Towards open science: the myExperiment approach

  • Authors:
  • David De Roure;Carole Goble;Sergejs Aleksejevs;Sean Bechhofer;Jiten Bhagat;Don Cruickshank;Paul Fisher;Duncan Hull;Danius Michaelides;David Newman;Rob Procter;Yuwei Lin;Meik Poschen

  • Affiliations:
  • School of Electronics and Computer Science, University of Southampton, Southampton SO17 1BJ, U.K.;School of Computer Science, The University of Manchester, Manchester M13 9PL, U.K.;School of Computer Science, The University of Manchester, Manchester M13 9PL, U.K.;School of Computer Science, The University of Manchester, Manchester M13 9PL, U.K.;School of Computer Science, The University of Manchester, Manchester M13 9PL, U.K.;School of Electronics and Computer Science, University of Southampton, Southampton SO17 1BJ, U.K.;School of Computer Science, The University of Manchester, Manchester M13 9PL, U.K.;The Manchester Interdisciplinary Biocentre, The University of Manchester, Manchester M13 9PL, U.K.;School of Electronics and Computer Science, University of Southampton, Southampton SO17 1BJ, U.K.;School of Electronics and Computer Science, University of Southampton, Southampton SO17 1BJ, U.K.;National Centre for e-Social Science, The University of Manchester, Manchester M13 9PL, U.K.;National Centre for e-Social Science, The University of Manchester, Manchester M13 9PL, U.K.;National Centre for e-Social Science, The University of Manchester, Manchester M13 9PL, U.K.

  • Venue:
  • Concurrency and Computation: Practice & Experience - Concurrency and Computation: Practice and Experience from the Microsoft eScience Workshop
  • Year:
  • 2010

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Abstract

By making research content more reusable, and providing a social infrastructure that facilitates sharing, the human aspects of the scholarly knowledge cycle may be accelerated and ‘time-to-discovery’ reduced. We propose that the key to this is the sharing of methods and processes. We present myExperiment, a social web site for discovering, sharing and curating Scientific Workflows and experiment plans, and describe how myExperiment facilitates the management and sharing of research workflows, supports a social model for content curation tailored to the researcher and community, and supports Open Science by exposing content and functionality to the users' tools and applications. Based on this, we introduce the notion of the Research Object—the work objects that are built, transformed and published in the course of scientific experiments—and suggest that by encapsulating methods with results we can achieve research that is more reusable and repeatable and hence rapid and robust. Copyright © 2010 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.