The AAAS Annual Meeting takes place in Austin from 15 to 19 February and F1000 will be there. We will try to get to the heart of open science while deep in the heart of Texas. We will be moderating a panel that will include perspectives from a researcher, Charles Lin, Baylor College of Medicine; a funder, Ashley Farley, the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation; and a publisher, Sabina Alam, F1000. We get some insight into their views on open science.
It seems not so long ago that we announced that we would be launching Gates Open Research, and hot on its heels is the latest addition to the family – UCL Child Health Open Research. We are delighted that UCL Great Ormond Street Institute of Child Health, the largest centre of child health research in Europe, have taken this big step in becoming the first institute to launch their own publication platform.
Rebecca Lawrence, our Managing Director, discusses the vital role that research institutions can play, together with research funders, in supporting their researchers in improving the way that the findings of their work are communicated and helping to reduce research waste.
When we first launched F1000Research just over four years ago, we took the first step on a journey that we hope will change the way the results of scientific research are published by using a fully transparent post-publication peer review model. We are delighted to announce today that the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation has agreed to join us on this journey by partnering with us to launch Gates Open Research using that same model of publication.
Open science could improve the dissemination of scholarly knowledge, but there is no commonly shared vision on how this could be achieved. Following discussions concerning the matter, guest authors, Katja Mayer, University of Vienna, and Peter Kraker, postdoctoral researcher at Know-Center, propose twelve principles that they hope will inspire a widespread discussion towards a shared vision for scholarly communication in the 21st century.