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Page 1: Sciblog2008 Etchevers

Laboratory notebooks online: perspective from the bench

Heather Etchevers

Page 2: Sciblog2008 Etchevers

What should go in a notebook

Motivation for experiments Diary – play-by-play Results

– Figures Sketches, graphs, photographs, printouts Tables, perhaps plots therefrom

Transmission of knowledge to later personnel– Analysis– Periodic summary

Derived from http://www.physics.hmc.edu/howto/labnotebook.html

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Most desired in lab notebooks

Outsource your memory– Preparation before experiments – Repository of results

Archive for proof of intellectual process– Internal (group, collaboration)– External (audits, patent contention)

Après moi, le déluge

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Typical biologists’ entries

Thanks to C. Juste (chargée de recherche, INRA) for her permission to reproduce

Photographs

JustificationDescription of protocol

SketchesTabularresults

Graphicresults

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Multiple notebooks needed

Lab meetings and conference notes Multiple research projects

– Field notes– Correspondence with collaborators

Large machines Chronological order vs. accuracy and narrative

– Periodic summing up Hard results Ideas and reflections

Protocols = cookbook – scribbles in margins

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Current offerings for academics – non-exhaustive

OpenWetWare– http://www.openwetware.org/wiki/Etchevers:Main

Evernote http://evernote.com/

e-CAT Addgene http://www.addgenelabs.org/

Blogs cf. http://rrresearch.blogspot.com/

– Practice writing, formulating hypotheses– Preview to lab meetings/journal clubs

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Advantages

Sharing with boss/collaborators Searching among your own records Linking to related resources

– Protocols– Security use documents– Vector maps– PubMed entries– Tagged data elsewhere online

Distant access

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Limitations

Organizational Physical

– Tears, blood, sweat, coffee, radioactivity. “Coomassie blue, methyl red, ethidium bromide pink, bacterial broth brown." (J. Rohn, Mind the Gap 11/4/07)

– Computer memory, security, electrical vagaries…

Legal– Proprietary resources and non-disclosure agreements– Potential patents

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Options for researchers today

Write up experiments completely before– Things rarely go exactly as planned.

Try to remember everything and type it up afterwards

– Errors in memory

Write things in pen and paper, then transpose– Errors in transposition– Double work

B Haugen, http://connectedbases.com/2007/07/19/

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Other possibilities

Optical character recognition for scanning notes

Pen-top computers such as Livescribe. – date- and keyword-searchable archive – Automatic blogging structure

One-button uploading Make it easy!

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How open?

"In a partially open system there is a risk for those who choose to be open. (…) Reward (…) is spread over the entire society. The sub-field I was in was highly competitive. The (personal) risk would not be worth the rewards. … Why should a grad student risk being scooped for the greater good?"

- ponderingfool 8 Dec 2007 on The World’s Fair