Open Research Articles - TL;DR - Digital Science https://www.digital-science.com/tldr/articles/topics/open-research/ Advancing the Research Ecosystem Thu, 12 Jun 2025 08:38:42 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.2 Supporting Australia’s PID Strategy: Introducing the National Benchmarking Toolkit (Consultation Draft) https://www.digital-science.com/tldr/article/supporting-australias-pid-strategy/ Thu, 12 Jun 2025 08:38:41 +0000 https://www.digital-science.com/?post_type=tldr_article&p=75981 It's now out for consultation - the Australian National Persistent Identifier (PID) Benchmarking Toolkit has been released as a draft, developed by Digital Science and commissioned by the Australian Research Data Commons (ARDC). Simon Porter takes us through what the toolkit offers for the future of Australian research.

The post Supporting Australia’s PID Strategy: Introducing the National Benchmarking Toolkit (Consultation Draft) appeared first on Digital Science.

]]>
Digital Science is pleased to support the Australian Research Data Commons (ARDC) in the development of the Australian National Persistent Identifier (PID) Benchmarking Toolkit, released today as a consultation draft.

Commissioned by ARDC as part of its work on the National Persistent Identifier Strategy, the toolkit provides a structured approach to assessing the adoption and maturity of PID infrastructure across Australia’s research ecosystem. It is intended to inform shared planning, highlight areas for improvement, and support long-term progress towards a more connected and interoperable research environment.

About the Toolkit

Persistent identifiers — including ORCID iDs, DOIs, RORs, and RAiDs — are now widely recognised as foundational components of modern research infrastructure. They help connect researchers, projects, outputs, institutions, and services across systems and domains.

The National PID Strategy outlines five strategic objectives that aim to increase the discoverability and reusability of research, improve reproducibility, reduce administrative burden, strengthen impact assessment, and support national capability mapping. The benchmarking toolkit aligns with these objectives by offering a set of SMART benchmarks — Specific, Measurable, Achievable, Relevant, and Time-bound —that provides a national framework for assessing progress against the Strategy whilst also providing a mechanism for institutions and sector bodies to evaluate their progress.

Each benchmark is grounded in the current state of practice and considers relevant factors such as international dependencies, expected maturity, stakeholder responsibilities, and alignment with FAIR principles (Findable, Accessible, Interoperable, and Reusable).

A Sector-Wide Resource

The toolkit covers a broad range of research inputs and outputs, including grants, research projects, research data, facilities, reports, methods, and non-traditional outputs. It also highlights the importance of connecting research activities across the full lifecycle.

As a practical demonstration of benchmarking in action, the report includes an analysis of Australia’s progress in ORCID adoption. Drawing on data from Dimensions and other sources, the report benchmarks ORCID uptake and record completeness by country, funder, discipline, publisher, and institution. Australia’s coordinated efforts over the past several years — including those led by ARDC and its partners — have resulted in one of the highest levels of ORCID adoption and integration globally.

Invitation to Contribute

This consultation draft is intended to support discussion and feedback across the sector. We invite contributions from institutions, funders, service providers, and researchers to help ensure that the final version — to be published in October 2025 — is both useful and implementable.

Over the coming months, Digital Science and ARDC will continue to refine the benchmarks and consult with stakeholders through a series of validation workshops and collaborative development activities.

Timeline

  • July–August 2025: Consultation, Validation and refinement
  • September 2025: Stakeholder workshops
  • October 2025: Final release of the benchmarking toolkit

Access the Report

📄 Download the consultation draft of the Australian National PID Benchmarking Toolkit: https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.29281667

Co-authored by Digital Science’s Simon Porter (VP Research Futures), Dr Juergen Wastl (VP Research Evaluation and Global Challenges) and Dr Hélène Draux (Senior Data Scientist).


For questions or feedback, please contact Simon Porter.

The post Supporting Australia’s PID Strategy: Introducing the National Benchmarking Toolkit (Consultation Draft) appeared first on Digital Science.

]]>
AI Needs New Facts – The Value of Novel Scientific Research https://www.digital-science.com/tldr/article/ai-needs-new-facts-the-value-of-novel-scientific-research/ Wed, 04 Jun 2025 09:21:13 +0000 https://www.digital-science.com/?post_type=tldr_article&p=75933 The role of scientific research has featured heavily at SXSW London 2025. Mark Hahnel suggests we need more basic research in order to compete.

The post AI Needs New Facts – The Value of Novel Scientific Research appeared first on Digital Science.

