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Open Access Makes Research More Widely Cited, Helping Spread … – Techdirt

from the share-the-knowledge dept

Open access has been discussedmany timeshere on Techdirt. There are several strands to its story. Its about allowing the public to access research they have paid for through tax-funded grants, without needing to take out often expensive subscriptions to academic titles. Its about saving educational institutions money that they are currently spending on over-priced academic journals, and which could be better spent elsewhere. Its about helping to spread knowledge without the friction that traditional publishing introduces, ideally moving to licenses that allow academic research papers to be distributed freely and without restrictions.

But theres another aspect that receives less attention, revealed here by a new paper that looks at how open access articles are used in a particular and important context that of Wikipedia. There is a natural synergy between the two, which both aim to make access to knowledge easier.The paper seeks to quantify that:

we analyze a large dataset of citations from Wikipedia and model the role of open access in Wikipedias citation patterns. We find that open-access articles are extensively and increasingly more cited in Wikipedia. What is more, they show a 15% higher likelihood of being cited in Wikipedia when compared to closed-access articles, after controlling for confounding factors. This open-access citation effect is particularly strong for articles with low citation counts, including recently published ones. Our results show that open access plays a key role in the dissemination of scientific knowledge, including by providing Wikipedia editors timely access to novel results. These findings have important implications for researchers, policymakers, and practitioners in the field of information science and technology.

What this means in practice is that for the general public open access articles are even more beneficial than those published in traditional titles, since they frequently turn up as Wikipedia sources that can be consulted directly. They are also advantageous for the researchers who write them, since their work is more likely to be cited on the widely-read and influential Wikipedia than if the papers were not open access. As the research notes, this effect is even more pronounced for articles with low citation counts basically, academic work that may be important but is rather obscure. This new paper provides yet another compelling reason why researchers should be publishing their work as open access as a matter of course: out of pure self interest.

Follow me @glynmoody onMastodon. Originally posted to the Walled Culture blog.

Filed Under: access to information, open access, research, sharing knowledge, studies Companies: wikipedia

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Open Access Makes Research More Widely Cited, Helping Spread ... - Techdirt

Freed Ukrainian P.O.W.s Report Abuses in Russian Captivity – The New York Times

Shot through the jaw and tongue by a snipers bullet last year in the last days of the grinding siege at the Azovstal steel plant in Ukraine, Senior Sgt. Maksym Kushnir could not eat or talk, and could barely breathe.

But when he hobbled out of abunker last May with hundreds of other wounded Ukrainian soldiers in a surrender negotiated with Russian forces, there was no medical help or any sign of the Red Cross workers they had been promised.

Instead, Sergeant Kushnir, nine years a soldier and a poet since childhood, said he was taken on a two-day bus journey into Russian-controlled territory and left on a bed to die, with his jaw shattered and gangrene spreading across his tongue.

I thought it was the end, he said. For the first three to four days, they did not do anything. They expected me to die on my own.

That Sergeant Kushnir survived and returned home to tell the tale is one of the success stories of the war. Even as the two sides are locked in full-scale conflict, Ukrainian and Russian officials have been exchanging hundreds of prisoners of war almost weekly.

Yet the prisoner exchanges have also revealed a grim reality. Ukrainian soldiers have come home with tales of appalling suffering in Russian captivity executions and deaths, beatings and electric shocks, a lack of health care and near-starvation rations.

Ukraine allows the International Committee of the Red Cross access to the Russian prisoners of war it is holding, an indication that it is meeting its obligations under international conventions of war. Russia does not. It restricts outside monitoring and has confirmed the identities of only some of those it is holding.

Ukrainian officials and former prisoners say Ukrainian captives were in a visibly worse state than the Russian prisoners at exchanges.

We were skinny like this, Sergeant Kushnir said, holding up his little finger. Compared to us, they looked well. We were thin and bearded. They were shaved and washed.

Its a classic abusive relationship, said Oleksandra Romantsova of the Center for Civil Liberties, a Ukrainian organization that was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize last year, summing up the treatment of Ukrainian prisoners.

It is unclear how many Ukrainian soldiers are prisoners of war or missing in action. Russia has provided only partial lists of those it is holding, and Ukraine does not release any numbers. But human rights organizations say there are at least 8,000 to 10,000 prisoners, and Ukrainian officials did not dispute those figures.

And more Ukrainians have been taken in the fighting in and around the city of Bakhmut in recent months, according to people working to bring prisoners home. There are believed to be far fewer Russians held by Ukraine.

