The document discusses open science workflows and tools for natural sciences. It presents how the traditional closed research cycle can be transformed into a more open model through practices like gold and green open access publishing, open notebooks, research data management and archiving, and open peer review. Examples are given of open data repositories and journals as well as open source software tools that can help make individual research more transparent, efficient, and reusable as part of the wider scientific process. The presenters advocate for education and community engagement to establish open science as the new norm in research.
Open science in Natural Sciences: Workflows and Tools
1. Natural Sciences & Open Science:
Workflows & Tools
Presenters: Jon Tennant (ScienceOpen, @Protohedgehog)
Ivo Grigorov (FOSTER+, @OAforClimate)
OAW2017 https://www.slideshare.net/ivogrigorov/open-science-in-natural-sciences/
2. ● Marine Scientist by training
● Currently Fundraiser for
research, and an
● Open Science enthusiast
● Paleontologist by training
● ScienceOpen
● PaleorXiv
● SciComm
● Open Science
7. IDEA &
PROPOSAL
TEST
DATA
MODEL
CODE
Gold &
Green OA
EDUCATE
& TRAIN
REF Evaluation,
Societal Impact,
Open Innovation,
CO-CREATION
Open
Notebook
Science
RDM,
Archive &
Publish
Curate &
Publish
OS key part
of concept
Open
Educational
Resources
RESEARCH
LIFECYCLE
DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.49960
PUBLISH
● Transparency
● Efficiency
● Sustainability
● Rigour
● Re-usability
14. Open Access to ALL your research papers:
http://whyopenresearch.org/costs
https://figshare.com/articles/How_to_m
ake_your_research_open_access_For_fr
ee_and_legally_/5285512
15. It’s your work. Publish where you want.
But don’t lock it up.
16. And what about Open Peer Review?
Disclaimer: These are NOT the best, but just our publications!
Try #openpeerreview hashtag on SM for the full breadth of the discussion
19. How do we make open science the norm?
• Education and training for our students
• Learn skills for new, better ways of doing
research
• Empowerment and leadership for the next
generation
• Shifting power dynamics to reduce bias and abuse
• Building a global community based on sharing and collaboration
• Massive-scale engagement to re-align Open Science with current
incentive structures