学术交流
说服
声誉
激励
互联网
出版
科学传播
公共关系
领域(数学)
公民科学
互联网隐私
匿名
轻推理论
计算机科学
出版
社会学
业务
万维网
政治学
广告
社会科学
科学教育
计算机安全
心理学
经济
微观经济学
社会心理学
教育学
数学
法学
纯数学
生物
植物
作者
Tiberius Ignat,Paul Ayris,Beatrice Gini,Olga Štěpánková,Deniz Özdemir,Damla Bal,Yordanka Deyanova
标识
DOI:10.3389/frma.2021.748095
摘要
The current digital content industry is heavily oriented towards building platforms that track users' behaviour and seek to convince them to stay longer and come back sooner onto the platform. Similarly, authors are incentivised to publish more and to become champions of dissemination. Arguably, these incentive systems are built around public reputation supported by a system of metrics, hard to be assessed. Generally, the digital content industry is permeable to non-human contributors (algorithms that are able to generate content and reactions), anonymity and identity fraud. It is pertinent to present a perspective paper about early signs of track and persuasion in scholarly communication. Building our views, we have run a pilot study to determine the opportunity for conducting research about the use of "track and persuade" technologies in scholarly communication. We collected observations on a sample of 148 relevant websites and we interviewed 15 that are experts related to the field. Through this work, we tried to identify 1) the essential questions that could inspire proper research, 2) good practices to be recommended for future research, and 3) whether citizen science is a suitable approach to further research in this field. The findings could contribute to determining a broader solution for building trust and infrastructure in scholarly communication. The principles of Open Science will be used as a framework to see if they offer insights into this work going forward.
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