Abstract

Both a significant body of literature and the case study presented here show that digital knowledge repositories struggle to attract the needed level of data and knowledge contribution that they need to be successful. This happens also to high profile and prestigious initiatives. The paper argues that the reluctance of researchers to contribute can only be understood in light of the highly competitive context in which research careers need to be built nowadays and how this affects researchers’ quality of life. Competition and managerialism limit the discretion of researchers in sharing their results and in donating their working time. A growing corpus of research shows that academic researchers are increasingly overworked and highly stressed. This corroborates the point that the room for undertaking additional tasks with future and uncertain benefits is very limited. The paper thus recommends that promoters of digital knowledge repositories focus on the needs of the researchers who are expected to contribute their knowledge. In order to treat them fairly and to ensure the success of the repositories, knowledge sharing needs to be rewarded so as to improve the working conditions of contributors. In order to help implementing this researcher-centred approach, the paper proposes the idea of expediential trust: rewards for contributing should be such that rational, self-interested researchers would freely decide to contribute their knowledge and effort trusting that this would make them better off.

Highlights

  • This Special Issue addresses the question of whether we can trust Digital Knowledge Repositories ( DKRs) in the field of biomedical sciences

  • Our findings show that providing incentives to researchers who can contribute to the building, reviewing and updating of Adverse Outcome Pathways (AOPs) in the Knowledge Base (KB) is a problem that has to be tackled and solved

  • From the perspective of a philosophical analysis of disruptive digital technologies, attention has mainly focused on epistemological issues—and on epistemic trust and on the transformations brought about by aggregating and standardising knowledge through the support of digital technologies—and the new social network that they create—epistemic communities

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Summary

Introduction

This Special Issue addresses the question of whether we can trust Digital Knowledge Repositories ( DKRs) in the field of biomedical sciences. A lot of attention has been devoted to the risk that users may or will not trust the DKRs, and this epistemic trust is surely an important issue. There is another risk that has been much more neglected: that the knowledge producers may not trust that the effort to contribute their knowledge to the DKR is worth their while. I propose the concept of expediential trust to identify and draw attention to this phenomenon

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