5. “Open Notebook Science is simply the practice of making one’s
laboratory notebook completely public in as close to real time as
possible. In organic chemistry this is pretty straightforward –
researchers must keep a notebook where they record what they
do and observe in an experiment, generally with the intent of
making a specific compound. In other fields, records may be kept
in different formats but the idea is that the research group doing
ONS should strive to do research transparently with as little
“insider information” as is reasonable. In organic chemistry this
means providing access to all raw data files (spectra for example)
so that another researcher can independently verify all
observations and conclusions made.”
J.C. Bradley, interviewed on Science Blogs, Blog Around the Clock, May 2008
http://scienceblogs.com/clock/2008/05/23/doing-science-publicly-intervi/
6. At Sci-Foo Camp, at the
Googleplex, August 2007
w/Deepak Singh at SciFoo
9. Research Without Borders,
“Open Science: Good for
Research, Good for
Researchers?” Columbia
University, February 2009
"Transparency facilitates rapid access to existing and new
collaborators, as well as exposing our work to the scrutiny of
many, which can only make it better.“
Jean-Claude Bradley, C&E News, February 9, 2009
http://cen.acs.org/articles/87/i6/Jean-Claude-Bradley.html
10.
11.
12. At University of Delaware
Tuesday Tech Talks,
February 2013
“…[Open Notebook Science] is sort of going away from a
culture of trust to one of proof. Everybody makes
mistakes. And if you don't expose your raw data, nobody
will find your mistakes.“
J.C. Bradley, Interviewed for Science Careers, Science, April 2010
http://sciencecareers.sciencemag.org/career_magazine/previous_iss
ues/articles/2010_04_09/caredit.a1000036
13. At the White House Open Science Poster Session, W/Andrew Lang, June 2013
14. At the White House Open Science Poster Session, w/Matthew McBride, June 2013