Open science: Difference between revisions
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imported>Daniel Mietchen m (Open Science moved to Open science: CZ naming conventions) |
imported>Daniel Mietchen (further tweaking) |
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{{Image|Science-commons-Bollen-4337901909 c87b0b0321 o.jpg|right|350px|The basic ingredients to Open Science: [[Scientific method|Scientific research]] shared across disciplines using [[Science 2.0]] tools and [[open license]]s.}} | {{Image|Science-commons-Bollen-4337901909 c87b0b0321 o.jpg|right|350px|The basic ingredients to Open Science: [[Scientific method|Scientific research]] shared across disciplines using [[Science 2.0]] tools and [[open license]]s.}} | ||
'''Open Science''' is a movement aimed at an increased [[Transparency (behaviour)|transparency]] of [[Scientific method|scientific research]] | '''Open Science''' is a movement aimed at an increased [[Transparency (behaviour)|transparency]] of [[Scientific method|scientific research]], both within and beyond the scientific community, and at sharing its results with the widest possible audience. | ||
As such, it is concerned with the handling of [[data]] and the publication, in [[academic journal]]s or on [[Web 2.0]] platforms, of research results derived from those data, along with the protocols and code used to generate them. As such, Open Science can be considered an umbrella term for a number of rather independent movements with similar goals, like [[Open Data]] and [[Open Access]] — both inspired by the [[Open Source]] movement. | As such, it is concerned with the handling of [[data]] and the publication, in [[academic journal]]s or on [[Web 2.0]] platforms, of research results derived from those data, along with the protocols and code used to generate them. As such, Open Science can be considered an umbrella term for a number of rather independent movements with similar goals, like [[Open Data]] and [[Open Access]] — both inspired by the [[Open Source]] movement. |
Revision as of 18:48, 14 February 2010
Open Science is a movement aimed at an increased transparency of scientific research, both within and beyond the scientific community, and at sharing its results with the widest possible audience.
As such, it is concerned with the handling of data and the publication, in academic journals or on Web 2.0 platforms, of research results derived from those data, along with the protocols and code used to generate them. As such, Open Science can be considered an umbrella term for a number of rather independent movements with similar goals, like Open Data and Open Access — both inspired by the Open Source movement.