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Laying out the Principles of Open Science
1. laying out the principles of
open science
(an abbreviated version)
kaitlin thaney
program manager, science commons
open science@PSB
5 january 2009
This presentation is licensed under the CreativeCommons-Attribution-3.0 license.
2. most of the useful knowledge
is inaccessible.
most of the useful knowledge is
in the wrong technology.
we don’t have enough people
working on it.
8. “papers”
IGFBP-5 plays a role in the
regulation of cellular senescence
via a p53-dependent pathway
and in aging-associated vascular
diseases
9. “networked knowledge”
IGFBP-5 plays a role in the
regulation of cellular senescence
via a p53-dependent pathway
and in aging-associated vascular
diseases
10.
11. “ By open access to the literature, we mean its free
availability on the public internet, permitting users to
read, download, copy, distribute. print, search, or link to
the full texts of the articles, crawl them for indexing,
pass them as data to software, or use them for any
other lawful purpose, without financial, legal or
technical barriers other than those inseparable from
gaining access to the internet itself.”
Image from the Public Library of Science, licensed to the public, under
CC-BY-3.0
12. “The only constraint on reproduction and distribution,
and the only role for copyright in this domain, should
be to give authors control over the integrity of their
work and the right to properly acknowledged and
cited.”
25. ensures ability to freely distribute, copy,
reformat, and integrate data from research into
new research ... without legal barriers
citation, attribution via norms
29. data without structure and annotation is a
lost opportunity.
data should flow in an open, public, and
extensible infrastructure
support recombination and reconfiguration
into computer models, queryable by search
engine
treated as public good