Some Ukrainian soldiers have also been placed on trial in Russia on dubious charges, and have received lengthy sentences in the Russian penal system, said Oleksandr Pavlichenko of the Ukrainian Helsinki Human Rights Union.

Five hundredmedical personnel and hundreds offemale soldiers and woundedare among the prisoners of war, said Andriy Kryvtsov, the chairman of Military Medics of Ukraine. He said 61 military medics remained in captivityand called for their release.

Dr. Yurik Mkrtchyan, 32, an anesthetist,was among more than 2,000taken prisoner after battles atthe Ilyich steel plant in Mariupol in April last year, many of themwounded soldiers he was caring for.

He said the Russians provided medical assistance only when he begged themand transferred the wounded to a hospital only when they were close to death.

Dr. Mkrtchyan, who was released after a prisoner exchange inNovember, said he remained anxious about the conditions of the wounded, including amputees.

They were just the boys who protected our hospital, he said. Most of them are still in captivity, and I see no excuse or explanation for that because they are already disabled, they cannot fight, there is no reason to keep them in prison.

Former prisoners and human rights groups say Ukrainian captives, including the wounded and pregnant female soldiers, have been subjected to relentless beatings.

Dr. Mkrtchyan described how new arrivals had to run a gantlet of prison guards who beat them with sticks, a hazing ritual known as a reception. He recalled running, head down, through the torrent of blows, and seeing a fellow prisoner on the ground. The soldier, a wounded prisoner with serious burns named Casper, was killed by the beating, he said.

Maksym Kolesnikov, 45, was among more than 70 Ukrainian soldiers and four civilians who were captured in the days just after the Russian invasion in February 2022, when Russian troops overran his base near the town of Hostomel, north of Kyiv, Ukraines capital.

The men were taken for interrogation to a filtration camp in a disused factory, where their commander was beaten within earshot of the whole unit. The Russian network of filtration camps, where military and civilian Ukrainians are screened and interrogated, have been widely criticized for violations of human rights.

After a few days, Mr. Kolesnikov and his fellow detainees were moved to a Russian prison in the Bryansk region, near the Ukraine border.

The reception beating lasted five hours. I was kneed in the face, he said. The beatings continued daily for a month. The guards used rubber truncheons, plastic piping, wooden rulers and knotted pieces of rope, or just kicked prisoners, he said.

Prisoners nicknamed one group of guards the electricians because they tormented prisoners with electric shocks.

The captives were dangerously malnourished, Mr. Kryvtsov said.

It was a good day when you found a potato in your soup, said Mr. Kolesnikov, who added that he lost about 75 pounds in captivity.

He said he suffers from a compressed spine from malnutrition, and hip and knee injuries from the prolonged beatings.

Oleh Mudrak, 35, the commander of the First Azov Battalion, was unrecognizable and painfully thin when he returned from four months in captivity after being taken prisoner at the Azovstal plant in Mariupol, said his nephew Danylo Mudrak.

He regained the weight and underwent surgery on his shoulder, but five months after his release, he died of a heart attack, Danylo Mudrak said.

Members of the Azov battalions, long painted as neo-Nazis by Russia as part of its justification for the war, came in for especially harsh treatment, according to Maj. Dmytro Andriushchenko, who was a deputy commander of the Second Azov Battalion when he was taken prisoner at Azovstal. Azov was like a red rag for them, he said.

Major Andriushchenko was in a penal colony at Olenivka in July when an explosion ripped through a barracks, killing at least 50 Azov members. Likeseveral former inmates of Olenivka who wereinterviewed, he accusedRussia of orchestrating the explosion.

The prison guards closed the gates to the barracks, preventing survivors from escaping, MajorAndriushchenko said.

Dr. Mkrtchyan, who was in the same penal colony, said he and other Ukrainian medics urged the guards to let them help the wounded, but they were not allowed out of their building.

Russia has blocked calls for an independent investigation into the explosion and blames it on a Ukrainian strike.

For some of the wounded from Azovstal, visits by Russian television crews may have been a lifeline. The publicity created pressure on the Russian authorities to care for the prisoners, who were already weak from their time under siege in Azovstal with little food and water, Sergeant Kushnir said.

With his broken jaw and gangrenous tongue, Sergeant Kushnir could not lie down and sat with his head in his arms for several days without painkillers or antibiotics.

Eventually, he was moved to another hospital where doctors amputated his tongue and wired his jaw closed.