]]>
At SXSW London, I had the pleasure of seeing DeepMind co-founder Demis Hassabis speak on the future of artificial intelligence. Among many thought-provoking points, two remarks stuck with me. First, he emphasised the importance of understanding the fundamentals. Second, he championed the scientific method as a guiding principle for making meaningful progress in AI. 

DeepMind co-founder Demis Hassabis interviewed at SXSW London 2025. Photo by Mark Hahnel.

As someone who works at the intersection of open research and AI, I’ve found myself returning to a specific question: What kind of content truly matters to AI? I have previously spoken of an AI powered flywheel effect in research, where each cycle follows this pattern:

  1. Raw data is processed by AI to generate initial research outputs
  2. Knowledge extraction tools mine these outputs for higher-order insights
  3. These insights form a new, refined dataset
  4. AI processes this refined dataset, generating more precise analyses
  5. The cycle continues, with each rotation producing more valuable knowledge

I interpret “understanding the fundamentals” as being the base layer, the raw data. Models can mimic almost any writing style and generate endless reams of text. Not all content is created equal. I have witnessed this first hand as self declared “academics” from around the globe use generalist repositories to post non peer-reviewed content written by LLMs which proves their genius.

AI systems, particularly large language models, rely on data to learn. Not just more data, but better data; data that reveals new structure in the world. Without novel input, AI models will become better at rephrasing the known, but not at understanding the unknown. At its core, science is a method for producing high-quality, structured novelty – a repeatable process for generating new facts, testing them against reality, and sharing them with the world. Basic research, often funded for its long-term potential rather than short-term applications, is the primary engine of this kind of content. AlphaFold succeeded because it was trained on grounded, empirical data from the protein databank.

If we want AI to continue advancing in a meaningful way that uncovers new knowledge, we need to prioritise access to and support for novel scientific research. That means supporting open science. It means investing in infrastructure that ensures new data and discoveries are FAIR (Findable, Accessible, Interoperable, and Reusable). It means rethinking publication practices to encourage the dissemination of negative results, replication studies, and raw data. And it means funding basic research across the globe.

China has significantly increased its investment in basic research, aiming to reduce reliance on foreign technology and achieve self-sufficiency in foundational sciences. China’s spending on basic research passed 6% of its total R&D in 2023 and continues to rise. China seems to be an outlier. Here in the UK for example, basic research through UKRI continues but often faces pressures to demonstrate short-term economic impact. In the US, the NSF and NIH continue to support basic research, but federal R&D budgets have shifted toward mission-driven, applied research. The Inflation Reduction Act and CHIPS and Science Act brought some uplift, but basic science still receives a minority share of total R&D.

The geopolitical landscape is hard to predict. But the narrative is that all countries want to compete on the AI stage. Radical abundance only will happen in your country if you have some control of the input to the models. 

Former UK Prime Minister Tony Blair and the UK Secretary of State for Science, Innovation and Technology, The Rt Hon Peter Kyle MP, interviewed at SXSW London 2025. Photo by Mark Hahnel.

At a separate SXSW London session, we also heard from former UK Prime Minister Tony Blair and The Rt Hon Peter Kyle MP, UK Secretary of State for Science, Innovation and Technology. Peter Kyle’s plans for integrating AI into the UK government are commendable, and seem to be advancing at a pace that the UK government is not famous for. A comment from Tony Blair however highlighted what is at stake if we don’t fund basic research: “It is amazing to me that we are not feeding all of the NHS data into these AI models.”

Whether you trust this government with your most sensitive data or not, we will have future governments who may not follow your best interests – in the same way that LLM models are ignoring copyright on academic publications today, they may ignore human ethics when it comes to your medical data. Feeding the NHS into LLMs is not the answer. The easiest way to generate new data for the AI models with a view to advance science and technology is to fund more basic research and insist that the outputs be made open in a FAIR manner.

There is so much to gain. The value of novel scientific research has never been higher.

The post AI Needs New Facts – The Value of Novel Scientific Research appeared first on Digital Science.

]]>
From Gold to Diamond: Is Equitable Open Access Still a Mirage? https://www.digital-science.com/tldr/article/from-gold-to-diamond-is-equitable-open-access-still-a-mirage/ Wed, 30 Apr 2025 09:45:00 +0000 https://www.digital-science.com/?post_type=tldr_article&p=75726 Mark Hahnel once wrote that Open Access is an inevitability. But what is the data telling us? In this new post, Mark shares the latest numbers and his insights on the current state of play for OA.

The post From Gold to Diamond: Is Equitable Open Access Still a Mirage? appeared first on Digital Science.

