Friday, March 13, 2026

Why the Sri Aurobindo Ashram Is Painted in Light Purple

 

Colour, Colonial Memory, Climate, and Consciousness in White Town

Visitors walking through White Town in Puducherry often notice something subtle but persistent: the Sri Aurobindo Ashram and many of its associated buildings are painted not in stark white, nor in vivid colour, but in a restrained palette of light mauve, grey-blue, and lavender-tinted stone.

This is not an accident, nor merely a decorative choice. The colour emerges from three overlapping histories: French colonial urban aesthetics, the demands of climate, and the Ashram’s own philosophy of quiet inwardness — with an added layer of symbolic meaning drawn from the writings of Sri Aurobindo and The Mother.


1. The French Colonial Pastel Tradition

White Town (formerly Ville Blanche) was the European quarter of French India. Unlike British colonial towns, French urban design emphasised visual harmony over monumentality. Soft pastels — pale blues, greys, pinks, and mauves — were considered refined, domestic, and Mediterranean.

French manuals on colonial architecture recommended:

“Colours that soften light rather than dominate it, suitable for long streets and strong sun.”

This explains why even secular homes around the Ashram share a similar chromatic restraint. The Ashram did not impose a colour scheme on White Town; rather, it inherited and preserved an existing one.

Importantly, when the Ashram gradually acquired houses around its main building (from 1920s onward), it did not repaint them dramatically. Instead, it retained tones that blended into the quarter’s established visual language.


2. Climate and Material Reality

Puducherry’s coastal climate — heat, humidity, salt air — strongly favours light mineral paints.

Traditional limewash and later breathable paints:

  • reflect heat,

  • age gently,

  • and fade into softer hues rather than peeling harshly.

The Ashram’s colours often look different at different hours of the day — grey at noon, lavender at dusk, bluish in early morning. This mutability is not incidental; it is a property of thin, light-reflective coatings, not opaque modern paints.

In practical terms, the Ashram’s palette is:

  • economical,

  • durable,

  • and thermally sensible.

Auroville would later experiment with radical architectural materials; the Ashram, by contrast, chose continuity and understatement.


3. The Ashram’s Aesthetic of Non-Assertion

Sri Aurobindo never wanted the Ashram to announce itself architecturally. He resisted temples, symbols, uniforms, and dramatic external markers.

The Mother echoed this preference repeatedly. In Questions and Answers, she warned against spirituality that seeks visibility:

“If you want to show spirituality, you have already lost it.”

This attitude shaped the Ashram’s physical presence. The buildings do not compete with the street. They withdraw slightly, visually and psychologically.

In this sense, the pale mauve-grey colour functions almost as anti-colour — neither religious white nor celebratory saffron, neither colonial bravado nor nationalist symbolism.


4. Colour Symbolism in Sri Aurobindo and The Mother

Here the story becomes more subtle.

The Mother developed a detailed system of spiritual colour symbolism, documented in Words of the Mother and preserved today in the Ashram’s colour meditation cards. In this system:

  • Violet / mauve is associated with
    higher emotional consciousness, devotion, and transformation of the vital nature.

She wrote:

“Violet is the colour of the higher vital — devotion, surrender, and a movement towards transformation.”

Sri Aurobindo, in Letters on Yoga, also refers to violet and blue-violet states as transitional zones between mental and spiritual consciousness.

There is no known written directive saying “paint the Ashram violet for spiritual reasons.” Scholars and archivists are careful on this point. However, the long-standing consistency of the palette — maintained under the Mother’s direct supervision — strongly suggests resonance rather than coincidence.

In other words:
The colour was not chosen because of symbolism, but it was retained because it aligned with it.


5. Between White Town and the World

Placed between:

  • colonial White Town,

  • nationalist India,

  • and later, the experimental future of Auroville,

the Ashram’s colour becomes a visual philosophy.

It says:

  • We are here, but not separate.

  • We are distinct, but not assertive.

  • We belong to history, but are not owned by it.

As the Mother once remarked about the Ashram as a whole:

“It must be a place where nothing shocks, nothing attracts, but everything invites.”