He dreamed of eating. He wrote some verse:

Have mercy on me, fate. Im alive.

Dont punish me mercilessly.

The physical pain was not as hard to bear as the uncertainty ofbeing a captive, he said.

When you dont know what to prepare for, what the next day will bring, he said, especially after seeing what the Russians were doing to our men, and being in constant expectation of death, it is not a cool feeling at all.

At the end of June, Sergeant Kushnir and other wounded men from Azovstal were loaded onto buses and driven to the front line to be exchanged.

Back in Ukraine, he has been through multiple operations and spent months learning to talk again by exercising the scar tissue at the back of his throat.

His surgeon, Dr. Vasyl Rybak, 44, the head of the department of rehabilitation and reconstructive surgery at a hospital in Odesa, took bone from his hip to reconstruct his jaw, but when that did not work, he inserted a titanium jaw, created at a 3-D printing lab in the city of Dnipro.

Next, Dr. Rybak plans to learn from pioneers in India how to create a new tongue for his patient from muscle tissue in his chest.

Hes a hero, he said of Sergeant Kushnir, during a break after surgery. They all are.

Oleksandr Chubko and Dyma Shapoval contributed reporting.

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Freed Ukrainian P.O.W.s Report Abuses in Russian Captivity - The New York Times

Ukraine downs Russian drones but some get through due to gaps in air protection – Yahoo News

KYIV, Ukraine (AP) Ukrainian air defenses downed 32 of 35 Shahed exploding drones launched by Russia early Tuesday, most of them in the Kyiv region, officials said, in a bombardment that exposed gaps in the countrys air protection after almost 16 months of war.

Russian forces mostly targeted the region around the Ukrainian capital in a nighttime drone attack lasting around three hours, officials said, but Ukrainian air defenses in the area shot down about two dozen of them.

The attack was part of a wider bombardment of Ukrainian regions that extended as far as the Lviv region in the west of the country, near Poland.

The Shahed drones made it all the way to Lviv because of the inability of air defense assets to cover such a broad area, Ukrainian air force spokesman Yuriy Ihnat said.

Air defense systems are mostly dedicated to protecting major cities, key infrastructure facilities, including nuclear power plants, and the front line, he said.

There is a general lack of air defense assets to cover a country like Ukraine with a dome like Israel has, he said, in a reference to Israels Iron Dome aerial defense system.

In the Lviv region, the Russian strike hit a critical infrastructure facility, starting a fire, according to Lviv Gov. Maksym Kozytskyi.

Russia also struck the southern Zaporizhzhia region of Ukraine with ballistic missiles.

Ukraines air defenses have been reinforced with sophisticated weapons from its Western allies, allowing it a higher success rate recently against incoming drones and missiles.

Previously, a winter bombardment by Russia damaged Ukraines power supply, though speedy repairs blunted that Kremlin effort.

The latest aerial assaults behind Ukraines front line coincided with the early stages of a Ukrainian counteroffensive, as it aims to dislodge the Kremlins forces from territory occupied since Russias full-scale invasion in February 2022.

The counteroffensive has come up against heavily mined terrain and reinforced defensive fortifications, according to Valerii Zaluzhnyi, the commander-in-chief of Ukraines armed forces.

Story continues

Russia has also mustered a large number of reserves, he said in a post accompanying a video of him visiting front-line positions with other senior officers.

Heavy battles are taking place in eastern Ukraine, around Bakhmut, Lyman, Avdiivka and Marinka, the Ukrainian armed forces said. Russia shelled 15 cities and villages in the eastern Donetsk region, wounding five civilians, including three in Chasiv Yar near Bakhmut, according to Ukraines presidential office.

Despite the fierce resistance of the occupiers, our soldiers are doing everything possible to liberate Ukrainian territory. The operation continues as planned, Zaluzhnyis post said.

In other developments, Russias Foreign Intelligence Service, known by its acronym SVR, invited Ukrainian diplomats stationed abroad to come to Russia with their families to avoid returning to Ukraine. It claimed many Ukrainian diplomats are unwilling to return home after their tours and want refugee status in the European Union and Asian countries where they worked.

___

Follow APs coverage of the war in Ukraine at https://apnews.com/hub/russia-ukraine

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Ukraine downs Russian drones but some get through due to gaps in air protection - Yahoo News

Deputy commander and entire battalion of Russian troops from South Ossetia killed in south Ukraine – Yahoo News

Russian occupier Tekhov Aivengo was killed during the fighting for the village of Pyatykhatky

During the fighting for the village of Pyatykhatky in Zaporizhzhya Oblast, a deputy battalion commander from South Ossetia and several hundred other Russian troops were killed, Russian propagandist Telegram channels reported on June 18.

