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A Few Thoughts on Open Science Relevant to PCORI
Philip E. Bourne, PhD, FACMIAssociate Director for Data Science
National Institutes of Health
October 8, 2015
Workshop to Align Funders & Publishers Regarding Policies Associated with Open Science
http://www.sparc.arl.org/
Some Conclusions
Need to state the problem you are trying to solve Need exemplars that solve that problem Turn those exemplars into use cases that the
community will support Need to understand the norms of the community at a
granular level Policies need to shift those norms Conformance to policies has to be measured and
evaluated Incentives need to be in place The infrastructure to support the above is non-trivial
NIH’s Response to Some of These Conclusions
State the Problem You Are Trying to
Solve
…accelerate efficient, cost-effective biomedical research
to enhance health, lengthen life, and reduce illness and disability
Goals expanded from recommendations in the June 2012 DIWG and BRWWG reports.
State the Problem You Are Trying to
Solve
Find
Access
Interoperate
Reuse
Goals expanded from recommendations in the June 2012 DIWG and BRWWG reports.
Need to understand the norms of the community at a granular level
Policies need to shift those norms
Conformance to Policies has to be Measured and Evaluated
We need machine readable data sharing plans
Data and software need provenance that includes grant numbers
Incentives Need to be in Place
Badges
Data & software citation needs to be encouraged
VPR’s & tenure committees need to be educated
BD2KCenter
BD2KCenter
BD2KCenter
BD2KCenter
BD2KCenter
BD2KCenter
DDICC
Software
Standards
The Infrastructure to Support Open Science is Non-trivial
The CommonsLabs
Labs
Labs
Labs
NIHNIH……Turning Discovery Into HealthTurning Discovery Into Health
[email protected]://datascience.nih.gov/