Difference between revisions of "Open Source Scientific Research"
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The main platform for the scientific community in the 20th century was the peer-reviewed scientific journal. A scientist writes a paper, submits it for review by other scientists and, if it is found to be up-to-standard, the paper is published in a copyrighted journal and made available to subscribers. The intellectual property rights to the paper are owned by the journal. | The main platform for the scientific community in the 20th century was the peer-reviewed scientific journal. A scientist writes a paper, submits it for review by other scientists and, if it is found to be up-to-standard, the paper is published in a copyrighted journal and made available to subscribers. The intellectual property rights to the paper are owned by the journal. | ||
− | This model has many advantages: the main one being that poorly conducted experiments are filtered out by the peer-review process. On the other hand, subscription to journals is often expensive (e.g. It costs $200 a year to subscribe to ''Nature''), limiting access to scientific knowledge. Negative results (e.g. finding that a certain drug has no effect on a disease) are rarely published in such journals, as space in | + | This model has many advantages: the main one being that poorly conducted experiments are filtered out by the peer-review process. On the other hand, subscription to journals is often expensive (e.g. It costs $200 a year to subscribe to ''Nature''), limiting access to scientific knowledge. |
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+ | Negative results (e.g. finding that a certain drug has no effect on a disease) are rarely published in such journals, as space in journals is limited and tends to be given to more interesting positive results. Scientists are often reluctant to publish negative results - particularly where the research is intended to show the effectiveness of a certain drug. This leads to {{wp|Publication_bias|publication bias}}, where data is skewed towards the positive simply because the negative results have been withheld. If scientific studies are conducted openly, all data - whether positive or negative - can come to light. | ||
An alternative to the peer-reviewed journal is open scientific research. This means posting scientific papers freely on the Internet for anyone to access, without intellectual property restrictions. | An alternative to the peer-reviewed journal is open scientific research. This means posting scientific papers freely on the Internet for anyone to access, without intellectual property restrictions. | ||
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A different kind of peer-review then takes place, an open peer-review like what we see on Wikipedia. Other scientists can rate the paper or comment on it, allowing the best research to rise to the top. Data-mining algorithms can link related research studies together, showing studies that use similar methodologies together, even aggregating the results of several studies. | A different kind of peer-review then takes place, an open peer-review like what we see on Wikipedia. Other scientists can rate the paper or comment on it, allowing the best research to rise to the top. Data-mining algorithms can link related research studies together, showing studies that use similar methodologies together, even aggregating the results of several studies. | ||
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Open collaboration in science allows scientific experiments to be global collaborations of interested parties around the world. This allows for greater ''n'' numbers, as data can be aggregated from a large number of researchers. This leads to more reliable results. | Open collaboration in science allows scientific experiments to be global collaborations of interested parties around the world. This allows for greater ''n'' numbers, as data can be aggregated from a large number of researchers. This leads to more reliable results. | ||
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* http://www.biomedcentral.com/ | * http://www.biomedcentral.com/ | ||
* [http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=science-2-point-0 Scientific American: Science 2.0 -- Is Open Access Science the Future?] | * [http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=science-2-point-0 Scientific American: Science 2.0 -- Is Open Access Science the Future?] | ||
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Latest revision as of 16:10, 4 December 2011
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