[sci.psychology] Academic Email Directory Needed in Cognitive/Biobehavioral Sciences

harnad@mind.UUCP (Stevan Harnad) (05/24/88)

computer science


(Originally to: Bob Morecock, Editor of Psychnet)

Bob, could I have a copy of your mailing list? If you want, you can have a
copy of mine, which is so far only 250 names long, and CVNet's vision list,
which you probably already have and is over 500 names long. [Peter Kaiser has
been kindly (and wisely) providing it for all (presumably qualified
professionals, for noncommercial, academic use).] I plan to use it to
communicate with BBS Editors and Associates, potential commentators, authors
and referees to circulate abstracts and to receive referee reports and
commentaries.
        BBS itself has over 3000 Associates in filing cards and computer files,
but I haven't yet got most of their email addresses, and I'm trying to collect
as many of them as I can, any way I can. (Also, many BBS Associates probably
don't have them yet, and I'm trying to encourage all to get and use them.)
        What we need is an academic email directory, jointly, for the
behavioral, cognitive, and bioneural sciences and related disciplines such as
computer science, linguistics and philosophy. (For the other disciplines too,
of course, but they cannot be my direct concern.) It occurred to me the other
day that this might be another mission  and mandate for Psychnet -- both to
create and make available such a directory and to actively lobby the
psychology and associated community to get involved in the medium.
        What triggered the idea was a notice on comp.society.futures about a
commercial email registry (National Email Register) that provides a
directory and searching for a fee to the commercial community. I have
no idea what proportion of the academic email community they have
listed, but it seems ridiculous that access to email addresses -- an
underutilized, powerful resource in urgent need of expansion and
encouragement -- should be retarded by the need to pay for and access
a commercial service for a fee. It's as if people had not yet discovered the
virtues of the telephone, yet could only find one another's numbers if
they paid a fee.
        It might be a good idea to post this. I'll send it to some other
relevant newsgroups too. I'd be willing to cooperate in forming a
cognitive/biobehavioral email list in any way I can.
                    Stevan Harnad, Editor, Behavioral & Brain Sciences

-- 
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