]]>
A few years ago, I wrote that Open Access is an inevitability. And in many ways, the data supports that view—at least at a glance.

Gold Open Access—the model where authors (or their funders) pay article processing charges to make work freely available—has grown steadily over the past decade. But if you look closely, the growth is slowing. And what’s taking its place isn’t the altruistic, community-powered model many hoped for. Instead, Hybrid Open Access is filling the gap: a model where paywalled journals charge extra to make select articles open.

Diamond Open Access—where publishing is free for both authors and readers, supported by institutions rather than APCs—has been making headlines. But here’s the uncomfortable truth: we still don’t have enough data to know whether Diamond OA is actually growing or simply being talked about more.

A System Stuck in the Middle

Digging into Dimensions data layered on top of OpenAlex, a clear pattern emerges. Gold OA’s momentum is slowing. But instead of researchers turning to Green OA (self-archiving in repositories) or Diamond OA, many are choosing Hybrid OA instead.

Why?

Because researchers chase visibility, reputation, and prestige. That often means publishing in high-impact journals—many of which are owned by legacy publishers who now offer hybrid models. These options give authors a way to comply with funder mandates without sacrificing perceived academic clout.

Institutions and libraries, meanwhile, are under pressure to show open access progress. Hybrid OA, while expensive, is a politically safe way to do that. It’s the administrative equivalent of checking a box—even if it means paying twice.

Transformative agreements like Read and Publish deals have only accelerated this trend, redirecting subscription budgets to cover OA fees—effectively normalizing hybrid publishing in many disciplines.

A New Vision Emerges

But while the hybrid tide rises, a quiet revolution is underway.

In 2022, a coalition of organizations—Science Europe, cOAlition S, OPERAS, and ANR—launched a bold Action Plan to support Diamond OA. Their goal: to build a truly equitable, community-driven publishing ecosystem, where knowledge is a public good and the costs are shouldered collectively—not by individual researchers.

This vision took shape through the DIAMAS project and culminated in the creation of the Diamond OA Standard (DOAS). Think of DOAS as a blueprint: a framework to help Diamond journals measure, improve, and sustain quality.

It’s built on seven pillars:

  • Legal ownership, mission, and governance
  • Open science practices
  • Editorial management and research integrity
  • Technical service efficiency
  • Visibility and impact
  • Equity, diversity, inclusion, and multilingualism
  • Continuous improvement

Together, these components aim to professionalize Diamond OA without compromising its values. They send a clear message: if scholarly communication is a public good, then it must be shaped and governed by the scholarly community itself.

The Missing Link: Measurable Growth

Despite this momentum, the numbers tell a more sobering story.

Early data from OpenAlex paints the picture that Diamond OA has plateaued in terms of publication volume. Enthusiasm and infrastructure have grown—but the data doesn’t reflect this.

Why the disconnect? Part of the issue is visibility. At Digital Science, we would love a better way to track Diamond Open Access growth. DOAJ lists 1,369 journals as being “without fees”, but there seem to be many edge cases resulting in a landscape that isn’t black and white.

It is also true that many Diamond journals operate with limited marketing, uncertain technical infrastructure, and fragmented funding. And despite the ideals, many researchers still don’t see them as viable options for career advancement.

What Comes Next?

There are reasons for optimism. The DIAMAS project isn’t just advocating for Diamond OA—it’s building the scaffolding. Its service portal offers templates, best practices, and technical guidance to help journals align with DOAS standards and professionalize their operations. The European Diamond Capacity Hub (EDCH) serves as a coordination center for Diamond OA stakeholders in Europe. Launched alongside the EDCH, the ALMASI Project focuses on understanding non-profit OA publishing in Africa, Latin America, and Europe.

The pieces are falling into place for equitable open access solutions. What’s needed is adoption and quantification. Funders and Institutions should include equitable OA in their promotion criteria. Researchers must see it as a credible home for their work. If anyone knows of faster ways to get clean data for Diamond, please reach out.

The path forward exists. But like any path, it only becomes clear by walking it. If you are working in this space and have this data, we would love to disseminate it through our tools at Digital Science.

The post From Gold to Diamond: Is Equitable Open Access Still a Mirage? appeared first on Digital Science.

]]>
The Perpetual Research Cycle: AI’s Journey Through Data, Papers, and Knowledge https://www.digital-science.com/tldr/article/the-perpetual-research-cycle-ais-journey-through-data-papers-and-knowledge/ Fri, 21 Mar 2025 09:45:00 +0000 https://www.digital-science.com/?post_type=tldr_article&p=75639 A "collaborative synergy" between AI and researchers "will define the next era of scientific progress", writes Mark Hahnel. How will AI enhance human intellect?

