User:Daniel Mietchen/Talks/COASP 2010/Summary: Difference between revisions

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:::;;;<blockquote>''What if everyone in the world were in your lab – a ‘hive mind’ of sorts, but composed of countless creative intellects rather than mindless worker ants, and one in which resources, reagents and effort could be shared, along with ideas, in a manner not dictated by institutional and geographical constraints?&nbsp;&mdash;&nbsp;[http://dmm.biologists.org/content/2/5-6/201 Chris Patil and Vivian Siegel]''</blockquote>
If you want to make scholarly publishing editable, wikis provide a viable way to do so.
 
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Wikis
*provide the opportunity to structure digitally published items more [[context]]ually than stand-alone articles (particularly print-based ones) allow for
*are compatible with any mode of [[peer review]] tested so far
*can be integrated with every step of the [[research cycle]], so as to highlight research as a process and improve reproducibility
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Latest revision as of 02:41, 22 November 2023


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Session start · Talk start · Quotes · Background · Wikis as science communication platforms ·
Wikis as platforms for Open Access publishing · Prototypes · Editorial policies · Guided tour ·
Obstacles · Alternatives · Outlook · Summary · Slides · Video · Q & A · Demo

What if everyone in the world were in your lab – a ‘hive mind’ of sorts, but composed of countless creative intellects rather than mindless worker ants, and one in which resources, reagents and effort could be shared, along with ideas, in a manner not dictated by institutional and geographical constraints? — Chris Patil and Vivian Siegel

Wikis

  • provide the opportunity to structure digitally published items more contextually than stand-alone articles (particularly print-based ones) allow for
  • are compatible with any mode of peer review tested so far
  • can be integrated with every step of the research cycle, so as to highlight research as a process and improve reproducibility