Suchergebnisse
Filter
9 Ergebnisse
Sortierung:
Lo sviluppo insostenibile: dal vertice di Rio a quello di Johannesburg
In: Testi e pretesti
Lo sviluppo sostenibile: dalla Conferenza di Rio alla Conferenza di Johannesburg
In: Le nuove tessere 75
Bioterrorismo: antrace, gas nervini e bombe atomiche ; quali rischi corriamo e come possiamo difenderci
In: Primo piano
Albert Einstein, Pacifist
In: The Federalist Debate, Band 29, Heft 1, S. 32-36
ISSN: 1591-8483
La risorsa infinita: una società democratica della conoscenza
In: Saggi scienza e società
L' Italia oltre il declino: ricerca scientifica e competitività economica
In: Scienza e società 1
Perspectives on Open Science and scientific data sharing: an interdisciplinary workshop
Looking at Open Science and Open Data from a broad perspective. This is the idea behind "Scientific data sharing: an interdisciplinary workshop", an initiative designed to foster dialogue between scholars from different scientific domains which was organized by the Istituto Italiano di Antropologia in Anagni, Italy, 2-4 September 2013.We here report summaries of the presentations and discussions at the meeting. They deal with four sets of issues: (i) setting a common framework, a general discussion of open data principles, values and opportunities; (ii) insights into scientific practices, a view of the way in which the open data movement is developing in a variety of scientific domains (biology, psychology, epidemiology and archaeology); (iii) a case study of human genomics, which was a trail-blazer in data sharing, and which encapsulates the tension that can occur between large-scale data sharing and one of the boundaries of openness, the protection of individual data; (iv) open science and the public, based on a round table discussion about the public communication of science and the societal implications of open science. There were three proposals for the planning of further interdisciplinary initiatives on open science. Firstly, there is a need to integrate top-down initiatives by governments, institutions and journals with bottom-up approaches from the scientific community. Secondly, more should be done to popularize the societal benefits of open science, not only in providing the evidence needed by citizens to draw their own conclusions on scientific issues that are of concern to them, but also explaining the direct benefits of data sharing in areas such as the control of infectious disease. Finally, introducing arguments from social sciences and humanities in the educational dissemination of open data may help students become more profoundly engaged with Open Science and look at science from a broader perspective.
BASE