Type of site | Question and answer Open peer review |
---|---|
Owner | Roger Cattin [1] |
Created by | Abhimanyu Pallavi Sudhir, Rahel Knoepfel and Roger Cattin |
URL | physicsoverflow |
Commercial | No |
Registration | Optional |
Launched | April 2014 [2] |
Content license | User contributions under CC BY-SA 3.0 [2] |
PhysicsOverflow is a physics website that serves as a post-publication open peer review [2] platform for research papers in physics, as well as a collaborative blog and online community of physicists. It allows users to ask, answer and comment on graduate-level physics questions, post and review manuscripts from ArXiv (which lists PhysicsOverflow discussion pages among its trackbacks [3] ) and other sources, and vote on both forms of content.
In addition to the two primary forms of content, the PhysicsOverflow community also welcomes discussions on unsolved problems, and hosts a chat section for discussions on topics generally of interest to physicists and students of physics, such as those related to recent events in physics, physics academia, and the publishing process. [2]
PhysicsOverflow was started in April 2014 as a physics-equivalent of MathOverflow by Rahel Knöpfel, a physics PhD at the University of Rostock, high-school student Abhimanyu Pallavi Sudhir, and Roger Cattin, a retired professor of computer science at the University of Applied Sciences, Switzerland. [2] The site was initially a mere question-and-answer forum, as it was started by users dissatisfied by the policies of the Physics Stack Exchange, but it was eventually expanded to include a Reviews section in October 2014. [4]
PhysicsOverflow is well-known for its liberal moderation policy and hesitation to block contributors except for spam, as reflected in the website's bill of "user rights". [5] [6] The content is largely community-moderated, much like MathOverflow, although exceptions have been recorded. [7] [8]
Although the site's moderation policy is publicly available as part of the moderator manual, the site has been criticised for the excessive dispersion of policy-related material, such as the FAQ, the Bill of Rights, the moderator list and the Community Moderation threads, leading to reduced transparency. [9] [10] In response, the site's administrators posted a bulletin of all moderation-related content on the site on the homepage.
PhysicsOverflow runs Question2Answer, an open-source Q&A software, with a custom theme and several plugins and patches. [2] Some of its plugins have been used by other Question2Answer websites, such as the Open Science Q&A and the Physics Problems Q&A. [11] [12]
Quantcast records around 3000 monthly visitors and between 20,000 and 50,000 global page views to PhysicsOverflow every month, over half of whom are located in four countries: the United States (26.8%), India (9.2%), the United Kingdom (8.5%), and Germany (6.4%). [13] However, according to PhysicsOverflow's own data, only around 1500 users actually contribute content to the site, and 440 are active at a given point in time. [14]
The creation of PhysicsOverflow was well-received by the MathOverflow community. [15] PhysicsOverflow was also featured at the 5th Offtopicarium [16] and World Scientific's Asia-Pacific Physics News Letter. [17]
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