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Scientific publications are where results and knowledge derived by science are shared and taught to others in the world. Results are no use to anybody if they are not made available to other experts, to be discussed, critically evaluated, and built upon. Consequently, ever since the beginnings of modern science, various forms of publishing have played a central role in the work of researchers who need to be able to present their work intelligibly in written form to have it recognized by their peers. This philosophy of the full disclosure of the fruits of the intellectual work of scientists can sometimes conflict with the interest to protect it against abuse (e.g., patenting of work produced by others, occurrence information of plant species threatened by overexploitation, etc.).
While medieval and renaissance scholars predominantly produced books mostly written in Latin, more diverse venues of publication are available today, but especially articles ("papers") in journals maintained by scientific societies, institutes or commercial publishers now dominate in many fields. In recent decades, continuous and high-quality paper writing has become a key qualification of scientists, and increasing competition can lead to a mentality best described with the saying "publish or perish".
They are articles published in scientific journals, ranging from a few to at most a few dozen pages. In the natural sciences, research papers have today become the most important means of communicating results. They generally have a very schematic structure, consisting of:
Basically a research paper of only two to six pages that presents results of lesser importance.
A journal article that summarize the state of knowledge in a certain field of research by citing all relevant recent studies, without presenting new data of its own.
Scientific journals may also contain letters to the editor, book reviews, or rarely other types of articles.
Textbook
Presents the state of knowledge in a certain field of science in an easily accessible format. It can be aimed at very different audiences, ranging from school pupils to other professional scientists who may want to use it as a reference for their own university courses.
Conference proceedings
A collection of abstracts, i.e. short summaries of talks or posters that were presented at a scientific conference, in book form.
Monograph
A book, the exact scope of which depends on the area of research. Literally, it means a work that aims to present all that is known about a specific subject. In organismal biology, it refers to a thorough taxonomic treatment of all species of a group of organisms.
Flora / fauna / field guide
Books in organismal biology that help to identify the scientific name of plants or animals of a specific region, and provide additional information on the species.
Preprint
An unreviewed article made available directly by the scientist. They used to be printed on actual paper, available in advance of journal publication, but are now typically put up on arXiv or similar. Quality varies widely. But this is an entirely respectable method of getting the word out quickly (and staking out credit early), and is pretty much the standard way it's done in physics these days. The expectation is that anything that is any good will get a proper write-up with peer review before publication.
Before publication in reputable journals, scientific articles are generally sent out to two or more reviewers or referees from the same field of research to examine the quality of the paper. Based on the recommendations of these referees, the editor of the journal can then decide to reject a paper, require specific changes from the author(s) before publication, or accept it as is, although that rarely happens. Reputable textbook publishers will employ reviewers and editors in a comparable fashion.
This system, though imperfect, worked well until the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic in the early 2020's. At this time, researchers began to find that their manuscripts were no longer being handled in an objective, collegial fashion, but rather, were subject to non-scientific principles. Journal editors began to reject manuscripts without peer review that they felt were not in harmony with left leaning principles. The process of peer review is secret, so large volumes of data on this subject are not and will never be available for systematic analysis and conclusion. Yet, the anecdotal experience of investigators suggests that the peer review process now suffers at the hands of journal editors who have foregone the practice of the Scientifc Method with objectivity, and, in contrast, have adopted subjective, anti-science principles.[citation needed]
The prestige that is connected with different types of publications, e.g. book vs. article, differs between research fields, partly because of tradition, but partly because of the type of research that is conducted. Books are relatively hard to assess except by relying on the opinion of qualified colleagues. To be able to differentiate between more or less respectable journals, a number of criteria is usually employed: