“…Other community‐driven practices draw on crowdsourcing, citizen science, and other types of collaborative and multisite working that can occur in a surprising number of stages of the entire research process, including research team building (e.g., Moshontz et al., 2018), design decisions (e.g., Landy et al., 2020), data collection (e.g., Paquot et al., 2022, validation of community judgements of proficiency), community augmented meta‐analyses that accumulate multiple datasets (see Many Babies Metalab, https://langcog.github.io/metalab/documentation/using_ma_data/contribute_ma), and analysis (Aczel et al., 2021, to improve analytical robustness). Even the writing process itself has attracted an open community‐driven approach (e.g., Tennant et al.’s, 2020, discussion of massively open online papers [MOOPs] that involve between 10 and 100 [partially] self‐selecting authors in an openly participatory format). With clear editorial rights and authorship assignment, we think that MOOPs may help to diversify the producers of research, though perhaps only for certain genres of academic writing such as narrative syntheses or scoping reviews.…”