The post The Perpetual Research Cycle: AI’s Journey Through Data, Papers, and Knowledge appeared first on Digital Science.

]]>
Academics hypothesize, generate data, make sense of it and then communicate it. If AI can help to generate, mine, and refine knowledge faster than human researchers, what does the future of academia look like? The answer lies not in replacing human intellect but in enhancing it, creating a collaborative synergy between AI and human researchers that will define the next era of scientific progress. I’ve been playing around with chatGPT, Google Gemini and Claude.ai to see how well they all do at creating academic papers from datasets. 

AI can also serve as a tool to aid humans in data extraction from many papers. Consider a scenario where AI synthesizes information from hundreds of studies to create a refined dataset. That dataset then feeds back into the system, sparking new research papers.

This cycle—dataset to paper, paper to knowledge extraction, knowledge to new datasets—propels an accelerating loop of discovery. Instead of a linear research pipeline, AI enables a continuous, self-improving knowledge ecosystem.

From data to papers

I looked for interesting datasets on Figshare. The criteria was a) that I knew they would be re-usable as they had been cited several times. And b) the files were relatively small (<100MB) so as not to hit the limits of the common AI tools. 

This one fit the bill:

Rivers, American (2019). American Rivers Dam Removal Database. figshare. Dataset. https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.5234068.v12

From there I asked Claude 3.7 Sonnet “Based on the attached files, can you create a full length academic paper with an abstract, methods results, discussion and references”. Followed by “Can you convert the whole paper to latex so I can copy and paste it into Overleaf?”

The resulting paper needs a little tweaking in the layout of the results and graphs, but other than that, has done a great job.

Papers to new data/knowledge

A single paper is just the beginning. The real challenge is synthesizing knowledge from the ever-growing volume of research. This is where specialized knowledge extraction tools become crucial. How do we effectively mine this knowledge? This is where ReadCube shines. ReadCube helps researchers manage and discover scholarly literature, but its real power lies in its knowledge extraction capabilities. Imagine ReadCube as a powerful filter, sifting through countless pages to extract the nuggets of wisdom.

Tools like ReadCube can then analyze vast collections of papers, uncovering patterns and relationships that human researchers might miss. This process involves:

  • Text and citation mining: AI can analyze papers to identify emerging trends, inconsistencies, or knowledge gaps.
  • Automatic synthesis: AI can compare findings across thousands of studies, synthesizing insights into new, high-level conclusions.
  • Hypothesis generation: By recognizing correlations between disparate research areas, AI can propose new research directions.

The Flywheel Effect: How the Cycle Accelerates

The true magic happens when this extracted knowledge becomes the input for the next iteration. Each cycle follows this pattern:

  1. Raw data is processed by AI to generate initial research outputs
  2. Knowledge extraction tools mine these outputs for higher-order insights
  3. These insights form a new, refined dataset
  4. AI processes this refined dataset, generating more precise analyses
  5. The cycle continues, with each rotation producing more valuable knowledge


With each turn of this flywheel, the insights become more refined, more interconnected, and more actionable. The initial analyses might focus on direct correlations in the data, while later iterations can explore complex causal relationships, predict future trends, or suggest optimal intervention strategies.

This AI-driven, data-to-knowledge cycle represents a paradigm shift in research. Imagine the possibilities in fields like medicine, climate science, and economics. We’re moving towards a future where AI and human researchers work in synergy, pushing the boundaries of discovery. Rather than replacing researchers, AI acts as a force multiplier, enabling deeper faster knowledge generation.

The post The Perpetual Research Cycle: AI’s Journey Through Data, Papers, and Knowledge appeared first on Digital Science.

]]>
The 12 Days of DSmas https://www.digital-science.com/tldr/article/12-days-of-dsmas-2024/ Mon, 23 Dec 2024 12:34:07 +0000 https://www.digital-science.com/?post_type=tldr_article&p=74724 Every Muppets fan knows that Christmas is all about being revisited by people you've previously encountered. So from 25th December to 5th January we'll be sharing our 12 Days of DSmas. Check back daily as we share a Speaker Series 2024 chat each and every day. Happy Holidays from the Digital Science Thought Leadership Team!

The post The 12 Days of DSmas appeared first on Digital Science.

]]>

Every Muppets fan knows that Christmas is all about being revisited by people you’ve previously encountered. So from 25th December to 5th January we’ll be sharing our 12 Days of DSmas. Check back daily as we share a Speaker Series chat each and every day. Happy Holidays from the Digital Science Thought Leadership Team!