The light purple walls do exactly that.


Conclusion: A Quiet Colour for a Quiet Revolution

The Ashram’s coloration is not branding. It is not ornament. It is not doctrine.

It is the product of:

  • French colonial restraint,

  • climatic wisdom,

  • and a spiritual tradition that valued inner change over outer display.

In a town full of strong histories and louder colours, the Ashram chose to speak softly — and has done so, quite literally, for over a century.

Thursday, March 12, 2026

The Birth—and Trouble—of Statistical Significance

How p < 0.05 Became Science’s Most Famous Threshold

If you have ever read a scientific paper, you have almost certainly seen a statement like:

“The result was statistically significant (p < 0.05).”

This tiny number—0.05—has quietly shaped scientific conclusions for nearly a century. It determines which results are celebrated, which papers get published, and sometimes even which careers flourish.

But where did this number come from?
Why 0.05 and not 0.03, 0.1, or 0.001?

And why are many scientists today arguing that our dependence on this threshold has created serious problems for science?

Let’s explore the story of statistical significance, the errors it produces, and the historical accident that turned 0.05 into a scientific dogma.


The Birth of Statistical Significance

The idea of statistical significance emerged in the early 20th century when scientists began grappling with a fundamental problem:

How do we know whether an observed effect is real or just due to random chance?

To address this, statisticians developed hypothesis testing.

The framework works like this:

  1. Start with a null hypothesis (H₀)
    Example: There is no difference between two treatments.

  2. Collect data.

  3. Calculate how surprising the data would be if the null hypothesis were true.

This probability is the p-value.

A small p-value suggests that the observed result would be unlikely if the null hypothesis were correct.


What Exactly is a p-value?

Mathematically, the p-value represents:

𝑝=𝑃(data as extreme as observed𝐻0 is true)

In simple words:

The p-value measures how surprising your data would be if nothing interesting were actually happening.

A small p-value means the data would be rare under the null hypothesis.


The Man Who Made 0.05 Famous

The threshold p < 0.05 is closely associated with the British statistician and geneticist Ronald Aylmer Fisher.


4

Fisher was one of the founders of modern statistics and population genetics. In 1925, he published a landmark book:

Statistical Methods for Research Workers

In that book, Fisher suggested a convenient guideline:

Results with p < 0.05 could be considered statistically significant.

But here is the crucial point:

Fisher never intended this to be a strict rule.

He wrote that 0.05 was merely a convenient benchmark, not a universal law.

Yet over time, scientists treated it exactly like one.


What Did Scientists Use Before Fisher?

Before Fisher’s work, statistics was far less standardized.

Researchers used several different approaches:

1. Probability thresholds varied widely

Different fields used thresholds like:

  • 1/10 (0.1)

  • 1/20 (0.05)

  • 1/100 (0.01)

There was no universal standard.


2. Direct probability reasoning

Scientists often asked questions like:

“What is the probability that this difference arose by chance?”

But they rarely used formal hypothesis testing.


3. Early work by Karl Pearson

Another major figure was Karl Pearson, who developed tests like the chi-square test.

However, Pearson did not promote a universal significance threshold.


The Neyman–Pearson Revolution

In the 1930s, statisticians Jerzy Neyman and Egon Pearson introduced a more formal decision framework.

They introduced the concepts of:

  • Type I error

  • Type II error

  • statistical power


The Two Errors of Significance

When we perform hypothesis testing, two kinds of mistakes can occur.

Type I Error: False Positive

A Type I error occurs when we reject the null hypothesis even though it is true.

Example:

You conclude a drug works when in fact it does not.

The probability of making this error is called the significance level (α).

This is where 0.05 comes from.


Type II Error: False Negative

A Type II error occurs when we fail to detect a real effect.

Example:

A drug actually works, but your study concludes that it does not.

The power of a statistical test is:

Power=1𝛽

This measures how likely we are to detect a real effect.


When “Significant” Became a Problem

Over time, the threshold p < 0.05 became deeply embedded in scientific practice.

But this created several problems.


