Unfortunately a lot of researchers submit themselves to closed access journals due to prestige factors. I understand why a PhD student or academic might do this, to rake up impact factor points in order to graduate or get pass the tenure committee. But these guys are DeepMind, with high salary jobs already, without the academic BS, so you'd figure they would know better ...
This is Nature, the single most prestigious journal on science. It’s the Ivy League of PhDs. A publication in that journal is a guaranteed job safety in university circles.
We are. Nature has enormous prestige across all fields. It has the highest H-index.
Nature (the multidisciplinary journal) should not be confused with other Nature publications that have the name "Nature" in them, like Nature Neurscience or Nature Reviews Molecular Cell Biology.
What do you mean? H-index applies to individual researchers. All nature journals have high impact factors - and readership among hard scientists, but i dont think ML researchers read Nature every month. I understand that some reserachers need the prestige factor. But honestly , in the case of deep mind, i think they are giving prestige to Nature as an ML journal, where they previously had none. They could have published their results in a reputable open access journal like eLife instead, and do a service to the open access community. Publishing closed access is not a great direction to move towards. Also, why didn't they pay for Nature's open access option, it's not like they don't have the money.
> What do you mean? H-index applies to individual researchers.
H-index is also applied and calculated to publications (Journal h-index). IMHO It fits better to the multidisciplinary nature of the journals than other impact factors.
>some reserachers need the prestige factor. But
In academia things like Nobel price, Abel price, Turing price are signals of significance for those not in the field. They are usually received very late in career.
If you have several publications in Nature, the prestige level approaches those awards and you get the prestige when you are still active researcher. You get tenure or funding for research group. The value can be measured in millions.
I have yet to see ML phds at my university (a well reputed ML institute ) care for Nature. Everyone publishes in journals specific to their area.
* Nips, icml, iclr for all ML folk
* Cvpr, iccv for vision
* Nacl for nlp
* Siggraph for graphics
So on and so forth.
I wonder how nature finds reviewers for ML papers , given its generic nature. Even ML researchers themselves have been struggling to give good reviews in the aforementioned top conferences. I can't imagine how the reviewers at Nature could appropriately review papers of the same quality.
I would say the fact that machine learning / neural network theory is featured in Nature is quite a breakthrough. And neuroscience for that matter is quite an associated field of research.
Friend of mine recently published a paper in Nature on quantum computing. There is immense prestige in doing so.
no doubt, but the question is at what cost and for what reason. Nature editors are at best an arbiter of significance, a job that they often delegate to voluntary external referees anyway. Nature is not a speciaalized journal. Like Science, they offer prestige but bundling all the sciences in one journal does not make them useful for regular reading. It's a self-selecting process, and scientists who are open-science-minded should retarget this self-selection process to one of the good open access publishers. Why should it be Nature that gets the spotlight here and not eLife, an open publisher that is truly innovative.