ODIN: Open Data In Neurophysiology: Advancements, Solutions & Challenges
Across the life sciences, an ongoing effort over the last 50 years has made data and methods more reproducible and transparent. This openness has led to transformative insights and vastly accelerated scientific progress. For example, structural biology and genomics have undertaken systematic collect...
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Zusammenfassung: | Across the life sciences, an ongoing effort over the last 50 years has made
data and methods more reproducible and transparent. This openness has led to
transformative insights and vastly accelerated scientific progress. For
example, structural biology and genomics have undertaken systematic collection
and publication of protein sequences and structures over the past half-century,
and these data have led to scientific breakthroughs that were unthinkable when
data collection first began. We believe that neuroscience is poised to follow
the same path, and that principles of open data and open science will transform
our understanding of the nervous system in ways that are impossible to predict
at the moment.
To this end, new social structures along with active and open scientific
communities are essential to facilitate and expand the still limited adoption
of open science practices in our field. Unified by shared values of openness,
we set out to organize a symposium for Open Data in Neuroscience (ODIN) to
strengthen our community and facilitate transformative neuroscience research at
large. In this report, we share what we learned during this first ODIN event.
We also lay out plans for how to grow this movement, document emerging
conversations, and propose a path toward a better and more transparent science
of tomorrow. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2407.00976 |