Open Access to Research Can Save Lives - Commentary - The Chronicle of Higher Education

Delicious/sc.at.neu/openaccess 2012-12-04

Summary:

This year a high-school student in Maryland announced that he had invented a diagnostic test for pancreatic cancer. The test costs three cents per use. It works 168 times as fast and more than 400 times as accurately as the best previously existing test. It also may be able to detect ovarian and lung cancers. Jack Andraka, the inventor, is 15 years old. His cancer test is more than a medical triumph. It is also a triumph for open access, the goal of a decade-old movement to replace an obsolete and inefficient scholarly publication industry with something better for everybody: a system that allows anyone with a computer and an Internet connection free access to results of academic and scientific research—most of it paid for by taxpayers.

Link:

http://chronicle.com/article/Open-Access-to-Research-Can/136065/?cid=cr&utm_source=cr&utm_medium=en

From feeds:

Open Access Tracking Project (OATP) » Delicious/sc.at.neu/openaccess

Tags:

openaccess oa.funders oa.policies oa.recommendations oa.gold oa.green oa.benefits oa.new oa.data oa.open_science oa.economic_impact oa.crowd oa.comment oa.scholcomm oa.repositories oa.journals

Authors:

sc.at.neu

Date tagged:

12/04/2012, 01:46

Date published:

12/03/2012, 11:05