The First Problem: Misinterpreting the p-value

Many scientists misunderstand what a p-value means.

Common incorrect interpretations include:

  • “p = 0.05 means there is a 95% chance the hypothesis is correct.”

  • “p = 0.05 means the result will replicate 95% of the time.”

  • “p < 0.05 proves the effect is real.”

All of these interpretations are incorrect.

The p-value only measures:

How surprising the data are under the null hypothesis.

It says nothing about whether the hypothesis itself is true.


The Binary Thinking Trap

The 0.05 threshold created a dangerous habit:

p-valueConclusion
0.049Significant
0.051Not significant

Yet these results are almost identical statistically.

Still, one result may be published while the other is ignored.

This binary thinking has distorted scientific decision-making.


The Rise of p-Hacking

Because journals prefer statistically significant results, researchers sometimes (often unintentionally) manipulate analyses until significance appears.

This practice is called p-hacking.

Examples include:

  • trying multiple statistical tests

  • analyzing subsets of the data

  • removing outliers selectively

  • collecting data until p < 0.05 appears

Each of these increases the chance of false discoveries.


The Multiple Testing Problem

This issue becomes especially severe in modern biology.

Imagine testing 20,000 genes for association with a disease.

If we use p < 0.05:

  • about 1000 genes may appear significant purely by chance

This is why fields like genomics now use multiple testing correction, such as:

  • Bonferroni correction

  • False Discovery Rate (FDR)


Statistical Significance vs Scientific Importance

Another issue is that statistical significance does not measure importance.

With very large datasets, even tiny effects become significant.

Example:

  • effect size = extremely small

  • p-value = extremely small

The result may be statistically significant but biologically trivial.

This is why modern papers increasingly report:

  • effect sizes

  • confidence intervals

  • biological interpretation


The Replication Crisis

In the last decade, large replication studies in psychology and biomedical research discovered something troubling:

Many statistically significant findings could not be reproduced.

This became known as the replication crisis.

Major contributing factors include:

  • small sample sizes

  • publication bias

  • p-hacking

  • misuse of p-values

  • multiple testing


The “Winner’s Curse”

There is also a phenomenon called the Winner’s Curse.

When a result barely passes the significance threshold, the estimated effect size is often overestimated.

Later studies typically find much smaller effects.

This explains why many exciting discoveries initially appear strong but weaken over time.


The Modern Reform Movement

In response to these problems, statisticians are proposing several reforms.


1. Lowering the significance threshold

Some scientists propose using:

  • p < 0.005 instead of 0.05

to reduce false discoveries.


2. Reporting effect sizes

Instead of only reporting p-values, studies should report:

  • magnitude of the effect

  • uncertainty around the estimate


3. Multiple testing correction

Common approaches include:

  • Bonferroni correction

  • False Discovery Rate (FDR)

These are essential in genomics and proteomics.


4. Pre-registration

Researchers declare their:

  • hypotheses

  • analysis plans

before collecting data.

This reduces p-hacking.


Where Science Stands Today

A century after Fisher’s suggestion, the 0.05 threshold still dominates scientific research.

Yet many statisticians now argue that science should move away from rigid thresholds and toward a more nuanced approach.

Instead of asking:

“Is this result significant?”

we should ask:

  • How large is the effect?

  • How reliable is the evidence?

  • Does it replicate?

  • Is it biologically meaningful?


A Final Irony

The most fascinating part of this story is that the famous threshold 0.05 was never meant to be a rule.

It was simply a convenient guideline suggested by Fisher nearly 100 years ago.

Yet that small number went on to shape the structure of modern science.

Sometimes, the biggest forces in science begin with the smallest numbers.

Two Utopias, Two Directions: Drawing Parallels Between the Formation of Israel and Auroville

At first glance, Israel and Auroville seem impossible to compare. One is a nation-state forged through war, law, and geopolitics; the other is a stateless experimental township devoted to human unity. Yet scratch beneath the surface, and striking parallels emerge—not because they pursued the same goals, but because they arose from similar historical pressures, shared psychological conditions, and overlapping human archetypes.

