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| Volume 1, Number 1, Editorial i, Page i |
doi:10.1167/1.1.i |
http://journalofvision.org/1/1/i/ |
ISSN 1534-7362 |
Editorial
Welcome to the Journal of Vision
Andrew B. Watson |
NASA Ames Research Center, Moffett Field, CA, USA |
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Welcome to the Journal of Vision. We hope you
will enjoy our inaugural issue. It is the product of efforts and
ideas of many individuals, notable among them Denis Pelli, Rachel
Necker, Bruce McClelland, Steven Shevell, Suzanne McKee, Joanne
Angle, Cindy Fuss, David Beebe, the Journal of Vision Editorial
Board, the ARVO Board of Trustees, the team at ScholarOne, and many
others. It is also an evolving entity, and we hope you will let
us know how it can be improved.
When we envisioned this journal, our ambition was
to create a vehicle that would serve, in a pure and optimal way,
the publishing and reading needs of working vision scientists. Inherent
in this dream was the notion of a digital, networked, or online
journal. All of the content of the journal would be represented
in digital form, and primary access to that content would be through
digital networks such as the internet. These two attributes, realized
now in the Journal of Vision, offer an array of wonderful
and powerful functions and capabilities that cannot be gained by
other means.
At first glance, it may appear that the principal
difference between this journal and a print journal is the medium:
one appears on a screen, the other on paper. But the medium is not
the message. The viewing surface is perhaps the least significant
distinction. Indeed, many of our readers may prefer to read on paper.
JOV, therefore, includes both screen-oriented (HTML) and print-oriented
(PDF) versions of each article. But if not electronic display, what
are the distinctive features and advantages of a digital, networked
scientific journal?
It is often said that journals serve two functions:
a news function and an archive function. To these
I would add a linking function, and an access function. The news
function, through which a journal notifies a community about a new
idea or empirical result, is served exceptionally well by a digital,
networked journal. Electronic mail and an automated alerting service
allow Journal of Vision to notify a reader of the appearance
of a new article or a new issue. In the future, we will enhance
this service to notify a reader only when papers on specific topics
are published, or to notify an author whenever their paper is cited.
But a news story is more than a headline. Beyond the
notification element of the news function is the communication element.
The journal must provide the author with expressive tools that enable
effective communication of the scientific work. In this regard a
digital journal has distinct advantages. Not only can it incorporate
traditional text and simple graphs, but also detailed images, color
graphics and images, as well as animated graphics and movies. In
the near future, scalable graphics and images will be available.
These expressive media are of particular value to the vision scientist.
Never again will we be limited to describing our stimuli,
now we can show them!
Other tools at the Journal of Vision author's
disposal are source code of computer models or experimental methods,
tables of numerical data, and interactive demonstrations. Because
the marginal cost of digital storage is low today, and will be lower
tomorrow, there are few practical limits to the material that can
be included. And the hierarchical nature of a digital hyperlinked
publication means that inclusion of numerous diverse resources can
be accomplished without clutter: resources are made visible only
upon request.
Finally, news is only news if it is timely. Instead
of waiting the traditional year or more to see one?s article in
print, Journal of Vision authors can broadcast their work
to the world in just twelve weeks. This extraordinarily fast publication
time is made possible by the paperless workflow of the journal,
which is again enabled by its digital, networked nature.
The archive function of a journal - the secure
and permanent storage of published articles - is of paramount importance
both to authors and to the scientific community. Permanence is perhaps
the most common concern that authors may have about submitting their
work to an online journal. But ironically, digital journals, composed
of bits that do not decay, and endowed with the capacity to be perfectly
and cheaply reproduced, may be more secure than their paper counterparts.
Journal of Vision and ARVO have guaranteed that all articles
will be permanently archived, and for those who have more faith
in the persistence of tangible things, an annual archive will also
be produced on optical disk.
But an archive is useless without access. A
digital, networked journal has the capacity to excel at the access
function, since copies of each article can be delivered on demand,
essentially without cost, to anyone, anytime, anywhere in the networked
world. But to achieve this access utopia, it is essential that the
journal impose no barriers whatsoever between reader and material:
no subscription fees, no membership requirements, no requests for
passwords or other information. The acid test for effortless access
is the "one-click" test: is it possible to reach a desired article
- from a citation in another paper, from an author?s website, from
a colleague?s email - with a single click? And to do so from any
networked device anywhere in the world? With the Journal of Vision,
it is, and always will be. Journal of Vision ensures this
result with two design features. The first is that each article
will be assigned a unique and permanent URL (uniform resource locator)
and DOI (digital
object identifier). The DOI is a new means for identifying and locating
digital content, a feature that we will discuss at greater length
on a future occasion. The second feature is that the Journal
of Vision does not charge readers (or require registration)
for access to any content. Consequently the assigned URL or DOI
will always take you directly to the article, with no annoying and
delaying requests for money or information along the way. While
this is of enormous benefit to readers, it may be of even greater
benefit to authors, whose goal is always to achieve the widest possible
distribution of their work.
Scientific reports are never solo performances. Invariably
they depend upon prior works: for methods, theory, and precursor
results. In printed papers, they link to this prior art through
bibliographic references. The diligent scientist will, in time,
and if geographic and economic conditions permit, seek out some
of that prior work to verify and enrich their understanding of the
subject. In the Journal of Vision, this linking function
is accelerated, enlarged, and extended to the future as well as
the past. Each bibliographic reference is accompanied by a link,
either to the article itself if it is available freely on the internet,
or to a search of a public citation database such as PubMed,
where additional information on the reference as well as related
publications will be returned. We also expect to participate in
CrossRef,
a collaboration among publishers which will allow direct linking
from reference to article (when available), or to the abstract.
Journal of Vision also currently provides two specialized
searches from the entry page for each article. The first is to related
articles on PubMed, the second is to articles in Journal of Vision
which cite the current article. Soon we will extend this latter
search to find all published articles, in whatever journal, which
cite the present article. These are forms of linking to the future
which are impossible in printed articles. As these features demonstrate,
the networked nature of the Journal of Vision makes each
article a nexus in a web of related scientific information.
In this, our first issue, we have taken a conservative
approach to the adoption of advanced technologies and features.
We have designed a simple interface that places the articles at
the fore, and that relegates all else to an accessible but unobtrusive
background. We have only assumed that the reader possesses the most
widespread and well-tested access tools and technologies. However,
our digital aspect equips us with a fluid and evolving nature that
will allow us to optimize our interface and to seamlessly integrate
new tools and technologies as they emerge. Examples in prospect
are SVG
(scalable vector graphics) for scalable high quality representation
of graphics, MathML,
for standardized representation and rendering of sophisticated mathematical
expressions, and XML,
a general, standardized means of representing complex digital objects
such as scientific articles. PNG
and other advanced graphic formats will allow more accurate color
rendition of visual stimuli. The DOI,
mentioned earlier, will allow efficient cross-referencing of articles
in other online publications. And of course, as we enter this new
age of information, the future will bring digital magic as yet undreamed
of. We are ready.
But in the end, it is the science that matters. This
shiny new vehicle would be but a digital illusion without content
of the highest quality. I look forward to fascinating reports that
clarify and deepen the mystery that is vision. I have enormous confidence
in the dedication and skill of our editorial board. With their efforts,
and your own, the Journal of Vision will achieve its goal,
to break down the barriers of time, space, and energy that separate
scientists from their science.
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