And if you just can’t wait, you can catch up on our entire 2024 Speaker Series season on-demand:

Merry Dr Chris Van Tulleken-mas! We chatted with Chris online about research integrity, impact, openness, and investigative research. Catch his interview here, and don’t forget to watch his Xmas Lectures on BBC for The Royal Institution this year!

As a Nobel laureate and former president of The Royal Society, Professor Venki Ramakrishnan has long played a role in shaping a more innovative, inclusive and impactful research culture, which we chatted about during his live Speaker Series lecture at the Ri. We went to Cambridge, UK to hear his thoughts on curiosity, competition and collaboration.

As Chief Publishing Officer at PLOS, Niamh provides business leadership for the entire PLOS portfolio to advance PLOS’s vision and mission. In this episode Niamh talks about the evolving landscape of scientific research and the push towards open science, including her journey from the early days of advocating for public access to research, to tackling current challenges like making science more inclusive and accessible.

Building communities is hard, but Alice Meadows has worked hard to make it look effortless. Here she is in Boston, MA, USA, telling us about the power of persistent identifiers.

It’s New Year’s Eve, and a time to reflect on the past and make plans for the months ahead. When we visited the Max Planck Institute in Berlin, Germany, we added to the echoes of amazing research conversations resonating around their iconic library when we chatted about the history, philosophy and future of research with Dr Maria Avxentevskaya and Dr Ben Johnson.

Happy New Year! We caught up with pro-skater Rodney Mullen at his home in Los Angeles, USA to hear his thoughts on why we need diverse minds to innovate in all walks – and ollies – of life. And, since it’s the new year and you’re probably feeling a little “sleep deprived”, you can also follow this up with his live Speaker Series lecture at the Ri.

If you’ve been eating as much cheese as this author, dearest gentle reader, you too will be experiencing a fascinatingly slippery grasp on reality – which brings us to Day 9’s featured speaker. “Is Maths Real?” was the question that Dr Eugenia Cheng posed in her live Speaker Series lecture at the Ri. I caught up with her ahead of her lecture in the iconic Faraday lecture theatre in London, UK to talk about why we need to break down barriers of knowledge in research, and reunite STEM and the humanities for impactful change.

2024 was a wild ride for global politics, and research is not immune to its changes. I caught up with Professor Jenny Reardon in Cambridge, UK, to learn more about how we can work with politics, and not against it, to provide solutions for everyone across the world, and where red tape remains to be overcome.

Our final Speaker Series guest of 2024 was Dr Danny Hillis. We visited the Applied Invention offices in Cambridge, MA, USA, where innovator, inventor, and Imagineer Danny shared his thoughts on how we can use novel technology to combat novel challenges in mis- and disinformation and make the most meaningful impact from data.

Catch up on our entire 2024 Speaker Series season on-demand and watch this space for our 2025 series featuring more impactful innovators from across the research landscape. Happy Holidays, and Happy New Year!

The post The 12 Days of DSmas appeared first on Digital Science.

]]>
TL;DR Shorts: Joy Owango on Research Infrastructure https://www.digital-science.com/tldr/article/tldr-shorts-joy-owango-on-research-infrastructure/ Tue, 26 Nov 2024 11:30:00 +0000 https://www.digital-science.com/?post_type=tldr_article&p=74399 In this week's TL;DR Shorts episode, Joy Owango discusses the importance of open infrastructures in improving the persistence and visibility of ALL research information from across the world to better include and impact all of society.

The post TL;DR Shorts: Joy Owango on Research Infrastructure appeared first on Digital Science.

]]>
We’re back with another episode of TL;DR Shorts featuring Joy Owango, the Founding Director of the Training Centre in Communication, or TCC Africa. In today’s episode, Joy discusses the importance of open infrastructures in improving the persistence and visibility of ALL research information from across the world to better include and impact all of society.

In this week’s TL;DR Shorts episode, Joy Owango talks about leveraging open research infrastructure to improve the persistence and visibility of research information globally. Check out the video on the Digital Science YouTube channel: https://youtu.be/qgFsZTUzIO0

Joy believes that open infrastructure can tackle both of these challenges and has already gone some way to proving its value in connecting people to underexplored areas of research and underrepresented researchers. Open infrastructures can also help us better analyse and understand the networks forming within and beyond research to drive research, discovery and innovation.

Reflecting on the impact that open research infrastructures have already had on the visibility and the collaborative discovery potential of African research outputs, Joy knows first-hand that these new ways of supporting research are already working – but she encourages us to create an even stronger framework within which everyone’s research contributions can be seen and built upon.