Both were born in the mid-20th century. Both were responses to civilizational rupture. Both attracted people willing to abandon normal life to build something radically new. And both reveal, in different ways, the limits of utopian imagination.

This essay explores what is similar, what is different, and what these two experiments reveal about the modern human condition.


Shared Historical Moment: Post-Catastrophe Idealism

Both Israel (1948) and Auroville (1968) emerged from the long shadow of World War II.

Israel

  • Formed in the aftermath of the Holocaust

  • Answered a collective Jewish question: How do we survive as a people?

  • Rooted in urgency, trauma, and existential threat

Auroville

  • Conceived amid post-war disillusionment, Cold War anxiety, and decolonization

  • Answered a different question: Can humanity transcend nation, religion, and violence altogether?

  • Rooted in philosophical dissatisfaction rather than immediate threat

Similarity:
Both were responses to failure—of Europe, of nationalism, of moral order.

Difference:
Israel was about collective survival; Auroville was about collective transcendence.


Who Came: The Psychology of the Settlers

Israel’s early settlers

  • Holocaust survivors

  • European Jews fleeing antisemitism

  • Zionist idealists

  • Many deeply secular, socialist, and anti-religious

They did not come for comfort. They came to build, defend, and endure.

Auroville’s early settlers

  • Europeans, Indians, Americans, Israelis

  • Post-war idealists, artists, engineers, seekers

  • Often disillusioned with nationalism, capitalism, and religion

They too abandoned comfort—but not to defend borders. They came to escape them.

Parallel:
In both cases, settlers were:

  • Young

  • Idealistic

  • Willing to live primitively

  • Motivated by belief rather than reward

Divergence:
Israel demanded sacrifice for continuity; Auroville demanded sacrifice for transformation.


Land Without People? A Shared Myth, A Shared Problem

Both projects rested—at least initially—on a dangerous simplification.

In Israel

  • Early Zionist rhetoric spoke of “a land without a people”

  • In reality, Palestinian Arabs lived there

  • This mismatch became a central, unresolved conflict

In Auroville

  • Land was acquired from Tamil villages

  • Often framed as “barren” or “wasteland”

  • In reality, it displaced agrarian and caste-structured rural life

Similarity:
Both projects underestimated:

  • The depth of existing human relationships to land

  • The cost of idealism imposed from above

Difference:
Israel’s conflict became violent and geopolitical.
Auroville’s conflict became bureaucratic, economic, and cultural.


Collective Living: Kibbutz and Community

Kibbutzim (Israel)

  • Radical collectivism

  • Shared property, shared labor

  • Military defense integrated into daily life

  • Over time: privatization and decline of original ideals

Auroville communities

  • Collective ownership (theoretically)

  • Shared labor and decision-making

  • No military, no coercive enforcement

  • Over time: informal hierarchies and economic stratification

Parallel:
Both tried to engineer new humans through new living arrangements.

Difference:
Kibbutzim were optimized for efficiency and survival.
Auroville communities were optimized for inner growth and experimentation.


Religion: Rejection, Re-entry, and Control

This is where the contrast becomes sharp.

Israel

  • Founded largely by secular Jews

  • Religion was initially sidelined

  • Over time, religious orthodoxy gained state power

  • Result: ongoing tension between secular and religious Israelis

Auroville

  • Founded explicitly as post-religious

  • No temples, rituals, or doctrines

  • Spirituality framed as individual and evolutionary

  • Result: vague spirituality, difficult to transmit or regulate

Irony:
Israel tried to escape religion and was pulled back into it.
Auroville tried to escape religion and dissolved into ambiguity.


Power, Law, and Reality

This may be the most important difference.

Israel

  • Embraced the state

  • Built armies, laws, borders

  • Accepted violence as tragic but necessary

  • Became real by becoming coercive

Auroville

  • Rejected sovereignty

  • Relied on moral authority and consensus

  • Dependent on Indian state protection

  • Struggled to enforce its own ideals

Outcome:
Israel survived by compromising its utopia.
Auroville preserved its utopia by limiting its scale.


