolf me about it, while it was still in his own user space. Verbal chat 04:47, 20 October 2009 (UTC)
What now?
- The proposed guidelines have now been used in several AfDs (with both "keep" and "delete" outcomes) and the current text seems to have stabilized to a version that most (all?) of us can agree upon. Does anybody know what the procedure is to get this from "proposed guideline" to "guideline"? --Crusio (talk) 16:48, 1 November 2009 (UTC)
- Open an RfC, and add it to Template:Cent. Fences&Windows 00:13, 2 November 2009 (UTC)
- I'm afraid I don't immediately see how this works. From Wikipedia:Requests for comment it seems to me that this is a procedure for dispute resolution. --Crusio (talk) 00:39, 2 November 2009 (UTC)
- Both steps done. RJC TalkContribs 01:09, 2 November 2009 (UTC)
- To address some of the concerns voiced in the RfC below, the current guidelines are not unabashedly inclusionist. A rapid look at the history of Wikipedia:WikiProject Academic Journals/Article alerts will show that a fair number of journal articles have been deleted since this guideline was proposed (many after having been prodded of taken to AfD by myself). --Crusio (talk) 16:25, 2 November 2009 (UTC)
Promotion to guideline status
Discussion has been stalled for a month. While there is support for the general principle of this proposal, there is not a clear enough consensus for promotion to a guideline. Many people have indicated they would like to see the wording improved, and as there is a general feeling that this proposal is helpful, it would be inappropriate to mark this as a failed proposal, so I have marked it as a notability essay. SilkTork *YES! 00:04, 31 December 2009 (UTC)
Not enough consensus at this time to promote to guideline
|
---|
is really all you need to go by. The first one ensure that we can have articles on the journal cited by wikipedia, these are our WP:RS. If we can't write an article on them, it's probably that we shouldn't use them as sources in the first place. The second one is the obvious "duh". If you are cited, you're obviously worthy of inclusion. And the third one covers journals with historic impact on their respective fields. Headbomb {ταλκκοντριβς – WP Physics} 14:14, 3 November 2009 (UTC)
Arbitrary break
How to improve the proposalAbove it is becoming clear that this proposal enjoys considerable support, but also that a significant number of editors is opposed to it as it stands. Some of these opposing statements are rather general, making it difficult to improve the proposal to address these concerns. I would greatly appreciate if some of you could either propose some improvements in the current wording or give me some examples of notable journals that would not satisfy these criteria or non-notable ones that would pass these criteria. (Obviously I am not addressing those editors who are of the opinion that thsi whole proposed guideline is superfluous... :-). --Crusio (talk) 17:26, 9 November 2009 (UTC)
I seem to have missed most of what looks to have been a very interesting discussion. Just wanted to add here a bit about finding sources for articles on journals. One of the main sources I have found on the history of long-established journals (I tend to contribute edits about the history of journals established in the 19th century or earlier) is anniversary/history articles published in the journals themselves, or sister publications produced by the organisation that publishes the journal (e.g. an article in the news bulletin of the academic society that produces the journal). I guess that is not the independent third-party sources people normally look for, but it is something I have observed as to where history of a journal or magazine gets published. One of the points raised above was that one of the criteria involves historical impact. As far as I can recall, this is obliquely referring to how old the journal is, especially in cases of journals that were published for tens or hundreds of years, but are no longer published. Of course, finding sources for the very old journals is trivially easy, but I think that is what the "significant history" bit means. I also think examples help when discussing notability. Three examples of articles I created or significantly expanded: Annales de chimie et de physique, Astronomische Nachrichten, Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History (hey, that's three countries and three sciences I've covered now). I also filled in the history of the editors for Astronomical Journal and Journal of Biological Chemistry. The latter is a classic example of where I found a history of the journal's first 75 years written by a former editor of the journal. Astronomical Journal also has similar history articles in its own pages. The Astronomische Nachrichten article was largely written from a journal article about the early history of the science. The AMNH Bulletin is an example of an article where the sources are currently only the museum itself (the publishing body), but I have little doubt that more sources can be found. The Annales de chimie et de physique article is a good example where there is a specific source discussing the journal itself in the wider context of the history of science (In the Shadow of Lavoisier: The 'Annales de Chimie' and the Establishment of a New Science. Maurice Crosland. 1994). Finally, Journal of the Chemical Society is an article where I can see potential for expansion from suitable sources that relate the history there, but I have less hope for an article such as Health Economics (which I created to help disambiguate links to health economics) - that one may well remain nothing more than a directory entry-type article. Carcharoth (talk) 03:49, 19 November 2009 (UTC)
|
Editorial Boards
I've been thinking about the question of whether the composition of an Editorial Board is relevant to the Notability of an academic journal. It seems to me on reflection that it clearly is. Being on an E.B. involves a bit of work (and reputational risk) for AFAIK no pay. Less established academics might do it for the prestige, but by the time you reach the top you have far too many calls on your time and the only reason you serve on an E.B. is because you think that the journal is doing important work to which you can somewhat contribute. Therefore having top-flight people on a journal's E.B. says that they think it is important and is therefore certainly relevant to notability. What do people think? NBeale (talk) 14:02, 5 November 2009 (UTC)