Subscribe now to be notified of each weekly release of the latest TL;DR Short, and catch up with the entire series here

If you’d like to suggest future contributors for our series or suggest some topics you’d like us to cover, drop Suze a message on one of our social media channels and use the hashtag #TLDRShorts.

The post TL;DR Shorts: Joy Owango on Research Infrastructure appeared first on Digital Science.

]]>
TL;DR Shorts: Venki Ramakrishnan on Open Research https://www.digital-science.com/tldr/article/tldr-shorts-venki-ramakrishnan-on-open-research/ Tue, 29 Oct 2024 16:46:17 +0000 https://www.digital-science.com/?post_type=tldr_article&p=74070 Open research is for life, not just for Open Access week, which is why we are sticking with the theme and hearing from Nobel laureate and former president of the Royal Society Venki Ramakrishnan who talks about this very topic in this week's TL;DR Shorts episode.

The post TL;DR Shorts: Venki Ramakrishnan on Open Research appeared first on Digital Science.

]]>
Hot on the heels of last week’s International Open Access Week and the announcement of the latest round of Nobel prizes earlier this month, it felt right that this week’s TL;DR Tuesday offering should feature Nobel laureate and former President of the Royal Society, now Group Lead of the Structural Studies Division of the Medical Research Council’s Laboratory of Molecular Biology, Venki Ramakrishnan. In this week’s TL;DR Shorts episode, Venki talks about the opportunities and challenges of open research.

Venki Ramakrishnan talks about the opportunities and challenges of open research. Check out the video on the Digital Science YouTube channel: https://youtu.be/ZD5iVPFq-GQ

Venki is a strong supporter of open research. Most research activities undertaken across the world are funded by taxpayers or charities. Venki believes that the public and other researchers have a right to access research information generated from this work. However, he also has concerns about the potential consequences of cutting out some of the steps in more traditional publishing routes.

Venki emphasises the need for research outputs to be checked for their integrity and credibility when sharing research openly. This curation step takes time and resources and therefore costs money, so we need to find a balance between sharing research information openly, widely and without financial barriers to accessing it, while also ensuring that that research is robust and of high quality. Who should fund this?

One way the open research agenda has transformed research is through institutions and funders insisting that data sets are made more available by sharing them in open repositories. This is just one example of how culture change in research is happening, and how small steps lead to a much larger research transformation and a paradigm shift in how we do research.

Subscribe now to be notified of each weekly release of the latest TL;DR Short, and catch up with the entire series here

If you’d like to suggest future contributors for our series or suggest some topics you’d like us to cover, drop Suze a message on one of our social media channels and use the hashtag #TLDRShorts.

The post TL;DR Shorts: Venki Ramakrishnan on Open Research appeared first on Digital Science.

]]>
Presenting: Research Transformation: Change in the era of AI, open and impact https://www.digital-science.com/tldr/article/presenting-research-transformation-change-in-ai-open-and-impact/ Mon, 28 Oct 2024 09:45:00 +0000 https://www.digital-science.com/?post_type=tldr_article&p=73965 Mark Hahnel and Simon Porter introduce Digital Science's new report as part of our ongoing investigation into Research Transformation: Change in the era of AI, open and impact.

The post Presenting: Research Transformation: Change in the era of AI, open and impact appeared first on Digital Science.

]]>
Research Transformation report graphic
Research Transformation: Change in the era of AI, open and impact.

As part of our ongoing investigation into Research Transformation, we are delighted to present a new report, Research Transformation: Change in the era of AI, open and impact.

Within the report, we sought to understand from our academic research community how research transformation is experienced across different roles and responsibilities. The report, which is a mixture of surveys and interviews across libraries, research offices, leadership and faculty, reflects transformations in the way we collaborate, assess, communicate, and conduct research.

The positions that we hold towards these areas are not the same as those we held a decade or even five years ago. Each of these perspectives represent shifts in the way that we perceive ourselves and the roles that we play in the community. Although there is concern about the impact that AI will have on our community, our ability to adapt and change is reflected strongly across all areas of research, including open access, metrics collaboration and research security. That such a diverse community is able to continually adapt to change reflects well on our ability to respond to future challenges.

Key findings from the report:

  • Open research is transforming research, but barriers remain
  • Research metrics are evolving to emphasize holistic impact and inclusivity
  • AI’s transformative potential is huge, but bureaucracy and skill gaps threaten progress
  • Collaboration is booming, but increasing concerns over funding and security
  • Security and risk management need a strategic and cultural overhaul

We do these kinds of surveys to understand where the research community is moving and how we can tweak and adapt our approach as a company. We were very grateful to the great minds who helped us out with a deep dive into what has affected their roles and will affect their roles going forward. Metrics, Open Research and AI are very aligned with the tools that we provide for academics, and the strategy we have to make research more inclusive, transparent and trustworthy.

