Mandatory data and code sharing for research published by The BMJ | The BMJ

peter.suber's bookmarks 2024-03-24

Summary:

"The BMJ is committed to transparency in research. In 2013, we required authors of drug and device trials published in the journal to agree to share relevant trial data on reasonable request.4 In 2015, this requirement was extended to all clinical trials published in the journal.5 Sadly, not all authors honoured this promise, and sharing of trial data remains disappointingly low.67 Barriers include the time and effort required to ensure that data are organised and useable, and fears among some researchers that competitors might gain unfair academic or commercial advantages or misuse or misinterpret the data.

It is time for the next step. From 1 May 2024, The BMJ will require authors of all submitted trials to post relevant trial data in an enduring, publicly accessible repository such as Vivli8 before publication. Repositories organise and store study data so that they can be retrieved and used by other researchers. We encourage authors of trials currently accepted for publication to voluntarily adhere to this policy. A link to the trial data will be included in the data sharing statement on every research paper published in The BMJ. Data sharing should not be confined to trials, and The BMJ intends to broaden its data sharing policy to non-trial research in future. But practical problems remain for observational studies and other non-trial research, such as permissions and privacy of data held in registries.

We will also require submission of relevant analytical code in a supplementary file that will be permanently accessible alongside each paper.9 Our new policy on code sharing applies to all research we publish, and a new code availability statement will be included in research papers. Other journals are moving in this direction as well. Springer Nature has announced a policy to require code availability statements in articles in its journals, and to encourage authors to share code publicly and cite code they have used...."

Link:

https://www.bmj.com/content/384/bmj.q324.full

From feeds:

Open Access Tracking Project (OATP) » peter.suber's bookmarks

Tags:

oa.new oa.bmj oa.journals oa.policies oa.policies.journals oa.policies.journals.code oa.code oa.floss oa.data oa.compliance

Date tagged:

03/24/2024, 09:03

Date published:

03/24/2024, 05:03