- So long as its' phrased as being indicative of notability, rather than an independent proof in itself, I'd go along. Some established people might serve on an editorial board just to promote one of their student's pet projects. There is a tendency to permit inherited notability which I think we should guard against. RJC TalkContribs 14:28, 5 November 2009 (UTC)
- As an editor myself, I can tell you that NBeale is not completely realistic about editorial boards. When I started Genes, Brain and Behavior in 2001, I approached a number of people to constitute an editorial board. As far as I recall, 1 person refused (well, he just got the Nobel Prize the day before, so I guess he was swamped with requests), all others accepted. This was for a journal that did not even exist yet... Most of these people never had heard of me, so it wasn't my stellar reputation as an editor or scientist either... :-) Being on an editorial board carries very little "reputational risk" and always adds to one's prestige. In addition, usually there is hardly any (or none at all) work required. At most, boards are requested from time to time to provide advice on editorial policy and most scientists are always happy to do this even if they were not on the board. In short, it only would be remarkable if a journal had only mediocre scientists on its board. Now that would really be exceptional! :-)
- In conclusion I have to say that I am strongly opposed to adding Editorial Board members to a journal's article and even more to adding anything about the prestige of the board to the current proposed guidelines. As far as I am concerned, if a journal must derive its notability from the people on its board, that would constitute prime evidence that the journal has no notabity at all and is far removed from ever attaining it. --Crusio (talk) 14:53, 5 November 2009 (UTC)
- Strongly agree with Crusio. If I saw an article about a journal that pointed out how distinguished its editorial board was, I would immediately jump to the conclusion that the journal had no intrinsic notability in its own right (like an article about a book that felt the need to list the people invited to its launch), and that the writer of the article was attempting to make the journal seem more important than it really is by means of an appeal to authority. All journals that are worth their salt have some distinguished people on their editorial boards. So what? SNALWIBMA ( talk - contribs ) 15:35, 5 November 2009 (UTC)
- "All journals that are worth their salt have X" is not remotely an argument that "X should not be mentioned in an article about the journal". All journals that are worth their salt publish interesting and important articles. This is not an argument against referring to any especially interesting and important articles in a Wikipedia article about them. (and BTW the question is not "who was invited to a launch" - anyone can invite anybody - but if someone vv distinguished agrees to chair a launch discussion it is certainly interesting and suggests that the book is well out of the ordinary.For the bemused: Snalwimba & I are old sparring partners, & I am co-author of said book NBeale (talk) 18:21, 5 November 2009 (UTC)
- My previous point was not that I "invited" all those people, my point was that almost all of them accepted the invitation, showing that such is nothing out of the ordinary. As far as I can see, the same goes for chairing a launch discussion, although I understand that this deals with book launches (and apparently one book launch in particular). However, the current proposal is concerned with academic journals, so please let's stay on topic. --Crusio (talk) 20:17, 5 November 2009 (UTC)
- "All journals that are worth their salt have X" is not remotely an argument that "X should not be mentioned in an article about the journal". All journals that are worth their salt publish interesting and important articles. This is not an argument against referring to any especially interesting and important articles in a Wikipedia article about them. (and BTW the question is not "who was invited to a launch" - anyone can invite anybody - but if someone vv distinguished agrees to chair a launch discussion it is certainly interesting and suggests that the book is well out of the ordinary.For the bemused: Snalwimba & I are old sparring partners, & I am co-author of said book NBeale (talk) 18:21, 5 November 2009 (UTC)
- The editorial board of some journals are selective. this is not always the case--especially with lower quality journals. That inverse correlation with quality is part of the motivation for eliminating them from articles. Routine practice with a weak journal is to invite as many people to the board as possible, typically with the offer that a/they will get a subscription, and b/that articles the submit or sponsor will get favorable consideration--the unspoken implication is that these would be the articles from the less successful of their students, articles that would have difficulty getting published elsewhere. (I don;t like this game, and have turned down a few such invitations) There are, much less viciously, many older European national journals that have the practice of inviting every professor of the subject in their country to join as a matter of course. These people will likely be notable, but that they are on the board doenst say much about the journal. Crusio, I think that there would indeed be some journals where we would make an exception--but it would need to be justified rather strictly. This is exactly the quagmire that we've stayed out of in other fields also--we list the president of the company, and the CEO, and maybe the chairman of the board--but not the rest of the board, except possibly for the most famous companies. We always list the mayor of a town, but only for the largest cities would we list the city council. This is just the extension of a general practice--one that has proven necessary to reduce spam. We arenot the company's web site, nor the journal's.
