harnad@phoenix.Princeton.EDU (S. R. Harnad) (03/22/90)
CALL FOR SQUIBS PSYCOLOQUY (Bitnet) now has a moderated Usenet twin, sci.psychology.digest. With this we enter the second, experimental phase in exploring the vast potential of this new medium for scholarly communication, under the sponsorship of the American Psychological Association (see forthcoming articles in the APA Monitor and Science Agenda). Note that this is the last time PSYCOLOQUY will appear on the unmoderated newsgroup, sci.psychology. To receive it from now on you must subscribe to sci.psychology.digest (or listserv@tcsvm.bitnet for the Bitnet version -- this does not affect Bitnet subscribers). PSYCOLOQUY/sci.psychology.digest is now calling for "squibs" -- brief postings of new ideas or findings in any area related to psychology, cognitive science or neuroscience on which you wish to invite peer discussion. Note the "peer." All contributions must be serious and informed, as contributions to refereed journals are; each posting will be peer-reviewed by the member of the editorial board specializing in its subject matter. (Nominations for the board are also invited; self-nominations should be accompanied by a CV). Use this medium to "pilot" new ideas and findings with your peers the world over. You will find that the potential speed and interactiveness of "scholarly skywriting" matches much more closely the natural speed and interactiveness of human thought than the slow turnaround times of conventional publication. Its scope is also global and interdisciplinary to a degree that has never before been possible. And yet, unlike "live" oral symposia, it has the constraints of the written medium (and peer review); so there is still a premium on reflection and answerability. The objective is eventually to draw the best minds in the field into active participation in this medium, even those who still find computers too unfriendly, by demonstrating its revolutionary potential in the evolution of ideas. Postings will be classified by subject matter, with informative subject headers that make it easy to browse or skip. (Your format suggestions are welcome.) Conventional bboard material -- abstracts, tech report notices, coneferences, journal contents, employment notices -- will continue to appear but will not be archived. The only form of contribution that will be archived electronically (and available by anonymous ftp) will be the peer-reviewed, scholarly, scientific and professional commentary, in the style of the "open peer commentary" feature of Behavioral and Brain Sciences (BBS, which one of the co-editors of PSYCOLOQUY, happens to edit). Ongoing discussions will have their own separate postings, with a recognizable identifying header, for those who wish to follow only them. (If an especially useful discussion archive on a particular topic evolves, I may publish it, with the contributors' permission, in Behavioral and Brain Sciences.) At first each archived files will be identified only by its subject header and posting date, but eventually a more formal citation format will be adopted (suggestions are again welcome). The ideal length for a squib is not much more than a screenful, but longer gems will not be rejected because of length alone. If length gets out of hand, however, only the author's summaries of long contributions will actually be posted, while the full file will be available by anonymous ftp to those who are following the discussion. Co-Editors: (scientific discussion) (professional/clinical discussion) Stevan Harnad Perry London Psychology Department Dean, Graduate School of Princeton University Applied and Professional Psychology Rutgers University -- Stevan Harnad Department of Psychology Princeton University harnad@clarity.princeton.edu srh@flash.bellcore.com harnad@elbereth.rutgers.edu harnad@pucc.bitnet (609)-921-7771