Center for Open Science

abernard102@gmail.com 2013-04-03

Summary:

"The Center for Open Science, which opens today in Charlottesville, Virginia, aims to improve how science is conducted and communicated. The organization will build tools to improve the scientific process and promote accurate, transparent findings in scientific research. It will also provide scientists with incentives to conduct original research and replicate previous studies to verify their accuracy. "Learning new things is hard. A single study is not enough to establish new knowledge. Important new findings are challenged, replicated, and reinterpreted by many independent scientists to confirm their validity. Without openness, science simply cannot operate," said Brian Nosek, associate professor of psychology at the University of Virginia. Nosek founded the Center along with Jeffrey Spies, a University of Virginia graduate student. Spies added, 'The Center for Open Science will encourage openness, accessibility and reproducibility across all phases of the research workflow' ... The group's signature project is the Open Science Framework website. The website allows scientists to easily store and manage research materials, collaborate with others, and publicly share their hypotheses and findings. Scientists can register their research designs ahead of conducting the study to improve confidence in the final result. Nosek said, 'When there is a strong hypothesis for a study, registration provides accountability to truth, and reduces opportunities to flexibly analyze data in order to produce the result we want rather than the result that we got.' The Open Science Framework website makes it far easier to practice science in an open and transparent manner. It supports a novel publishing model in which study designs are peer reviewed before data collection rather than afterwards. Designs are evaluated on the quality of the methods and the importance of the question rather than the nature of the results.

The journal Perspectives on Psychological Science has announced adoption of this publishing format for a new type of article reporting multi-center replication efforts. Barbara A. Spellman, professor of psychology at the University of Virginia and the Perspectives editor, noted 'Some ideas are so important that we should publish high-quality tests of them regardless of the outcome. When multiple labs coordinate with original study designers to do multiple replications, we can learn about the robustness, generalizability, and effect sizes of noteworthy research.'  The Center is already leading initiatives, such as the Reproducibility Project, to investigate replicability of published results. This open, crowd-sourced study involving more than 100 scientists is conducting replications of studies published in the 2008 issues of three major psychology journals. Rebecca Saxe, associate professor of cognitive neuroscience at M.I.T. and one of the contributors to the project, said, 'This project embodies what I love about science. Scientists seek truth by being persistently self-critical. It is exciting when our findings survive our efforts to poke holes in them. And, when they don't survive, we learn something new. Knowledge wins either way!'  The Center for Open Science was launched through $5.25 million in funding from the Laura and John Arnold Foundation ... The Center's operations and activities are growing rapidly ..."

Link:

http://centerforopenscience.org/pr/2013-03-05/

From feeds:

Open Access Tracking Project (OATP) » abernard102@gmail.com

Tags:

oa.new oa.open_science oa.crowd oa.quality oa.funders oa.reproducibility oa.reproducibility_project oa.credibility oa.open_science_framework oa.arnold_foundation oa.center_open_science oa.announcements

Date tagged:

04/03/2013, 13:11

Date published:

04/03/2013, 09:11