- In particular, there is one special case: where a journal dealing with a borderline subject tries to get mainstream scientists on the board to lend it respectability. The question always arises whether the people who sign up actually know what they are joining. The principle is, as those great cynics G & S have it in The Gondoliers:
- DUKE. I sit, by selection, /Upon the direction/ of several Companies bubble--
- As soon as they're floated / I'm freely bank-noted /I'm pretty well paid for my trouble--
- DUKE. I sit, by selection, /Upon the direction/ of several Companies bubble--
DGG ( talk ) 02:32, 6 November 2009 (UTC)
- Hi DGG: Anyone who can quote The Duke of Plaza Toro has to be a great guy, but the noble and valliant Duke was, as you say, pretty well paid for his trouble. I agree that it is possible that some leading scientists or philosophers could be bamboozled onto a board, and fail to resign, but it is not sensible to assume that several would. These would be highly exceptional circumstances: the normal point stands, that other things being equal having loads of first-rate academics on your editorial board is (a) interesting and (b) and indication - not conclusive proof - of notability, unless there is some strong reason to doubt it. NBeale (talk) 21:21, 6 November 2009 (UTC)
- I can only re-iterate what I said previously: A relative nobody like me starts a new journal and at a point where there has not yet been a single page printed I got a Nobel Prize winner and multiple national academy members on my board. And several of the others have been elected to a national academy since then, so they were pretty prestigious, too. If I could do that for a journal that didn't even exist yet, then having notable people on the board does not amount to much if anything and did not guarantee at all that the journal was/would become notable. This works only one way, the reverse is not true: if I would not have been able to get anybody notable on the board, the journal would certainly have tanked, so not having any notable people on the board would be a sure sign for lack of notability. But not the other way around.
- I agree with DGG, of course, that there are exceptions. There always are and the current argument is for the general case. --Crusio (talk) 22:55, 6 November 2009 (UTC)
- Hence, having notable people on the Editorial board is, broadly speaking, a necessary, but certainly not a sufficient, condition for notability. NBeale (talk) 07:48, 7 November 2009 (UTC)
- Yes, and one therefore could cite the absence of anybody notable as evidence of missing notability, whereas citing the fact that notable persons are on the board does not establish anything whatsoever. --Crusio (talk) 23:57, 11 November 2009 (UTC)
- Hence, having notable people on the Editorial board is, broadly speaking, a necessary, but certainly not a sufficient, condition for notability. NBeale (talk) 07:48, 7 November 2009 (UTC)
- Hi DGG: Anyone who can quote The Duke of Plaza Toro has to be a great guy, but the noble and valliant Duke was, as you say, pretty well paid for his trouble. I agree that it is possible that some leading scientists or philosophers could be bamboozled onto a board, and fail to resign, but it is not sensible to assume that several would. These would be highly exceptional circumstances: the normal point stands, that other things being equal having loads of first-rate academics on your editorial board is (a) interesting and (b) and indication - not conclusive proof - of notability, unless there is some strong reason to doubt it. NBeale (talk) 21:21, 6 November 2009 (UTC)
- On the subject of editorial board composition, I find this article rather enlightening. Protonk (talk) 23:19, 7 November 2009 (UTC)
- Thank you. Very interesting. Shows that Editorial Boards can indeed be important. BTW it occurs to me that one interesting test would be to look at the last n journals that got deleted in AfD debates and the last n that survived, and see if there is any significant difference in the number of Academicians on their Editorial Boards. NBeale (talk) 13:47, 8 November 2009 (UTC)
- I'm not sure how the linked article would support that conclusion. The bulk of the article was devoted to explaining how the author witnessed board and editor selection processes which had little to do with the merit of the selectee and more to do with mollifying political interests within the academe and the publisher. Protonk (talk) 22:03, 9 November 2009 (UTC)
- I did not conclude that "E.B.s reflect the merit of the selectee" but that "E.B.s can be important". The fact that there was so much political fighting about the composition of the E.B. clearly shows that some members of the E.B. cared deeply about who was on it. NBeale (talk) 06:58, 13 November 2009 (UTC)
- That may support an section about the EB conflict for that particular journal,but I cannot see that it does it general. If anything, the article presents it as an exceptional case, involving the start-up of a journal where the problem was one defining the scope, a conflict between various theoretical orientations of economists. As the author said, he did not expect the problem and had no reason to, based on a very wide professional experience. And he says "and in fact I am about to add seven new associate editors to the journal’s editorial board to handle the growth in submissions" asa purely routine matter. 95%of the time, the journal continues along a very non-exceptional pattern; sometimes, indeed, there is what amounts to a palace revolution or a conflict within the profession that is reflected. At some point, I intend adding systematically to journal articles every ssuch conflict for which I have sources--at this point they are present erratically. DGG ( talk ) 16:19, 28 November 2009 (UTC)
- I did not conclude that "E.B.s reflect the merit of the selectee" but that "E.B.s can be important". The fact that there was so much political fighting about the composition of the E.B. clearly shows that some members of the E.B. cared deeply about who was on it. NBeale (talk) 06:58, 13 November 2009 (UTC)
- I'm not sure how the linked article would support that conclusion. The bulk of the article was devoted to explaining how the author witnessed board and editor selection processes which had little to do with the merit of the selectee and more to do with mollifying political interests within the academe and the publisher. Protonk (talk) 22:03, 9 November 2009 (UTC)
New perspective?
At this point it seems that fairly many people oppose this proposal. Moreover, the old discussion at Wikipedia:Notability/RFC:compromise is a serious concern: many people seem to oppose the idea that a subject-specific notability guideline could be more permissive than WP:GNG. On the other hand, there is a lot of useful information in this proposal and in these discussions. Hence I started to wonder how to make the most of it even if this is never promoted to guideline status.