The Israeli Presence in Auroville: A Bridge Between Worlds

There is a quiet historical loop here.

From the 1970s onward, many Israeli youth came to Auroville:

  • Often post-military

  • Often exhausted by conflict

  • Seeking a space without identity, borders, or enemies

In a sense, Auroville became:

  • A pressure-release valve for the Israeli project

  • A place to ask questions Israel could not afford to ask

What if survival were not the highest value?


What Each Reveals About Utopia

Israel teaches us:

  • Utopias that ignore power will be crushed

  • Survival requires force, compromise, and exclusion

  • History does not pause for ideals

Auroville teaches us:

  • Utopias without power drift into incoherence

  • Ideals without enforcement become symbolic

  • Transcendence is fragile without structure


Conclusion: Two Answers to the Same Crisis

Israel and Auroville were born from the same modern crisis:
the collapse of old meanings and old authorities.

Israel answered:

We must become strong enough to never be powerless again.

Auroville answered:

We must become conscious enough to no longer need power.

One chose history.
The other chose experiment.

Neither fully succeeded.
Neither fully failed.

Together, they form a single question split in two:

Can humanity survive without transcending itself?
Can it transcend itself without first surviving?

Wednesday, March 11, 2026

Beyond Birth and Belief: Sri Aurobindo, The Mother, and the Unlikely Religious Lineages That Shaped Auroville

Auroville did not arise from a single religion, culture, or nation. In fact, its very premise was a rejection of these boundaries. Yet paradoxically, two very specific religious and civilizational lineages—Hindu India and Jewish Europe—flow quietly beneath its foundations. To understand Auroville honestly, one must examine Sri Aurobindo and The Mother not only as spiritual figures, but as products of their religious origins who consciously transcended them, and how people from those same worlds were drawn into the Auroville experiment and shaped it in practice.


Sri Aurobindo: Hindu by Birth, Universal by Vision

Sri Aurobindo was born into a Bengali Hindu family, a culture steeped in ritual, mythology, and philosophical pluralism. Yet his upbringing was anything but orthodox. Educated almost entirely in England, he was immersed in Greek, Latin, Western philosophy, and European political thought long before he returned to India.

When he did return, it was not as a religious reformer but as a revolutionary nationalist, and later, as a philosopher-mystic who reframed Hindu metaphysics into a universal evolutionary framework.

Aurobindo did not reject Hinduism; instead, he deconstructed and reassembled it:

  • The Vedas became symbolic maps of consciousness rather than ritual texts

  • The Upanishads were read as experiential psychology

  • Yoga was redefined as an evolutionary process, not a path of renunciation

His Integral Yoga was not meant to produce monks, but transformed human beings living in the world.

This reinterpretation of Hindu spirituality made his work strangely accessible to non-Indians—especially Western seekers who were disillusioned with dogma but still hungry for transcendence.


The Mother: Jewish by Birth, Universal by Choice

Mirra Alfassa (1878–1973), known as The Mother, was born into a Jewish family in Paris.

  • Father: Maurice Alfassa — Turkish-Jewish banker

  • Mother: Mathilde Ismaloun — Egyptian-Jewish

  • Her upbringing was secular and cosmopolitan, not religiously observant.

While her Jewish origin is historically clear, her spiritual identity moved beyond all religious labels very early in life. She did not practice Judaism, nor did she embed Jewish theology into her teachings. Instead, she consistently emphasized a universal, evolutionary spirituality.

“I belong to no nation, no civilisation, no society, no race… I am the child of the Divine.” — The Mother

Did her Jewish background influence her philosophy?

Indirectly, yes — culturally more than doctrinally.

Her background contributed to:

  • Intellectual rigor typical of late 19th-century European Jewish milieus

  • Diasporic universality — ease with non-national, non-ethnic identity

  • Resistance to dogma, a trait shared by many Jewish intellectuals who moved beyond orthodoxy

But crucially:

  • There is no Kabbalah, Torah, or Jewish mysticism embedded in Integral Yoga

  • Her spiritual synthesis was shaped far more by Sri Aurobindo, Indian metaphysics, and her own inner experiences

She was born Jewish, lived transnational, and died universal.