The deputy commander killed was said to be from the Storm Ossetiabattalion, and was named Tekhov Aivengo.

He was allegedly surrounded along with his battalion, and about 300Russian soldiers were killed.

The propagandists write that this unit had allegedly "decided to stand tothe end."

On June 19, Deputy Minister of Defense of Ukraine Hanna Malyarconfirmed that the Ukrainian military had liberated the village ofPyatykhatky in Zaporizhzhya Oblast.

Read also: Ukrainian military shows liberated Blahodatne in Donetsk Oblast video

In total, during the two weeks of the offensive in the Berdyansk andMelitopol sectors of the front, the Tavria grouping units have de-occupiedeight settlements:

Novodarivka,

Levadne,

Storozheve,

Makarivka,

Blahodatne,

Lobkove,

Neskuchne,

Pyatykhatky.

Read also: Details of the storming and successful liberation of Neskuchne - an interview with a soldier

Units in the Tauride sector advanced into enemy territory up to 7kilometers. The area liberated on the southern front amounts to 113square kilometers.

On June 15, Malyar reported that the offensive continues in severaldirections as the Ukrainian Armed Forces are gradually but surelyadvancing and inflicting significant losses on the enemy.

General Mark Milley, chairman of the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff, saidUkraine's counter-offensive to retake Russian-held territory would bedifficult and involve fierce fighting.

Were bringing the voice of Ukraine to the world. Support us with a one-time donation, or become a Patron!

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Deputy commander and entire battalion of Russian troops from South Ossetia killed in south Ukraine - Yahoo News

Horrors Of Trench Warfare Captured In Viral Ukrainian Special Ops Footage – The War Zone

In some of the most intense footage we have seen since Russia began its all-out invasion of Ukraine 16 months ago, a team from the Ukrainian 73rd Naval Special Operations Center (NSOC) is seen wiping out Russian troops in a trench somewhere on the southern front of the ongoing counteroffensive.

The video shows combat strikingly reminiscent of the brutal close-quarters fighting that took place in the trenches of France during WWI. The video looks more like a scene from 1917 then from a modern battlefield. In this 1-minute-57-second video segment, the Ukrainian special operators - roughly equivalent to U.S. Navy SEALs - enter the trench and one by one kill Russian troops as they snake through the labyrinth of tight, blind corners.

Editor's note: the video in this below contains extremely graphic scenes of combat. Viewer discretion is highly advised:

The video, taken by one of the operators wearing a helmet-mounted camera, begins with the 73rd NSOC team approaching the deeply dug trench complex and opening fire while turning left at the entrance. As the team continues a short distance down the trench, a Russian soldier appears from around the corner and is immediately shot dead. He slumps to the ground face down and is shot a few more times to ensure he is no longer a threat.

About 69 seconds into the video, two more Russian soldiers approach the Ukrainians from another section of trench and are also quickly gunned down. Some 10 seconds later, a Ukrainian operator is seen tossing a grenade into the trench network. About 10 seconds after that, another grenade is tossed.

At about 87 seconds into the video, there is a right orange-yellow flash, followed by the sounds of shouting and more gunfire, though what happens next is unclear.

In a post on its Telegram channel Monday where the video first appeared, the Ukrainian Special Operations Forces (SSO) claimed the team entered the trench from the rear, surprised its occupants, and killed 10 Russians.

"In the south, during the mission, the operators of the special purpose marine center were able to enter the rear of the enemy," the SSO said on its Telegram channel. "A combat group of SSO soldiers caught the enemy by surprise. Recovering from the surprise, some enemy soldiers tried to resist. But, as you can see from the video shot by one of our soldiers - in vain."

The graphic video underlines the chaotic and brutal nature of warfare the claustrophobic horror of fighting in trenches and the sudden immediacy of death. Though technology has changed greatly since the "Great War" - allowing us rapid access to such scenes, for one - the human element of combat and the horrors that go along with it remains the same.

Yuriy Butusov, editor of the Ukrainian CENSOR.net news outlet who has seen plenty of combat footage, was particularly moved by what he saw in this video.

One of the most stunning close-quarters battles captured on video in the history of modern wars, he said.

Contact the author: howard@thewarzone.com

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Horrors Of Trench Warfare Captured In Viral Ukrainian Special Ops Footage - The War Zone