Open access isn’t as open as you think, especially when there are corporate interests involved
Matthew Grosvenor
Cambridge computer scientists have established a new gold standard for open research, in order to make scientific results more robust and reliable
A group of Cambridge computer scientists have set a new gold standard for openness and reproducibility in research by sharing the more than 200GB of data and 20,000 lines of code behind their latest results – an unprecedented degree of openness in a peer-reviewed publication. The researchers hope that this new gold standard will be adopted by other fields, increasing the reliability of research results, especially for work which is publicly funded.
The researchers are presenting their results at a talk today (4 May) at the 12th USENIX Symposium on Networked Systems Design and Implementation (NSDI) in Oakland, California.
In recent years there’s been a great deal of discussion about so-called ‘open access’ publications – the idea that research publications, particularly those funded by public money, should be made publicly available.
Computer science has embraced open access more than many disciplines, with some publishers sub-licensing publications and allowing authors to publish them in open archives. However, as more and more corporations publish their research in academic journals, and as academics find themselves in a ‘publish or perish’ culture, the reliability of research results has come into question.
“Open access isn’t as open as you think, especially when there are corporate interests involved,” said Matthew Grosvenor, a PhD student from the University’s Computer Laboratory, and the paper’s lead author. “Due to commercial sensitivities, corporations are reluctant to make their code and data sets available when they publish in peer-reviewed journals. But without the code or data sets, the results are irrelevant – we can’t know whether an experiment is the same if we try to recreate it.”
Beyond computer science, a number of high-profile incidents of errors, fraud or misconduct have called quality standards in research into question. This has thrown the issue of reproducibility – that a result can be reliably repeated given the same conditions – into the spotlight.
“If a result cannot be reliably repeated, then how can we trust it?” said Grosvenor. “If you try to reproduce other people’s work from the paper alone, you often end up with different numbers. Unless you have access to everything, it’s useless to call a piece of research open source. It’s either open source or it’s not – you can’t open source just a little bit.”
With their most recent publication, Grosvenor and his colleagues have gone several steps beyond typical open access standards – setting a new gold standard for open and reproducible research. All of the experimental figures and tables in the award-winning final version of their paper, which describes a new method of making data centres more efficient, are clickable.
Read more: New gold standard established for open and reproducible research
The Latest on: Open research
via Google News
The Latest on: Open research
- ITfirms Lists Best Open Source Video Editing Softwareon January 19, 2021 at 7:00 pm
ITfirms’ report covers the latest listing of video editing software; know the criteria of selection and legibility!
- Open Lending (NASDAQ:LPRO) Lowered to Hold at Zacks Investment Researchon January 19, 2021 at 5:24 pm
Open Lending (NASDAQ:LPRO) was downgraded by Zacks Investment Research from a “buy” rating to a “hold” rating in a research report issued to clients and investors on Tuesday, Zacks.com reports.
- Applications Open for Research Opportunitieson January 19, 2021 at 5:17 pm
North Carolina Sea Grant and North Carolina Space Grant are encouraging undergraduate and graduate students to apply for research fellowship and scholarship opportunities.
- Lium Launches Predictive Research for Power, Renewables, and Shaleon January 19, 2021 at 3:35 pm
Lium LLC, an independent Energy & Industrial market research firm designed for institutional users, today announced the launch of coverage in the power & renewables markets in conjunction with ...
- Infill Thinking and Coras Research Announce Business Combination and Formaton of Liumon January 19, 2021 at 3:25 pm
Coras Research LLC and Infill Thinking LLC, independent energy market research firms led by energy finance veterans, announced today the closing of a business combination and the formation of a new ...
- A study that attempts to count the number of rodents used in lab research sparks a controversyon January 19, 2021 at 3:01 pm
A controversial new study claims that more than 110 million of the mammals used in American scientific laboratories for experiments are either mice or rats — an assertion that, if true, is astonishing ...
- Here’s How Many Car Windows Should Be Open to Minimize COVID-19 Risk, Per a New Studyon January 19, 2021 at 2:21 pm
To reduce the spread of COVID-19, you know you should be wearing a face mask in public and keeping a six-foot distance from people who don’t live in your home—but that’s pretty difficult to do when ...
- Infill Thinking and Coras Research Announce Business Combination and Formation of Liumon January 19, 2021 at 2:20 pm
Coras Research LLC and Infill Thinking LLC, independent energy market research firms led by energy finance veterans, announced today the closing of a business combination and the formation of a new ...
- A potential Trump memoir is being opposed by hundreds of editors, writers, and agents – who have signed an open letter against iton January 19, 2021 at 1:35 pm
Hundreds of authors, editors, and agents signed an open letter asking the world's publishers to skip a post-presidency memoir from Donald Trump.
- Who's writing open access articles?on January 19, 2021 at 10:18 am
An Academic Analytics Research Center (AARC) study has found greater rates of authorship of open access (OA) research articles among scholars at more prestigious institutions with greater access to ...
via Bing News