Two Lineages, One Radical Experiment

Auroville emerged from the fusion of these two trajectories:

  • Aurobindo’s Indian metaphysical depth

  • The Mother’s European universalism and organizational clarity

Together, they envisioned a city without religion, paradoxically founded by people who had mastered religion well enough to transcend it.

This vision proved magnetic to two overlapping but distinct groups:

  1. Seekers from Indian spiritual traditions

  2. Seekers from European, often Jewish, post-war humanist traditions


Jewish Participation in Auroville: Outsized, Quiet, Foundational

Auroville was never a “Jewish project.” Yet Jewish individuals played an outsized and distinctive role, particularly in its early decades (1960s–1980s).

Who were they?

Many Jewish Aurovillians came from:

  • France

  • Israel

  • Europe and North America

They were often:

  • Children of post-war Europe

  • Disillusioned with nationalism and identity politics

  • Seeking a post-religious, post-ethnic way of living

Auroville offered something rare: belonging without identity.


What did they contribute?

1. Early settlement and construction

Jewish participants were deeply involved in:

  • Physical construction of early settlements

  • Establishing farms, workshops, and cooperatives

  • Building infrastructure under extremely harsh conditions

They helped translate idealism into brick, mortar, and systems.


2. Architecture, engineering, and systems thinking

Jewish Aurovillians were prominent in:

  • Architecture and town planning

  • Engineering and alternative technologies

  • Long-term infrastructural thinking

This reflected a broader modernist tradition:

  • Functional design

  • Systems-based thinking

  • Pragmatism over symbolism


3. Education, psychology, and group process

They also played important roles in:

  • Alternative education

  • Psychology and consciousness studies

  • Conflict dialogue and collective decision-making

This included:

  • Non-hierarchical teaching models

  • Trauma-aware post-war humanist approaches

  • Bridging Western psychology with Integral Yoga


4. The Israeli connection

From the 1970s onward:

  • A steady stream of Israeli youth, architects, and volunteers arrived

  • Many were post-military, post-ideological, and deeply disillusioned

For them, Auroville functioned as:

  • Neutral spiritual ground

  • A rare space where Israeli, Arab, European, and Indian identities dissolved into daily cooperation


A Crucial Clarification

Despite:

  • The Mother’s Jewish origin

  • Significant Jewish participation

Auroville:

  • Is not influenced by Judaism as a religion

  • Has no Jewish institutional or doctrinal presence

  • Explicitly rejects religious, ethnic, or national ownership

This mirrors the lives of its founders:

  • Aurobindo: Hindu by birth, universal by philosophy

  • The Mother: Jewish by birth, universal by identity


Conclusion: The Post-Religious Prototype

Auroville’s deepest experiment was not architectural or ecological—it was anthropological.

Could human beings shaped by ancient religious identities outgrow them without denying them?

In Sri Aurobindo and The Mother, and in the Indian and Jewish participants who followed them, Auroville briefly suggested that the answer might be yes.

Not by erasing origins,
but by standing on them lightly.

Tuesday, March 10, 2026

The Rise, Spike, and Fall of Open Biology: What Its Impact Factor Really Tells Us

When the Royal Society launched Open Biology in 2011, the goal was ambitious: create a fast, open-access journal focused on molecular and cellular biology.

Over the next decade, the journal’s impact factor trajectory became a fascinating case study in modern scientific publishing. It rose quickly, peaked dramatically during the pandemic era, and then fell back to a more modest level.

The story is not just about one journal—it reflects structural forces reshaping the entire biology publishing ecosystem.


The Impact Factor Trajectory

Below is the approximate trajectory of the journal’s impact factor.

YearImpact Factor
20123.63
20134.56
20145.78
20154.82
20163.48
20173.29
20183.89
20194.93
20206.41
20217.12 (peak)
20225.8
20234.5
20243.6

The journal peaked in 2021 with an impact factor above 7, before falling to about 3.6 in 2024.

Understanding this curve requires looking at the journal’s life cycle and the broader publishing environment.