The post Presenting: Research Transformation: Change in the era of AI, open and impact appeared first on Digital Science.

]]>
TL;DR Shorts: Joy Owango on Open Research https://www.digital-science.com/tldr/article/tldr-shorts-joy-owango-on-open-research/ Tue, 22 Oct 2024 15:30:00 +0000 https://www.digital-science.com/?post_type=tldr_article&p=73748 The theme of this year's International Open Access Week, which kicked off yesterday, is 'Community over Commercialisation'. In today's TL;DR Shorts episode, Joy Owango talks about how open research is helping increase the visibility and representation of research being done in Africa.

The post TL;DR Shorts: Joy Owango on Open Research appeared first on Digital Science.

]]>
The theme of this year’s International Open Access Week, which kicked off yesterday, is ‘Community over Commercialisation,’ and today’s TL;DR Shorts contributor is someone who knows a huge amount about community and research culture. Joy Owango is the Founding Director of the Training Centre in Communication, or TCC Africa. In today’s episode, Joy talks about how open research is helping increase the visibility and representation of research being done in Africa.

Joy Owango discusses the impact that open research has had on the visibility and representation of African research outputs, while also reminding us that more barriers require removal for true equity in research. Check out the video on the Digital Science YouTube channel: https://youtu.be/GlGfFY-ZIUU

Joy believes that open access is one of the best things that has ever happened for researchers. It has raised the visibility of African research outputs by reducing or removing blockers to the inclusion of the amazing and impactful research being carried out, such as the fees associated with publishing novel research in top-tier journals with broad engagement. Publishers play a key role in driving this change, and overcoming this challenge requires them to fundamentally change how they work with the research community across the world.

Joy reminds us that there are also unexpected consequences that must be overcome as a global research community. An open research culture should allow more people to access existing research information and also contribute to it without financial or other barriers. While preprints and APC waivers exist, there is still a long way to go to ensure that all actors across the research ecosystem are taking advantage of these programmes of research transformation to break down barriers to inclusion in research and foster greater translation of research into real-world impact.

Subscribe now to be notified of each weekly release of the latest TL;DR Short, and catch up with the entire series here

If you’d like to suggest future contributors for our series or suggest some topics you’d like us to cover, drop Suze a message on one of our social media channels and use the hashtag #TLDRShorts.

The post TL;DR Shorts: Joy Owango on Open Research appeared first on Digital Science.

]]>
Welcome to… Research Transformation!  https://www.digital-science.com/tldr/article/welcome-to-research-transformation/ Mon, 21 Oct 2024 13:15:18 +0000 https://www.digital-science.com/?post_type=tldr_article&p=70432 Transformation via and within research is a constant in our lives. But with AI, we now stand at a point where research (and many other aspects of our working life) will be transformed in a monumental way. As such, we are taking this moment to reflect on the activity of Research Transformation itself, and celebrating the art of change. Our campaign will show how research data can be transformed into actionable insights, how the changing role of research is affecting both those in academia and industry, and exploring innovative ways to make research more open, inclusive and collaborative, for all – especially for those beyond the walls of academia.

The post Welcome to… Research Transformation!  appeared first on Digital Science.

]]>

Open research is transforming the way research findings are discovered, shared and reproduced. As part of our commitment to the Open Principles and research transformation, we are looking into how open research is transforming roles, approaches, policies and, most importantly, mindsets for everyone across the research landscape. See our inspiring transformational stories so far.

Academia is at a pivotal juncture. It has often been criticized as slow to change, but external pressures from an increasingly complex world are forcing rapid change in the sector. To understand more about how the research world is transforming, what’s influencing change, and how roles are impacted, we reached out to the research community through a global survey and in-depth interviews.

Research Transformation stories so far…

Academic Survey Report Pre-registration

State of Open Data 2024 – Special Edition

Will 2025 be a turning point for Open Access? – Digital Science

How has innovation shaped Open Research? What does the future hold – especially with the impact of AI? Here’s Dan Valen speaking about Figshare’s key role, with innovation helping to transform the research landscape.

Digital Science has always understood its role as a community partner – working towards open research together. Here’s some ways in which we have helped to transform research over the last 14 years.

In our first piece, Simon Porter and Mark Hahnel introduce the topic and detail the three areas the campaign will focus on.

