Abstract

Scientific progress is driven by the availability of information, which makes it essential that data be broadly, easily and rapidly accessible to researchers in every field. In addition to being good scientific practice, provision of supporting data in a convenient way increases experimental transparency and improves research efficiency by reducing unnecessary duplication of experiments. There are, however, serious constraints that limit extensive data dissemination. One such constraint is that, despite providing a major foundation of data to the advantage of entire community, data producers rarely receive the credit they deserve for the substantial amount of time and effort they spend creating these resources. In this regard, a formal system that provides recognition for data producers would serve to incentivize them to share more of their data.The process of data citation, in which the data themselves are cited and referenced in journal articles as persistently identifiable bibliographic entities, is a potential way to properly acknowledge data output. The recent publication of several sorghum genomes in Genome Biology is a notable first example of good data citation practice in the field of genomics and demonstrates the practicalities and formatting required for doing so. It also illustrates how effective use of persistent identifiers can augment the submission of data to the current standard scientific repositories.

Highlights

  • Scientific progress is driven by the availability of information, which makes it essential that data be broadly, and rapidly accessible to researchers in every field

  • One of the key lessons learned from the Human Genome Project, taking a page from the C. elegans community [1], was that making data broadly and freely available prior to publication was profoundly valuable to the field of genomics [2]

  • The wider biological science community has attempted to follow similar practices, as outlined in the guidelines published from the Toronto International Data Release Workshop [5], but adoption has been held back by a lack of easy-to-access repository infrastructure for many fields as well as an absence of incentives for authors to go through the time and effort necessary to make their work openly and available to others

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Scientific progress is driven by the availability of information, which makes it essential that data be broadly, and rapidly accessible to researchers in every field.

Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call