Science 2.0: Difference between revisions
Pat Palmer (talk | contribs) m (Text replacement - "Open Access" to "Open access") |
mNo edit summary |
||
Line 5: | Line 5: | ||
An important aspect of Science 2.0 is the leveraging or development of Web 2.0 tools and technologies — e.g. [[blog]]s, [[wiki]]s and [[social network]]s — for scientific purposes that range from [[database]]s to [[cloud computing]] to [[telemedicine]]. As such, Science 2.0 intertwines with parallel developments in other parts of [[society]], including [[Library 2.0]], [[Medicine 2.0]] and [[Education 2.0]]. | An important aspect of Science 2.0 is the leveraging or development of Web 2.0 tools and technologies — e.g. [[blog]]s, [[wiki]]s and [[social network]]s — for scientific purposes that range from [[database]]s to [[cloud computing]] to [[telemedicine]]. As such, Science 2.0 intertwines with parallel developments in other parts of [[society]], including [[Library 2.0]], [[Medicine 2.0]] and [[Education 2.0]]. | ||
Another significant element of Science 2.0 is the [[Open Science]] movement, aimed at an increased [[Transparency (behaviour)|transparency]] of scientific research and a wider sharing of its results both within and beyond the scientific community, e.g. by means of [[Open Data]], [[Open Source]] and [[Open access]]. | Another significant element of Science 2.0 is the [[Open Science]] movement, aimed at an increased [[Transparency (behaviour)|transparency]] of scientific research and a wider sharing of its results both within and beyond the scientific community, e.g. by means of [[Open Data]], [[Open Source]] and [[Open access]].[[Category:Suggestion Bot Tag]] |
Latest revision as of 17:01, 15 October 2024
The term Science 2.0 alludes to Web 2.0 — interactive content creation over the internet — and is frequently used as an umbrella term to describe adaptations of the scientific method to the Web 2.0 era of the World Wide Web.
An important aspect of Science 2.0 is the leveraging or development of Web 2.0 tools and technologies — e.g. blogs, wikis and social networks — for scientific purposes that range from databases to cloud computing to telemedicine. As such, Science 2.0 intertwines with parallel developments in other parts of society, including Library 2.0, Medicine 2.0 and Education 2.0.
Another significant element of Science 2.0 is the Open Science movement, aimed at an increased transparency of scientific research and a wider sharing of its results both within and beyond the scientific community, e.g. by means of Open Data, Open Source and Open access.