2018
DOI: 10.3233/isu-170856
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Astrophysicists and physicists as creators of ArXiv-based commenting resources for their research communities. An initial survey

Abstract: This paper conveys the outcomes of what results to be the first, though initial, overview of commenting platforms and related 2.0 resources born within and for the astrophysical community (2004)(2005)(2006)(2007)(2008)(2009)(2010)(2011)(2012)(2013)(2014)(2015)(2016). Experiences were added, mainly in the physics domain, for a total of twenty-two major items, including four epijournals -and four supplementary resources, thus casting some light onto an unexpected richness and consonance of endeavours.These exper… Show more

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Cited by 11 publications
(10 citation statements)
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“…With the recent explosion of preprints in the Life Sciences [103], a number of different services have emerged that 'overlay' peer review in one form or another on top of the developing preprint infrastructure [104], for example, biOverlay in the Life Sciences. However, the general uptake of such services appears to be fairly low [105]; most recently, this led to Academic Karma, a leading platform in this area, to shut-down (April 2019). In February 2018, the Prelights service was launched to help highlight biological preprints, and Peer Community In represents a service for reviewing and recommending preprints, both independent from journals.…”
Section: Beyond Traditional Peer Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…With the recent explosion of preprints in the Life Sciences [103], a number of different services have emerged that 'overlay' peer review in one form or another on top of the developing preprint infrastructure [104], for example, biOverlay in the Life Sciences. However, the general uptake of such services appears to be fairly low [105]; most recently, this led to Academic Karma, a leading platform in this area, to shut-down (April 2019). In February 2018, the Prelights service was launched to help highlight biological preprints, and Peer Community In represents a service for reviewing and recommending preprints, both independent from journals.…”
Section: Beyond Traditional Peer Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In numerous sub-disciplines of the physical sciences, mathematics and computer sciences, researchers share non-peer reviewed manuscripts to arΧiv, which currently publishes around 100 000 manuscripts each year (known as preprints or e-prints) (Ginsparg 2016 ; Pulverer 2016 ). Here, the purpose is for community-driven cost-effective and rapid communication of research results for collaboration and feedback, which has had differential uptake across the various research disciplines that use arΧiv (Marra 2017 ). Preprints are currently experiencing an explosive wave of growth in a variety of disciplines, catalysed by a wide range of different tools, platforms and community-level organisations (e.g.…”
Section: Innovations In ‘Open Peer Review’mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A much larger effect can be obtained in a topological system, where only one band exists at the Fermi level. [23][24][25][26][27][28][29][30] Recently, it was demonstrated that the maximal effect in a short junction based on the helical edges states of a quantum spin-Hall insulator (QSHI) is found when the Zeeman field is applied not only to the junction area, but to the superconductors as well. 31 In this paper, we show that the magnitude of the anomalous Josephson current allows one to identify whether a Josephson junction based on a nanowire with Rashba SOC and a Zeeman field is in the topologically nontrivial regime.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%