One of the most powerful tools to use in this context is the tracking of chemical entities as ChemSpider IDs. This enables direct access to many other web services which Andrew Lang and I have leveraged to generate our own services. Tony spoke a bit more about this in his part and outlined some of the benefits and frustrations with crowdsourcing. Carl spoke eloquently about his experiences with Open Notebook Science as a graduate student for computational projects. The slides from all of us are provided below.
Science Online 2011 ONS session
View more presentations from Jean-Claude Bradley.
The overall tone of the discussion during our session was quite positive and productive. This was the case with all of the other sessions I attended, as it has been in prior years. The Science Online conference has evolved to attract a large proportion of people advocating Open Science. The presenters and the audience feel that they are among friends and the result is usually a free and easy exchange of ideas. Not all conferences and symposia relating to the online aspects of science share this. I have seen many examples where the "online science" theme is overrun by Closed Science proponents, for example commercial databases or Electronic Laboratory Notebook (ELN) vendors. Hopefully this conference will retain its Open Science focus in the future.
Kaitlin Thaney proved to be a very effective moderator during her session on "The Digital Toolbox: What's Needed?" and she stirred up some insightful discussion. I also enjoyed Steve Koch's session (co-moderated with Kiyomi Deards and Molly Keener) on "Data Discoverability: Institutional Support Strategies". Steve shared a particularly compelling example of the collaborative benefits of Open Notebook Science, where a computational research group came across images and videos from one of his group's notebooks and incorporated these in their paper - with all due credit acknowledged.
I very much appreciated the opportunity to catch up with old friends and some new. I had never met Carl Boettiger in person before and we had some very interesting discussions about Open Science and Open Education. It was good to meet Mark Hahnel from FigShare and explore possible paths for data sharing. I had some nice chats with Antony Williams, Steve Koch, Steven Bachrach, Heather Piwowar and Ana Nelson.
The Saturday evening banquet proved to be surprisingly entertaining. Despite the sedate title of her talk, "Out on a Limb: Challenges of Training Scientists to Communicate", Meg Lowman pounded the audience with a hilarious performance. Science comedian Brian Malow kicked this up a notch with some very clever material. Later on, using a brilliant comedic judo technique, he repeated some choice derisive comments he received from his performances on YouTube. I hope he comes back next year!
Thought the talk was great without the slides but thanks for putting them up. Was great to meet you JC. I was amazed that in a conference with so much variety I could find so many people who shared specific common interests ie. open science/data sharing, with whom to discuss ideas and plans for literally the whole weekend. It can only be a good thing that so many people are trying to make things happen in this field and I think everyone will agree that what you do is a big reason for this.
ReplyDeleteThanks for the kind words! I'm glad you enjoyed my performance/presentation. That was the first time I've presented those YouTube comments - but it won't be the last!
ReplyDeleteAnd I do hope to be there again next year. #SciO11 rules!
Brian,
ReplyDeleteCan't wait to see those comments next year!