harnad@phoenix.Princeton.EDU (S. R. Harnad) (01/20/90)
Proposal to create a moderated Usenet group called sci.psycoloquy.moderated An International, Interdisciplinary Forum for Scholarly Communication --- I have just taken over the editorship of the Bitnet Psychology Newsletter (earlier called "Psychnet") and would now like to establish it also as a moderated newsgroup on Usenet. Below is my first editorial about plans for the group. The only thing that I would add is that the group is, and will remain, a strictly noncommercial forum for information exchange among psychologists (and scholars and scientists from related disciplines). Distributing it regularly to sites through Usenet seems a more efficient use of the airwaves than an email list, given that there are about 25,000 academic psychologists in the US, probably near that number in the rest of the world, and countless students and other interested disciplines. I will be moderating the scientific discussion; co-moderating the group with me will be Perry London, Dean of the Graduate School of Applied and Professional Psychology at Rutgers University, with the assistance of Cary Cheriniss, Associate Professor in that School. They will be handling postings related to clinical psychology. The American Psychological Association has also agreed to sponsor the list on an experimental basis for eight months. This will pay a graduate student for doing weekly updates on the bitnet listerver, where we hope to build up the email addresses of all psychologists worldwide. Below is a revised copy of the first editorial, which gives further information about the list. ----- To Bitnet Newsletter (PSYCOLOQUY) Recipients (~1300 individuals and redistribution sites): This is just to let you know that this list is about to come under new editorship. We all owe many thanks to Bob Morecock for having founded the Bitnet Psychology Newsletter (originally "Psychnet," soon to undergo yet another name change to PSYCOLOQUY). He has performed a valuable service to the field of psychology in getting the list started and sustaining it through its first few years in an era in which this medium will become inceasingly important in scholarly communication. There are some rather ambitious plans under consideration for this list. Academic email networks can be much more than bulletin boards for meetings, abstracts and notices, as most of them are. They are a potentially revolutionary medium for disseminating and discussing new findings and ideas -- "Scholarly Skywriting." The global scope and lightening pace of intellectual exchanges in this medium are uncannily well suited to the thought processes of the creative mind -- or so I believe, at any rate, and this hypothesis will soon be put to the test. Along with the notices that will continue to appear, and that you are encouraged to continue to submit, there will be demo's of skywriting. At first they will be circulated to the list as a whole. Then they will only be archived; to continue receiving them you will either have to request the volumes from listserv or to sign up for special sublists devoted to the topic under discussion. Occasional summaries or samples will be sent to the list as a whole from topics whose discussions endure. [This procedure may be modified for the Usenet group.] Anyone can contribute to the scholarly discussion, but the submissions will be moderated by [Perry London and] me, and we will have to exercise selectivity where necessary, for reasons of length, relevance, quality or tone (skywriting discussions must be polite and dispassionate). In addition, I am actively looking for a list co-editor to handle contributions bearing on clinical practice and professional matters in psychology. Someone is under consideration now, but don't hesitate to send nominations. The individual should be a professional psychologist with some stature in the field, preferably with editorial or administrative experience. (Note that this is not a paid position, but a service we are contributing in order to develop this new medium.) [Perry London of GSAP has since agreed to do it, with Cary Cheriniss, but we are still looking for subeditors for the many subspecialties of psychology and allied fields: perception, cognition, personality/social psychology, development, operant/classical learning, comparative, physiological, etc.] Two more matters for now: (1) The bitnet list's subscibership is currently about 1300, which is not small for an email list but microscopic in relation to the size of the world psychological community. I encourage all subscribers to recruit new subscribers to the list (feel free to capture and circulate this text to others by email). The procedure for adding one's name automatically to the list is to send mail to Listserv@tcsvm.bitnet (or @finhutc) with SUB PSYCH Firstname Lastname on the first text line. To unsubscribe: UNSUB PSYCH (name not required) (2) Negotiations are currently underway with some psychological organizations for some support for maintaining the list. The services of the editors will continue to be voluntary, but some hired help will be needed for adding and updating the address file and bundling and posting accepted material. [APA has since agreed to sponsor PSYCOLOQUY on a trial basis.] Your reactions and suggestions are welcome. Looking forward to a rewarding collaboration, Stevan Harnad Department of Psychology Princeton University Princeton NJ 08544 -- 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