Phase 1: Early Growth (2012–2014)

The first years showed rapid growth.

The impact factor rose from 3.6 to nearly 5.8 in just two years.

This is common for new journals because:

  • Early papers often receive disproportionate attention.

  • Editors commission high-profile articles to establish reputation.

  • Open-access availability increases visibility.

At this stage, Open Biology appeared poised to become a major open-access biology journal.


Phase 2: Stabilization (2015–2018)

The next phase saw a decline and stabilization around 3–4.

Typical impact factors during this period:

  • 2016 → ~3.5

  • 2017 → ~3.3

  • 2018 → ~3.9

This reflects what bibliometricians call post-launch normalization.

Once the novelty effect disappears, journals often settle into their long-term citation equilibrium.


Phase 3: The Pandemic Spike (2019–2021)

The journal then experienced its largest surge ever.

Impact factor rose:

  • 2019 → 4.9

  • 2020 → 6.4

  • 2021 → 7.1

Several forces likely contributed.

1. Pandemic-era citation inflation

Biomedical research output and citation rates surged during 2020–2021.

Many journals saw temporary impact-factor inflation during this period.

2. Highly cited review articles

Review papers accumulate citations far faster than research articles.

A few highly cited reviews can significantly influence the metric because impact factor only counts citations within a two-year window.

3. Editorial strategy

Some journals increase the number of commissioned reviews or perspectives, which tend to generate large citation counts.


Phase 4: The Post-Pandemic Decline (2022–2024)

After 2021, the impact factor fell sharply:

  • 2022 → 5.8

  • 2023 → 4.5

  • 2024 → 3.6

This drop looks dramatic, but it is actually a return to the journal’s long-term baseline.

Two main forces drove the decline:

  1. Highly cited papers aged out of the two-year citation window

  2. Citation rates across biology normalized after the pandemic

In other words, the spike was temporary.


A Comparison With Other Biology Journals

The pattern seen in Open Biology is not unique. Many biology journals experienced similar spikes around 2020–2021.

Below are a few examples.


BMC Biology

BMC Biology

YearImpact Factor
20196.8
20207.4
20217.36
20225.4
20244.5

Even a strong flagship open-access journal like BMC Biology saw its impact factor drop significantly after the pandemic spike.


Biology Direct

Biology Direct

YearImpact Factor
20192.2
20217.17
20235.7
20244.9

Here the spike is even more dramatic: the journal tripled its impact factor before returning closer to baseline.


Biological Research

Biological Research

YearImpact Factor
20193.1
20217.63
20226.7
20244.6

Again, we see a clear pandemic-era citation spike followed by decline.


What These Comparisons Reveal

Across multiple biology journals, the pattern is remarkably similar:

normal IF level

pandemic citation surge

temporary peak

return to baseline

This suggests the spike was not unique to Open Biology but part of a system-wide bibliometric event.


The Deeper Issue: Impact Factor Volatility

The story illustrates a fundamental property of the impact factor.

The metric is sensitive to:

  • a two-year citation window

  • skewed citation distributions

  • a small number of highly cited papers

Bibliometric studies show that citation distributions are highly unequal, meaning a minority of papers generate most citations.

This makes journal metrics inherently volatile.


The Real Position of Open Biology

Looking at the entire history rather than the peak, a clear pattern emerges.

The journal’s true long-term impact factor range appears to be about 3–4.

That places it as a solid mid-tier molecular and cell biology journal, comparable to many society journals.

Its temporary peak around 2021 should be viewed as an exceptional moment rather than a permanent shift in influence.


The Bigger Lesson for Scientists

The trajectory of Open Biology reveals something important about modern academic publishing:

Journal metrics can fluctuate dramatically even when scientific quality remains stable.

Impact factors are influenced by:

  • editorial policy

  • review articles

  • citation culture

  • global research trends

In other words, they measure citation dynamics as much as scientific impact.


In the end, the story of Open Biology is not about decline—it is about normalization.

After a decade of growth and a pandemic-era spike, the journal has simply returned to the citation level typical of a well-established society journal.