2020 EurekAlert! PIO Seminar
Preprints: New Questions, Pressures and Opportunities for the PIO
The rise of online preprint servers for scientific and medical research has offered scientists a convenient avenue for receiving immediate feedback from their peers. The availability of pre-peer-reviewed data in the public domain also offers opportunities for experienced journalists to mine for scoops while raising questions for scientists and public information officers (PIOs) on whether and how to communicate preliminary findings responsibly.
Join an international panel of PIOs as they share perspectives and strategies around preprints, and how PIOs can respond to this emerging practice, including:
- What benefits can be gained from communicating science at the preprint stage? Is it different by discipline?
- What role does the embargo play as preprints become more widespread?
- How does coverage at the preprint stage influence coverage of final peer-reviewed results?
- If preprint results promoted to journalists are later found to be different from peer-reviewed results, what are best practices for correcting public understanding?
- How can PIOs best advise authors who seek to promote their work at the preprint stage?
Speakers:
Bethany Baker | @PLOS
Senior Media Relations Manager
PLOS
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Karl Bates | @DukeResearch
Director of Research Communications at
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Duke University -
Linda Glaser | @LindaGlaser1
News & Media Relations Manager, College of Arts & Sciences
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Cornell University -
Mathias Jäger | @mat_jaeger
Press Officer
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EMBL -
Meagan Phelan | @MeaganPhelan
Executive Director, Science Press Package
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AAAS (Moderator) -
Jennifer Holshue | @EurekAlert
Deputy Director, Editorial Operations
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EurekAlert!