What if we changed the perspective, and made this text descriptive instead of prescriptive? Instead of stating rules like "a journal is notable if this-and-that", we could give information like "ISI is highly selective and Scopus is slightly less selective" (+ references and more details). Ideally, this would be a well-organised survey of various sources that one could use in articles about academic journals (and also when considering whether it makes sense to create an article at all). Call it a "writer's guide" or "essay" (or whatever) instead of a "notability guideline" if it helps.
The section "Notes and examples" could be a reasonable starting point. From these discussions we could add many pieces of information. As we wouldn't need to write them as rules, it'll be much easier to describe finer details like "this-and-that index has poor coverage in this-and-that field".
Even if this guide was written from such a perspective, we could still use this guide in AfD discussions. Instead of saying "included in X, hence notable per guideline Y section Z", one could write "included in X, which is a highly selective indexing service in this field (see essay Y section Z for more information and references)".
Any thoughts? — Miym (talk) 21:18, 9 November 2009 (UTC)
US Centered
Many of the bibliographic references indicated for criteria 1-3, and 5 are based in the US and tend to emphasize American journals. In reaction to this, the European Science Foundation is developing a set of "league tables" for academic journals, with a focus on European publications. Included in this program is a European Reference Index for the Humanities (ERIH), which has earned negative reactions from editors of journals in the history of science, technology, and medicine.
Despite the problem with that particular project, greater consideration of non-American perspectives seems appropriate. --SteveMcCluskey (talk) 16:14, 17 November 2009 (UTC)
- agreed. Will work on it. Personally, I've never seen a valid table of anything quality-related, except for those based on citation data. They at least measure what they claim to, which is frequency of citations within the set of journals they cover. DGG ( talk ) 06:22, 23 November 2009 (UTC)
- Excellence in Research for Australia's rank tables A* A B C. Fifelfoo (talk) 06:48, 23 November 2009 (UTC)
- yes, I know of it. The humanities section is based upon a reputation survey, and has no valid basis. The science section has not yet been published, and will take into account reputation as well as objective criteria. I've done reputation surveys among faculty: people list the journals they used back in graduate school plus the ones they are trying to promote. Valid means it measures what it says it measures. A survey of journal reputation measures reputation , not importance or quality, so it is never even pretends to be valid as a measure of quality--- and even as a measure of reputation, there has never been evidence that getting the reputation of a few senior faculty measures the current reputation in more general sense. That;s what I mean by lack of validity. DGG ( talk ) 01:40, 27 November 2009 (UTC)
- Excellence in Research for Australia's rank tables A* A B C. Fifelfoo (talk) 06:48, 23 November 2009 (UTC)
ERA Australia journal lists. Fgnievinski (talk) 02:08, 2 July 2015 (UTC)
The European Reference Index for the Humanities has a page, too. Fgnievinski (talk) 17:54, 8 July 2015 (UTC)
- ERIH only contains bibliographic info on humanities journals. As far as I can tell, they strive for completion. In the past they ranked journals (on unclear criteria, done by some committee), but that system was abandoned (similar for the ERA Australia journal lists). Inclusion in ERIH means that a journal is legitimate and peer-reviewed, much as DOAJ tries to include all legitimate OA journals. Inclusion in ERIH or DOAJ (or the ERA Australia journal lists) therefore does not have any impact on notability, I fear. --Randykitty (talk) 18:02, 8 July 2015 (UTC)
a bit misguided?
Hi,
I haven't read all of the previous discussion about this proposal, but it seems a bit misguided in general. For one thing, an index is not a "source", per se; while inclusion in any given index may show that the journal has some impact in a field, not being included in any given index doesn't show that the journal is not notable. There are hundreds of databases in the world; I'd strike the part about Web of Science and Scopus being the main ones, since it's simply not true [they are generalist, English-centric science databases that cover a fraction of the journals in the world]. It is correct that most journals -- the majority, in fact -- will not have anything written about them; journals are actually a somewhat odd category, where the "not a directory" rules should probably be bent. If a journal exists, and it has published legitimate research, it would be nice to have an article about what it is. Of course I would start with the big ones, the ones indexed by ISI; but we've got a long way to go before that list is filled out.
I think a better question might be to step back and wonder what is being excluded here. What's the problem? Are people adding articles about their own newsletters? About vanity-published journals? Is this really a huge problem? If so, I might simplify the criteria quite a bit:
- does the journal have an editorial board?
- can documentation of its mission, subject criteria, and publication and peer review practice be found?
- is it indexed anywhere?
- and (though this shouldn't be dealbreaker) is it written about by anyone else? Is it included in Ulrich's Periodicals Directory ?
