New piece on open science practices in Current Biology

Bertram, M.G., Sundin, J., Roche, D.G., Sánchez-Tójar, A., Thoré, E.S.J., Brodin, T. 2023. Open science. Curr. Biol. 33, R792–R797. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cub.2023.05.036 | PDF

The term ‘open science’ refers to a range of methods, tools, platforms and practices that aim to make scientific research more accessible, transparent, reproducible and reliable. This includes, for example, sharing code, data and research materials, embracing new publishing formats such as registered reports and preprints, pursuing replication studies and reanalyses, optimising statistical approaches to improve evidence assessment and re-evaluating institutional incentives. The ongoing shift towards open science practices is partly due to mounting evidence that studies across disciplines suffer from biases, underpowered designs and irreproducible or non-replicable results. It also stems from a general desire amongst many researchers to reduce hyper-competitivity in science and instead promote collaborative research that benefits science and society.

 
 
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