Is the Supporting Information the Venue for Reproducibility and Transparency?

Making research data, software, and data processing tools readily available to the public could significantly enhance the impact of scientific publications. Openness and transparency could address reproducibility concerns and accelerate scientific progress.(1, 2) While archives and repositories woul...

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Veröffentlicht in:The journal of physical chemistry. B 2017-12, Vol.121 (51), p.11425-11426
Hauptverfasser: Rudshteyn, Benjamin, Acharya, Atanu, Batista, Victor S
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Making research data, software, and data processing tools readily available to the public could significantly enhance the impact of scientific publications. Openness and transparency could address reproducibility concerns and accelerate scientific progress.(1, 2) While archives and repositories would be preferable for securing data in the long term, the Supporting Information (SI) already allocates significant space to provide auxiliary files, links, and essential information needed to make scientific findings immediately reproducible as well as data processing protocols and numerical procedures executable. Furthermore, the SI document could ensure that data that might not fit in the tight confines of a journal article lives online even when laboratories move on to other projects, close, and lose track of their data. The change for openness and transparency might be difficult to embrace, depending on the specific nature of the project. Nevertheless, the trend to make raw research data and open-source software packages available to the public has been building steady momentum. Openness in research data and software sharing is already making transformative contributions to the communication of research findings, critical for ensuring reproducibility as well as training of the next generation of scientists.
ISSN:1520-6106
1520-5207
DOI:10.1021/acs.jpcb.7b11664