I think that's good enough to weed out any truly vanity-press or fringe publications, and leave in the rest. -- phoebe / (talk to me) 19:45, 29 November 2009 (UTC) (academic librarian by trade)
- Phoebe, if you take a moment to read the discussion above, you will see that the problem is actual the opposite. Many people feel that we should only have articles on journals for which we have independent third party sources. That would exclude almost all academic journals. The proposal as currently phrased has been mainly criticised for being too inclusive, not for leaving stuff out. So this proposal is actually meant to give support to inclusion of articles on journals, even though it is also used to weed out articles on really marginal ones. --Crusio (talk) 20:37, 29 November 2009 (UTC)
- right -- that's not the opposite problem, it's just a more extreme version. In contrast, I don't think the proposed policy is inclusionist enough! regards, -- phoebe / (talk to me) 04:32, 30 November 2009 (UTC)
Objection to use
This proposal is being referred to in deletion debates as though it was an agreed guideline. It is not. Perhaps it should be marked as failed to make this clear? Fences&Windows 00:17, 10 December 2009 (UTC)
- It's still shown as an "active proposal' in the {{Notabilityguide}} template. Does that need to be changed? As far as I'm concerned, editors should feel free to point to whatever reasoning they see fit in an Afd. If they or their reasoning deviates from the consensus view, then it deviates from the consensus view. Location (talk) 00:56, 10 December 2009 (UTC)
- This proposed should not be adopted in my view, because its criteria almost strictly adhere to SCI journals which are included in SCI/ISI/Reuter database. Many controversies are raised on the ones not included. Of course, it may come from the potential inclusion of those non-SCI journals. The reviewer/referee qualification is another concern of adopting the rule(or a guidline used as a rule), when controvery arises. In an area of few experts available, especially in WP community, it is unfair to judge a journal just by non-specialists, which however does not exclude the right of expressing their thoughts. For example, Arch Path Lab Med has broad readership and good reputation among pathologists, but very low impact factor (about 1 or 2) compared with biomedical journals. Not to mention even more specialized field like pancreatology. How do you like Pancreas (journal)? Jon Zhang (talk) Jon Zhang (talk) 15:23, 3 March 2010 (UTC)
- I'm not sure what your point is exactly. Also the proposal is IF ANY of
- The journal is considered by reliable sources to be influential in its subject area.
- The journal is frequently cited by other reliable sources.
- The journal has a historic purpose or has a significant history.
- is met, then the journal should be included. Arch Path Lab Med thus meets criteria 1 and 2. Pancreas would also meet criteria 1 and 2.
- Everything following these criteria is simply possible ways to show that at least one of these criteria are met. Headbomb {ταλκκοντριβς – WP Physics} 15:41, 3 March 2010 (UTC)
- I guess you missed my point. I need to clarify my thoughts further. The example is not for those journals' inclusion into the list, rather the right reviewers or referees. How confident should a physicist(Am I mistaken? Correct me if I'm wrong) be in judging a medical journal in high specialized field, pathology and pancreatology. Like discussed above, you or most of others may judge its notability by using impact factor or its inclusion in SCI database. It is probably more appropriate to stop here, and say: Hey, I do not know much about it, and I will refer it to a pathologist or pancreatologist. No offense here. My biased opinion is this notability guideline is somewhat misleading and might be misused, as shown in this long discussion. However, I agree a guideline should exist. Thanks! -- Jon Zhang (talk) 15:56, 3 March 2010 (UTC)
- I don't think that we should go so far as to only allow pathologists to give their opinion on a pathology journal (disregarding for the moment the fact that this goes against Wikipedia's core policy that everybody can edit the encyclopedia). The proposed guideline was (as it has not been adopted, I use the past tense) an attempt to establish minimum requirements for journals to be included in WP and it was designed to be rather inclusionist. Some objective criteria can be established, not all of them dependent on ISI. For example, I don't know of any medical journal that is included in ISI, but not in PubMed (so inclusion in PubMed is less "exclusive" than inclusion in ISI). I also know that hardly any medical researcher will consider publishing in a journal that is not listed in PubMed, because her/his article would hardly be visible to colleagues. Taking these two things together, it seems rather logical to conclude that a medical journal that is not even included in PubMed, probably is not notable at all. This seems for the moment to be the case of, for example, your own NAJMS. However, also note that the intention of this proposal was not to help people showing that a journal is not notable, but rather to help them to show that a journal is notable. Similar, in an AfD debate, the onus is on the people that created the article to show that the subject of the article meets the notability criteria. If even this guideline cannot help you to do this, then I suggest you have a hopeless task before you. --Crusio (talk) 16:06, 3 March 2010 (UTC)
- Wikipedia is made by those who edit it. It's better to have a physicist look at a medical journal and try to gauge its notability than to have no one. It would be great if we had the luxury of having 100 pathologists reviewing the European Journal of Pharmacology, but we don't. What we have (in most discussion) one or two people from the physical sciences, one or two people from biological and medical fields, and one or two people from mathematical sciences. So while we may not have a panel of specialists relevant to the field, you still have a varied bunch of scientific-minded people assessing the journal, and in my experience, that's really all you need. For example, no one here believes that the Journal of Anti-Aging is a reliable source, even though most of us are not in medical fields. Why? Because it has all the classic marks of fringe journals (publishes non-conventional views, editor does science by press conference, most citations are self-citations, etc...). But to be even more to the point, there's not much difference in the way you assess if a journal is notable or not regardless of the field. If it's indexed by the relevant databases, edited by someone who's not considered a crank, meet WP:RS, is a couple of years old, and is published by a well-known house, or on behalf of some notable organization, the journal is most likely notable. Headbomb {ταλκκοντριβς – WP Physics} 16:11, 3 March 2010 (UTC)
Next step??
