Open Science/Week 13: International Cooperation in Open Science

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Learning Outcomes[edit | edit source]

  • Identify open science issues related to international cooperation.
  • Describe contextual factors relevant to equitable  international collaboration.

Readings[edit | edit source]

Framing a Situated and Inclusive Open Science: Emerging Lessons from the Open and Collaborative Science in Development Network” by Hillyer, R., Posada, A., Albornoz, D., Chan, L., & Okune, A. in Expanding Perspectives on Open Science: Communities, Cultures and Diversity in Concepts and Practices, 18, 2017, CC BY-NC.[1] 16 pages.

Developing Open Science in Africa: Barriers, Solutions and Opportunities” by Mwelwa, J., Boulton, G., Wafula, J. M., & Loucoubar, C. in Data Science Journal, 19: 31, (2020), Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International.[2] 18 pages.

In addition and based on student interest, assign one or more of these specific applications:

Developing International Open Science Collaborations: Funder Reflections on the Open Science Prize” by Kittrie E, Atienza AA, Kiley R, Carr D, MacFarlane A, Pai V, et al. in PLoS Biol 15(8): e2002617, 2017, CC 0 1.0.[3] 8 pages.

Open Science Approaches to COVID-19” by Edwin, G. T., Klug, D. M., & Todd, M. H. in F1000Research, 9, 2020, Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International.[4] 11 pages.

Discussion Question[edit | edit source]

Briefly summarize a study in your field that involved international cooperation. Highlight the extent to which the study incorporated open science practices. Comment on the factors in the study context that are relevant to equitable collaboration. Conclude your post with a question inviting further discussion.

Self-check Questions[edit | edit source]

1 In “Framing a Situated and Inclusive Open Science,” the authors’ concept of development is informed by which of the following ideas? Choose the best answer.

Amartya Sen’s Human Capabilities Approach
the Latin American concept of buen vivir, roughly, good life
the African concept of Ubuntu, roughly, celebration of people living and working together
all of the above

2 In “Framing a Situated and Inclusive Open Science,” the researchers sought to place more emphasis on understanding which aspect of open science projects?

tools
infrastructure
cost models
power structures

3 Which of the following were cross-cutting lessons or themes Hillyer and colleagues found in the case studies in “Framing a Situated and Inclusive Open Science”? Mark all that apply.

It is important for open science practitioners to build a common language.
Open science should be placed in a local context to get buy-in from local participants.
Take advantage of work that has already been done to avoid “reinventing the wheel.”
Collaborations should include at least one partner from the Global North.

4 Mwelwa and colleagues employed four methods in “Developing Open Science in Africa.” In which order did they carry out the four phases?

literature review, analysis of broad scope of research questions, survey, thematic analysis of data.
survey, literature review, analysis of broad scope of research questions, thematic analysis of data
analysis of broad scope of research questions, literature review, thematic analysis of data, survey
none of the above

5 Which of the following issues were identified in “Developing Open Science in Africa” as creating resistance to open data sharing? Mark all that apply.

Researchers sought to publish multiple studies based on the same data set.
Researchers believed that rapid technological change meant that data sets quickly became obsolete.
Researchers felt a sense of ownership over data, even when its collection had been publicly funded.
Researchers from the Global South saw the benefits of open science going mostly to the North.

  1. Hillyer, Rebecca; Posada, Alejandro; Albornoz, Denisse; Chan, Leslie; Okune, Angela (2017). "Framing a Situated and Inclusive Open Science: Emerging Lessons from the Open and Collaborative Science in Development Network". Expanding Perspectives on Open Science: Communities, Cultures and Diversity in Concepts and Practices: 18–33. doi:10.3233/978-1-61499-769-6-18. https://ebooks.iospress.nl/doi/10.3233/978-1-61499-769-6-18. 
  2. Mwelwa, Joseph; Boulton, Geoffrey; Wafula, Joseph Muliaro; Loucoubar, Cheikh (2020-08-05). "Developing Open Science in Africa: Barriers, Solutions and Opportunities". Data Science Journal 19 (1): 31. doi:10.5334/dsj-2020-031. ISSN 1683-1470. http://datascience.codata.org/article/10.5334/dsj-2020-031/. 
  3. Kittrie, Elizabeth; Atienza, Audie A.; Kiley, Robert; Carr, David; MacFarlane, Aki; Pai, Vinay; Couch, Jennifer; Bajkowski, Jared et al. (2017-08-01). "Developing international open science collaborations: Funder reflections on the Open Science Prize". PLOS Biology 15 (8): e2002617. doi:10.1371/journal.pbio.2002617. ISSN 1545-7885. PMID 28763440. PMC PMC5538631. https://journals.plos.org/plosbiology/article?id=10.1371/journal.pbio.2002617. 
  4. Tse, Edwin G.; Klug, Dana M.; Todd, Matthew H. (2020). "Open science approaches to COVID-19". F1000Research 9: 1043. doi:10.12688/f1000research.26084.1. ISSN 2046-1402. PMID 33145011. PMC 7590891. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/33145011/.