  • Making data more usable
  • Opening up channels & the flow of information
  • Transforming data through innovation & AI
  • Maintaining trust & integrity
  • Seeing both perspectives
  • What success looks like for knowledge transfer
  • Evolving roles and the role of people in bridging gaps
  • Research Transformation White Paper
  • How have roles changed:
    • In Academia?
    • In Publishing?
    • In Industry?
  • State of AI Report
  • How are we using AI in our research workflows?

Research Transformation

The way we interact with information can amplify our ability to make connections, and in doing so transforms how we understand the world. Supercharged by the AI moment that we are in, the steady march of digital transformation in society over the last three decades is primed for rapid evolution. What is true for society, is also doubly so for research. Alongside ground-breaking research and discoveries is the constant invitation to adapt to new knowledge and abilities. Combine the general imperative within the research sector to innovate with the rapidly evolving capabilities of generative AI and it is safe to say that expectations are high. Taking effective advantage of new possibilities as they arise however, requires successful coordination within society and systems. 

There is an art to transformation, and understanding the mechanisms of transformation places us in the best position to take advantage of the opportunities ahead.

In this series, we specifically seek to explore Research Transformation with an eye to adapting what we already know to the present AI moment. Transformation in Research is not just about digital systems, but it is also about people and organisations – crossing boundaries from research to industry, emerging new research sectors, creating new narratives and adapting to the possibilities that change brings.

At Digital Science, we have always sought to be an integral part of research transformation, aiming to provide products that enable the research sector to evolve research practice – from collaboration and discovery through to analytics and administration. Our ability to serve clients from research institutions to funders, publishers, and industry has placed us in a unique position to facilitate change across the sector, not simply within silos, but between them. In this series, we will be drawing on our own experiences of research transformation, as well as inviting perspectives from the broader community. As we proceed we hope to show that Research Transformation isn’t just about careful planning, but requires a sense of playfulness – a willingness to explore new technology, a commitment to a broader vision for better research, as well as an ability to build new bridges between communities.

1. The story of research data transformation

In the first of three themes, we will cover Research Transformation from the perspective of the data and metadata of research. How do changes to the metadata of research transform our ability to make impact, as well as see the research community through new lenses? How does technology enable these changes to occur? Starting almost from the beginning, we will look at how transitions in publishing practice have enabled the diversity of the research workforce to become visible. We will also trace the evolving story of the structure of a researcher’s papers, from the critical use of identifiers, to adoption of the credit ontology, through to the use of trust markers (including ethics statements and data and code availability, and conflict of interest statements.) The evolving consensus on structured and semi structured nature of research articles changes not only the way we discover, read and trust individual research papers, but also transforms our ability to measure and manage research itself.

Our focus will not only be reflective, but will also look forward to the emerging challenges and opportunities that generative AI offers. We will ask deep questions about how research should make its way into large language models. We also explore the new field of Forensic Scientometrics that has arisen in response to the dramatic increase in bad faith science in part enabled by generative AI, and the new research administration collaborations that this implies – both with research institutions and across publishing. We will aso offer more playful, experimental investigations.  For example, a series on ‘prompt engineering for librarians’ draws on the original pioneering spirit of the 1970’s MEDLARS Analysts to explore the possibilities that tools such as OpenAI can offer. 

2. The story of connection

Lifting up from the data, we note that a critical part of our experience of research transformation has been the ability to experience and connect with research fromshifting perspectives. In this second theme exploring research transformation, we aim to celebrate the art of making connections, from the personal transformations required  to make the shift from working within research institutions to industry, through to the art of building research platforms that support multiple sectors. We also cover familiar topics from new angles, For instance, how do the FAIR data principles benefit the pharmaceutical industry? How do we build effective research collaborations with emerging research sectors in Africa?

3. The story of research innovation

In our third theme, we will explore Research Transformation from the perspective of innovation, and how it has influenced the way research is conducted. Culminating in a  Research Transformation White Paper we will explore how roles have changed in academia, publishing, and industry.  Within this broader context of Research transformation, we ask ‘How are we using AI in our research workflows?’ How do we think we will be using AI in years to come?

Of course, many of us in the Digital Science community have been engaging with different aspects of research transformation over many years. If you are keen to explore our thinking to date, one place that you might like to start is at our Research Transformation collection on Figshare. Here we have collated what we think are some of our most impactful contributions to Research Transformation so far. We are very much looking forward to reflecting on research transformation throughout the year. If you are interested in contributing, or just generally finding out more, why not get in touch?

The post Welcome to… Research Transformation!  appeared first on Digital Science.

]]>