- It seems clear that the current proposal is not getting the consensus that it needs to get accepted as a guideline by the community. Unfortunately, however, I am not sure at all what possible changes could lead to consensus. The reason is that a fair number of editors find that the current proposal is too inclusive and should be more discriminating, whereas several other editors argue that the guideline should be more inclusive. These objections are contradictory and I see no ready way to reconcile the two.
Nevertheless I would like to argue that we have a clear need for accepted guidelines. At this moment, AfDs are going in all kind of directions and results are very dependent on who happens to participate, given the lack of clear guidance. Let me give some examples.
- In Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Adamantius (journal), one participating editor indicated that this journal (subsequently deleted following the current proposal's guidelines) would be notable if only it could be shown that it would be peer reviewed. This seems to be a far too inclusionist standpoint that few here would adapt, I think.
- In Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/ACS Chemical Neuroscience, the result was keep despite the journal not fulfilling the criteria of the current proposal.
- The failure to obtain consensus here has led one editor to prod several journals. After I deprodded those, one has been brought to AFD: Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/International Journal of Clinical and Experimental Medicine. The nom argues that inclusion in PubMed is not sufficient to establish notability.
There are probably more examples, but I guess that the above gives a rather good idea of the mess we are in. Given the disagreements about how inclusive the current proposal should be, I would like to call on all participants in this discussion to review the arguments presented by proponents and opponents of this proposal and then possibly to reconsider their viewpoint towards a more compromising stand. Given that the current proposal gets flak from both the inclusionist and deletionist sides, it might actually be a viable alternative. I invite those editors who felt that the current wording is too vague to propose some improvements. Any suggestions from other participating editors are welcome, too, of course. Thanks. --Crusio (talk) 11:44, 10 December 2009 (UTC)
- If I might offer my 2 cents here, having skimmed the discussion on the rest of the page: would it be useful to back up to discussing fundamentals?
- In my view, as the authority of Wikipedia articles derives from references, we have a vested interest in keeping articles in high-quality reference sources around. In my ideal world, every journal used in an FA would be blue-linked, no matter how obscure the topic. I would no more delete an article on an obscure academic journal than I would an article on a small village where nothing had ever happened. Those sort of basic location articles, for which the notability requirement is basically "it exists", form the framework for describing events, people, etc, while academic journals form the framework of our high-quality references.
- On the other side of the argument, I think some editors see this class of articles exactly like other types of articles and don't have the slightest idea why we can't have as stringent a criteria as that used for other media, e.g. music albums or poems.
- Asking people explicitly to agree with one, and only one, of the following statements will probably clarify people's thinking on the matter: "Articles on academic journals form a framework for high-quality article references and are thus fundamentally different from other classes of articles for which there are notability requirements" OR "Articles on academic journals are fundamentally the same as other classes of articles and should have notability requirements similar to those articles."
- I'm not sure it would move the discussion forward, as we may just find that the camps are irrevocably conflicted, but at least it would make the lines of the argument clearer - BanyanTree 05:01, 11 December 2009 (UTC)
- I think an affirmative case needs to be made supporting "Articles on academic journals form a framework for high-quality article references and are thus fundamentally different from other classes of articles for which there are notability requirements". I'm certainly not convinced. Protonk (talk) 05:08, 11 December 2009 (UTC)
- What I would like to support is a system of lists of journals. I proposed this above; if a journal isn't a complete joke, but there isn't very much in the way of sources or encyclopedic content, why can't it be a redirect to a list? The list can then show useful, standardized information such as the date of founding, number of issues per year, editor, contact info and so forth. Abductive (reasoning) 05:11, 11 December 2009 (UTC)
- I am in principle not against Abductive's proposal for creating lists for journals for which we don't have enough info to write a full-blown article. However, I don't think it is practical. Have a look at our journals infobox. To get all that information covered in a table including multiple journals seems impossible to me. --Crusio (talk) 12:23, 12 December 2009 (UTC)
- Well, principally there are four problems:
- We aren't a directory of academic journals. There are free (and non-free) services that offer this and have the necessary expertise and resources to do it better than us.
- We would generate a false equivalence between Journal of Almost Sketchy Science and Journal of Totally Awesome Science. Right now the status quo ought to be "if a journal is covered in reliable sources, we have an article". What is the reasoning behind changing it to "if it is a journal, we have an article". See my comment way, way above about listed journals and notability for an empirical look.
- NPOV, NOR, SPAM, etc. all still apply to academic journals. We go all soft on university subjects for a variety of reasons, but those content policies and guidelines have to guide our inclusion guidelines. I can't support a guideline that would abrogate those.
