Part 1 – communication, collaboration, visibility
New communications channels (blogs, microblogs, aggregators, virtual
conferences and poster sessions) and examples of successful applying
in science. New roles of blogs, Research Blogging initiative. Wikis,
Etherpad and Google Documents/Wave – platforms for document
co-writing. Collaboration for programmers, Git. Visibility and
recognition in the internets: StackOverflow and ResearcherID.
Part 2 – practical open science
Spectrum of openness in science. Community annotation of
genes/proteins/structures and why these aren’t so successful.
Crowdsourcing and citizen-science. Overview of open data repositories,
focusing on open data coming from pharma industry. Mechanisms of Open
Access and Open Notebook Science. Current discussions on intellectual
property – what’s not protected and what’s not licensable? Public
domain. Data citation. Openness vs metrics of academic effectiveness.
Part 3 – searching for information and literature management
Information overflow – myth or fact? Searching for information –
differences between PubMed and Google Scholar. Semantic analysis of
abstracts based on GoPubMed and NovoSeek. Targeted text-mining tools.
Literature management: online (Connotea, CiteULike) and desktop
(Zotero, Mendeley) approaches. Alternatives for EndNote. Automated or
not – literature recommendations. Web-based lab notebooks.
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