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What is “open science”?

Frank Gibson, a Research Associate at Newcastle University, UK currently working on the e-neuroscience project CARMEN, has written an essay Do scientists really believe in open science? , in which he collects current opinions of “Open Science”. He was stimulated to write the essay because of his role in the CARMEN project which, he writes, has exposed him to a domain of the life-sciences to which “data sharing and publicly exposing methodologies has not been readily adopted, largely it is claimed due to the size of the data in question and sensitive privacy issues.”

The essay is available here. It addresses definitions of “open science” and summarizes the standards used in disciplines other than neuroscience. You can see the Nature journals’ policies on data availability here, which apply to all the original research articles our journals publish. Via this web page, you can provide us with your comments and views on recent journal editorials about emerging policies on data availability in a range of disciplines and circumstances.

Among other aspects of “open science”, Dr Gibson discusses the “open notebook” approach pioneered by J-C Bradley. He also notes that Postgenomic produces an “up-to-the minute list of the open science discourse”. (Postgenomic is a website that tracks hundreds of science blogs and “does interesting things with that data”.) “Although early days”, continues Dr Gibson, "maybe even the “”https://scintilla.nature.com/group/open-science">open science group" on Scintilla (still undecided on Scintilla) will be the place in future for fostering the open science community".

Scintilla is one of Nature Publishing Group’s very latest products. It collects data from hundreds of news outlets, scientific blogs, journals and databases and then makes it easy for you to organize, share and discover exactly the type of information that you’re interested in. For example, you can keep track of life science podcasts, or the latest papers on schizophrenia, DNA methylation, physics or immunology. It is free to join, so take a look at what it has to offer and, if you wish, contribute to the open science group, or join one of the many other interest groups there.

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