- A list actually doesn't provide the organizational role we want. The bluelink would just be to "list of journals" Protonk (talk) 05:40, 11 December 2009 (UTC)
- I very strongly agree with your point number 1. There is no way, even with several librarians like DGG working on this problem, that Wikipedia can hope to compete with Thomson Reuters or even the government workers. I also agree with point 3. But a list could be a table with impact factors or other metrics to help the user understand what is a prominent journal. I offer this list idea as a compromise; I will not agree to a guideline that exempts articles on journals from having secondary sources. In a way, Wikipedia could be better than PubMed or Scopus, it could be a resource of articles on scholarly journals that have crossed over into the lay world. Abductive (reasoning) 05:54, 11 December 2009 (UTC)
- some responses. Ad 1. I absolutely hate arguments in the style of WP:OTHERCRAPEXISTS, but I do want to note that if a place exists, that mere fact is enough to establish notability and justify a stub saying "The nowhere village has 2" inhabitants and is located at such and such coordinates". Any obscure high school is considered notable automatically. Any sports figure that has been on the field for a split second is considered notable. Some people involved with sports even want to include those who never made it farther than the bench. Their justification is that "people may want to know about these guys", even though all information given is that So and so sat of the bench of this team in the 2003 season. These things are stubs and will forever remain so. Let's face it, WP is already a directory in many respects.
- But let's put all that aside. I really think it is strange if I would read an article in WP, which cites some scientific findings in some journal, that it would then be impossible to find even the briefest info on that particular journal. I would also like to argue that the way most journal stubs are now written, they provide more information than a simple directory. Most of our stubs provide significantly more information than the brief records one can find in PubMed, JCR, or any other database (perhaps excepted Ulrich's, to which I have no access, so I don't know). Most of our stubs even give important info on journals (ISSN, impact factor, editor, fields covered) together that require quite a number of mouse clicks when going to the journal homepage. I sincerely believe that WP provides better information here than any other database, government or otherwise.
- Ad 2. I see your point, but I don't think this is very serious. If a journal publishes Totally Awesome science, we'll often have more sources and then the article will (or at least can) reflect this.
- Ad 3. Of course all those policies would (and should) still apply. It is standard procedure to remove any unsourced, promotional claims such as "the most important journal in this field". Also, I maintain that most journal stubs can be written without resorting to OR. All information is sourced, even though we don't routinely include references for, for example, impact factors.
- Ad 4. I agree, see my above response to Abductive. --Crusio (talk) 12:38, 12 December 2009 (UTC)
- As regards the first point, we should absolutely not ignore the fact that high schools, places, and sports figures (to name a few) are considered notable almost automatically. Rather, instead of attempting to legislate parity for academic journals, we should try and stick to consistent and simple guidelines. If I had the power to dictate policy I would change exiting notability guidelines which result in including subjects whose articles will never meet our core content policies. but I don't. For my second point, I'm curious as to why you wouldn't think it is serious. in fact, your response is a little strange. Under your proposal the amount of sources that cover journals is immaterial. If they are indexed by WoS that is sufficient! I pointed out here the wide dispersion between the first page of indexed economic journals and the last page. Also note that by my off the cuff extimation, a little less than half of the indexed journals would meet planks one or three of your proposal (I find plank 2 so indiscriminate as to not warrant discussion), even with very narrow definitions of "fields" and very loose notions of "influential". My problem is that the guideline as written allows us to write articles for journals where there is no reasonable expectations of sourcing. Hence there would be only two avenues for content: material from the subject itself (or from some directory ranking) and material from editor interpretation. The rest of the problems (2 & 3) flow from that almost directly. Protonk (talk) 22:27, 12 December 2009 (UTC)
- I very strongly agree with your point number 1. There is no way, even with several librarians like DGG working on this problem, that Wikipedia can hope to compete with Thomson Reuters or even the government workers. I also agree with point 3. But a list could be a table with impact factors or other metrics to help the user understand what is a prominent journal. I offer this list idea as a compromise; I will not agree to a guideline that exempts articles on journals from having secondary sources. In a way, Wikipedia could be better than PubMed or Scopus, it could be a resource of articles on scholarly journals that have crossed over into the lay world. Abductive (reasoning) 05:54, 11 December 2009 (UTC)
- What I would like to support is a system of lists of journals. I proposed this above; if a journal isn't a complete joke, but there isn't very much in the way of sources or encyclopedic content, why can't it be a redirect to a list? The list can then show useful, standardized information such as the date of founding, number of issues per year, editor, contact info and so forth. Abductive (reasoning) 05:11, 11 December 2009 (UTC)
- I think an affirmative case needs to be made supporting "Articles on academic journals form a framework for high-quality article references and are thus fundamentally different from other classes of articles for which there are notability requirements". I'm certainly not convinced. Protonk (talk) 05:08, 11 December 2009 (UTC)
- To Crusio:
- "Inclusionist" and "deletionist sides" do not exist. People have different views on the appropriate inclusion standards, but nobody is an advocate for keeping borderline articles, or for deleting them. Proliferation of notability guidelines that stray from Wikipedia's basic content policies is harmful in part because people focus on the wrong question of "does this guideline permit too much, too little, or just the right amount?" The right question is much more simple: "what topics can we write articles about that pass wp:npov?"
- You seem to think applying this guideline will be good in part because afd outcomes won't depend on who happens to participate. Please explain how this guideline will result in consistent afd results, when its application will necessarily involve subjective standards such as "frequently," "historic," and "influential."
