Reflecting on 2012

Post date: Jan 10, 2013 3:21:03 AM

Nice reflections on research from Daniel Lemire:

http://lemire.me/blog/archives/2013/01/01/reflecting-on-2012/

"The new year (2013) is here. So, it is time to reflect on what I have done and seen in 2012.

As a researcher, one of the most interesting innovations in 2012 has been the emergence of the Google Scholar profiles. They are pages where Google aggregates the work of a given researcher. I have long advocated that we should pursue an author-centric model and I think we are finally getting there: Google Scholar allows you to subscribe to the new publications of an author. Unfortunately, Google has focused on the profile pages on citations: this encourages people to game the system by boosting artificially their citation counts. We will need better metrics if we want to openly assess researchers. To improve matters, I have started a small project described in my post From counting citations to measuring usage.

What is rather remarkable is that Google is actually disrupting the academic publication business… even though it is almost certainly not profitable for Google to do so. They are definitively creating value: it was far easier to find scientific references in 2012 than it was before thanks to the progress Google is making with Google Scholar.

Similarly, Google has kept pushing the state-of-the-art in database research with papers such as Processing a Trillion Cells per Mouse Click. This is remarkable especially if you consider that in academic circles, the physical design of databases has long been considered a solved problem. Clearly, academic wisdom was wrong.

Academics like myself often like to pretend that innovation starts with academic research which then migrates to industry where the ideas are implemented. Google puts a dent in this theory, as they are clearly driving research in Computer Science. Over the Christmas break I finally got around to reading Kealey’s Sex, Science And Profits who argues convincingly that this is true in general: the magical knowledge transfer from academic research to industry would account to only about 10% of all industrial innovations, and not the most valuable 10%.

I think that 2012 was a year when many academics like myself thought about the future. We have seen the emergence of massive open online courses from prestigious American universities and a few start-ups. It is becoming clear that governments are under increasing financial stress while universities have failed to become more efficient. It is hard to imagine that universities will remain undisrupted for another 20 years.

Though blogging was supposed to be dying in 2012, I am still writing and reading blog posts almost every day. One of the interesting innovation on this my blog has been the use of the social coding platform GitHub for hosting the code related to my software posts. I really like it because it allows people to not only comment on my posts, but also review and change easily my code. This has lead to more interesting discussions.

I have also started using GitHub for some of my research projects. And I have been lucky enough to get feedback from people who were interested in my code for their own reasons. The fact that GitHub makes it easy to contribute to a stranger’s code is a blessing for me as a researcher. In fact, GitHub has encouraged me to focus even more of my research on programming by making it easier to have an impact through software.

Though I want to resist making predictions, I think that in 2013, more of my time will be spent programming openly. I will probably move closer to an ideal of open scholarship where research papers are only one of visible outputs of my research. I also hope to move closer to an ideal where much of my research is actually useful. It is maybe worth repeating here that most of what researchers write is never read by anyone (even when it is cited). We have focused on publishing so much that we ended up believing that it is an end in itself (it is not!).

I no longer measure the popularity of my blog using statistics. I feel that it is rather pointless given how many bots and dead subscriptions there are. However, I still assess the value of the blog based on the interactions it generates. Subjectively, 2012 was a good year: I got a lot of very interesting feedback.

Several of my blog posts were tied with my ongoing research. In an ideal world, I’d be able to decompose much of my research into short blog posts: I think I am getting closer to this model. In this respect, I am inspired by the famous Edsger Dijkstra who published little in journals and conferences: he thought that the formal peer review system was counterproductive. I am no Dijkstra, of course, but I find his model very compelling. I still value the feedback I get from a good journal review, and it certainly helps me improve my work (and the work of my graduate students), but I now see it as just one tool among many.

My blog publication rate has come down. This is part of a long term trend caused by the increased usage of the social platforms such as Google+ and Twitter and the collapse of RSS as a platform. That is, much of what I would have published on this blog back in 2005, I now publish on Google+ or Twitter. I tend to stick with my blog for the more substantial pieces."