shifting scientific practice (k. thaney)
TRANSCRIPT
kaitlin thaney@kaythaney ; @mozillascience
ORCID / 3 nov 2015
shifting scientific practice
doing good is part of our code
we empower researchers to do more open, collaborative research on the web.
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current state of science
articlesdata
patents
some have a firehose
articlesdata
patents
quality versus quantity measured systems
a few fallacies of the research system
the published record is the only useful record
if it’s published, it’s usable.
What Des-Cartes did was a good step. You have added much several ways, &
especially in taking ye colours of thin plates into philosophical consideration.
If I have seen further it is by standing on ye shoulders of Giants.
- Isaac Newton, 1676
“
“
... that this is good job advice:
the systems we’re crafting serve the community’s (evolving) needs
1. examples of the role identity plays in community.
2. means to shift practice. 3. ... and how to sustain it.
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recognizing software and data contributions
code as a research objectwhat’s needed to reuse ?
http://bit.ly/mozfiggit
<institutional archives>
<national archives>
<code repos>
syndication and storage (via APIs)
http://openresearchbadges.org/
Contributorship Badges (Paper Badger)
•Conceptualization•Data curation•Formal analysis•Funding acquisition•Investigation•Methodology•Project administration
•Resources•Software•Supervision•Validation•Visualization•Writing – original draft•Writing – review &
editing
Project CRediT: Contributor Roles Taxonomy
http://casrai.org/CRediT
http://mozillascience.org/contributorship-badges-a-new-project/
http://mozillascience.github.io/software-discovery-dashboard/
https://github.com/mozillascience/software-discovery-dashboard/issues/1
https://github.com/codemeta/codemeta
CodeMeta: exploring ways to address discoverability of contributions
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shifting scientific practice (and getting it to stick)
openness, participation, collaboration
communicationaccess, reuse, scale
distributed, participatory
the web as a platform
- access to content, data, code, materials.- emergence of “web-native” tools.- rewards for openness, interoperability, collaboration, sharing.- push for ROI, reuse, recomputability, transparency.
“web-enabled research”
putting open ideals into practice(+ paying it forward)
https://commonspace.wordpress.com/2015/07/15/web-literacy-and-leadership/
service learning: n. hands-on, experiential learning
where people develop skills by working on a project in service of a bigger goal.
http://bit.ly/1JTMBSb
how do we amplify within research?
(... and beyond software development?)
mozillascience.org/collaborate
100+ pull requests
(code, content, learning resources)http://bit.ly/1N331JV
community-driven contributorship
http://mozillascience.github.io/leadership-training/
https://www.mozillascience.org/teaching-leadership-like-mozilla
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how do we build, support and sustain momentum?
furthering adoption of open, web-enabled research
rewards, incentives, reputation
supports needed for“professional development”
“Reliance on ad-hoc, self-
education about what’s
possible doesn’t scale.”
- Selena Decklemann
lowering barriers to entry(+ leveling the playing field)
https://mozillascience.github.io/studyGroupHandbook/
https://www.mozillascience.org/fellows
https://www.mozillascience.org/fellows
Richard Smith-Unna Christie Bahlai Jason Bobe Joey Lee
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we need your help.
rethink beyond just access to usability.
don’t forget the user in the design.
remember the non-technical challenges.
we’re here to help.
http://[email protected]
[email protected]@kaythaney ; @mozillascience
special thanks:
acknowledgments: Arfon Smith, Matt Jones, Mark Hahnel, Lars Holm Nielsen, Amye
Kenall, Laura Paglione, Brian Hole, Austin Davis-Richardson, Ai Deng, Robert Peters, Garth Henson, Anita Perala, Ali Al Dallal, Will Simpson, Alister Cole, Adam Blaine, Matt Mokary, Stefan Neamtu, Luke Coy +
many more.(+ the Mozilla Science Lab team: Abby Cabunoc Mayes, Arliss Collins,
Zannah Marsh, Steph Wright, )