- You have argued elsewhere, in favor of WP:PROF and in favor of this guideline, that WP:N is absurdly "inclusive" as applied to journals and professors. The reason you give is that, as long as a journal or professor is cited somewhere (or in at least two places), they will pass WP:N because a citation is a "source" for the purposes of WP:N. This is a basic misreading of WP:N. WP:N requires significant coverage. Citations don't count. 160.39.212.108 (talk) 09:03, 12 December 2009 (UTC)
- Ad 1. As far as I know, the terms "inclusionist" or "deletionist" are commonly used on WP, but who cares about that terminology as long as we know what we are talking about? I agree that articles should be neutral and NPOV. As I argued above, I maintain that we can do that for any journal without exception. The only question to decide is indeed where to put the bar.
- Ad 2. Point taken. However, it is very difficult to phrase the main criteria more stringent. Even GNG is phrased in such a way ("If a topic has received significant coverage"). That is why there are notes that are an integral part of the proposed guideline and that explain what is meant with words like "significant" and such.
- Ad 3. I actually agree with you that such citations would not fulfil GNG. However, that comment of mine (which I don't really remember where I posted it) you are referring to was in reaction to comments that were being used in AfD discussions. There were articles on academics that I proposed for deletion that were subsequently kept, because "more than 10 reliable sources cite this person's work! That's what I call notability!". Yes, they are a misreading of GNG. But fleshing things out a bit more in specialist guidelines has the advantage that GNG itself doesn't become too bloated and that such misreadings become impossible.
- General remark: In recent days a flurry of journal articles have been proposed for deletion. In a fair number of these AfDs (or PRODs) I have voted "delete" (or added a prod2). In all cases, I could in good faith cite "does not meet WP:Notability (academic journals)". The current proposal is not a blank check to write a stub on just any journal. On the other hand, this proposal is not a blank check to delete each and any journal stub around. I maintain that (with perhaps a few tweaks), it could be a good compromise. If the anonymous IP above does not think that the text is clear enough, I look forward to its suggestions to remedy this. --Crusio (talk) 12:54, 12 December 2009 (UTC)
- I have been combing through the articles on journals, and have found a strong congruence between an article meeting the GNG and meeting the defeated proposal. People should trust in the existing process. Abductive (reasoning) 13:23, 12 December 2009 (UTC)
- This was kept under this proposal: Biomedical Imaging and Intervention Journal. Doesn't meet the WP:GNG, not in PubMed, not in WoS, only in Scopus, hardly any citations to it. Fences&Windows 00:18, 13 December 2009 (UTC)
- Well, I'm not sure Juliancolton used this failed guideline. We'll just have to wait until people realize that new journals are forced to spam every way they can. I get a few emails every week from newly launched journals, asking me to contribute articles. Biomedical Imaging and Intervention Journal will be renominated and deleted someday, becuase fundamentally it is non-notable. Abductive (reasoning) 02:23, 13 December 2009 (UTC)
- It is not unusual that we have effective uniform consensus at AfD on the practical notability of a topic even when we have been unable to enact a formal guideline: I will mention for example shopping centers ,elementary schools, & high schools, and where we have rather exclusionist practical consistent results on the first two and inclusionist on the 3rd. (FWIW, I not only support but have actively worked for all three of those common outcomes, the deletionist as well as the inclusioinist, --and it took a good deal of persuasion for me to convince me to inclusionist on high schools). I think the result of BMIJ does represent the practical consensus, that a major disciplinary index + Scopus is sufficient. I fully expect future AfDs will be judged on that basis.
- There is however a basic problem, which the guideline does not really take account of: it is very easy to start a great number of online only open access journals using off-the-shelf software. A number of people have done exactly this, and some of them have been systematically trying to add all of their titles individually to Wikipedia. I think very few people would support this, and I have been supporting Crusio's deletion nominations, and have also gotten in touch off wiki with some of the publishers involved, to explain the advantages in waiting until a journal is properly established--by which I mean has a representation in appropriate indexes and a significant body of publication. Even the longest established of such publishers, BMC, still has most of its journals unrepresented in WoS or Scopus, and these are still considered not notable here. The requirement for a significant body of publication in fact goes hand in hand with the requirement for indexes, as journals inherently rarely get citations the first year or two of publication. As an analogy, both commercial and non-commercial publishers have told me that they typically expect a journal not to break even financially until after the third year at the earliest. The idea that all peer reviewed publications are notable is one that I would strongly resist--quite apart from the matter of judging the actual strength of the peer-review, which i=n some cases can be rather nominal--as I have first hand knowledge). DGG ( talk ) 05:00, 19 December 2009 (UTC)
- Well, I'm not sure Juliancolton used this failed guideline. We'll just have to wait until people realize that new journals are forced to spam every way they can. I get a few emails every week from newly launched journals, asking me to contribute articles. Biomedical Imaging and Intervention Journal will be renominated and deleted someday, becuase fundamentally it is non-notable. Abductive (reasoning) 02:23, 13 December 2009 (UTC)
- This was kept under this proposal: Biomedical Imaging and Intervention Journal. Doesn't meet the WP:GNG, not in PubMed, not in WoS, only in Scopus, hardly any citations to it. Fences&Windows 00:18, 13 December 2009 (UTC)
- I have been combing through the articles on journals, and have found a strong congruence between an article meeting the GNG and meeting the defeated proposal. People should trust in the existing process. Abductive (reasoning) 13:23, 12 December 2009 (UTC)