Making Science Open by Default

31
Making Science Open by Default Julien Colomb Freie Universität Berlin Björn Brembs Universität Regensburg http://brembs.net

description

My presentation for the General ONline Research Conference in Cologn, Germany on March 6, 2014. On these slides I detail our proof-of-concept of making all our digital data openly accessible online by default, automatically, whenever the researcher who collected them evaluates them using our custom R-Scripts.

Transcript of Making Science Open by Default

Page 1: Making Science Open by Default

Making Science Open by Default

Julien ColombFreie Universität Berlin

Björn BrembsUniversität Regensburg

http://brembs.net

Page 2: Making Science Open by Default

SCHOLARSHIP

Institutions produce publications, data and software

Page 3: Making Science Open by Default

CRISIS I

Dysfunctional scholarly literature

Page 4: Making Science Open by Default

Literature

• Limited access• No global search• No functional hyperlinks• No flexible data

visualization• No submission

standards• (Almost) no statistics• No text/data-mining• No effective way to sort,

filter and discover• No scientific impact

analysis• No networking feature• etc.

…it’s like the web in 1995!

Page 5: Making Science Open by Default

CRISIS II

Scientific data in peril

Page 6: Making Science Open by Default
Page 7: Making Science Open by Default
Page 8: Making Science Open by Default
Page 9: Making Science Open by Default
Page 10: Making Science Open by Default

CRISIS III

Non-existent software archives

Page 11: Making Science Open by Default
Page 12: Making Science Open by Default
Page 13: Making Science Open by Default

6. Konferenz für Sozial- und Wirtschaftsdaten (6|KSWD) - Wissenschaft 2.0: Open Data als Kernkomponente von Open Science; Stefan Winkler-Nees, Berlin, 21. Februar 2014

Report on Integration of Data and Publications, ODE Report 2011http://www.alliancepermanentaccess.org/wp-content/plugins/download-monitor/download.php?id=ODE+Report+on+Integration+of+Data+and+Publications

small data – long tail

Page 14: Making Science Open by Default

JULIEN COLOMB

One person is not an institutional infrastructure

Page 15: Making Science Open by Default
Page 16: Making Science Open by Default

Software to control the experiment and save the data

Page 17: Making Science Open by Default

Software to analyze and visualize the data

Page 18: Making Science Open by Default

buridan.sourceforge.net

Page 19: Making Science Open by Default

Scientific Code with Persistent Identifiers

Page 20: Making Science Open by Default
Page 21: Making Science Open by Default
Page 22: Making Science Open by Default
Page 23: Making Science Open by Default
Page 24: Making Science Open by Default
Page 25: Making Science Open by Default

FigShare API

The figshare API allows you to push data to figshare, or pull data out. This first version is a basic implementation that allows you to manage your figshare account or build applications on top of the figshare platform and public research.

Page 26: Making Science Open by Default
Page 27: Making Science Open by Default

Add new, or update an existing article

Page 28: Making Science Open by Default

Run your script and...

Same type of experiments → same scriptDefault: → same categories

→ same tags→ same authors→ same links→ same description

→ One complete article, in one click.

Update the figure: Higher sample size directly published while analysed, your boss may see the results before you do! (or you may see the results of your student before they do)

Possibility to make it public and citable in one click or directly in the R code.

Page 29: Making Science Open by Default

Citable?

http://dx.doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.97792

Page 30: Making Science Open by Default

Citable!

Page 31: Making Science Open by Default