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Incentivising open ecological data using blockchain technology

Rob J. Lewis, Kjell‐Erik Marstein, John‐Arvid Grytnes

2023Scientific Data11 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Research centred on understanding scientists’ attitudes towards open data in ecology and evolution point to an increased acceptance of and willingness to engage in open data practices 1 , 2 , but also identifies common threads of concern which present barriers to data sharing . Mindsets concerning data as proprietary are common 3 , especially where data production is resource intensive 4 . Fears of competing research in concert with loss of exclusivity to hard earned data are pervasive 1 , 5 , 6 , 7 . This is for good reason given that current reward structures in academia focus overwhelmingly on journal prestige and high publication counts 8 , and not accredited publication of open datasets. And, then there exists reluctance of researchers to cede control to centralised repositories, citing concern over the lack of trust and transparency over the way complex data are used and interpreted 6 , 9 , 10 .

Topics & Concepts

Open dataData sharingTransparency (behavior)Data scienceOpen scienceMetadataComputer scienceAnalyticsScholarly communicationWorld Wide WebData managementPublishingPolitical scienceComputer securityDatabaseLawPhysicsAstronomyAlternative medicineMedicinePathologyResearch Data Management PracticesScientific Computing and Data ManagementSpecies Distribution and Climate Change
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