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EXCEPTIONAL COLLOQUIUM : Digital scholarship and the changing nature of scientific publication

<!--HTML-->Digital media have extended the number of channels that scientists (and other academics) use to communicate and share information. Digital technologies have the potential to make all stages of the research process more visible in the public sphere, and to audiences that have, on occ...

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Autor principal: Dr. Richard Holliman & Prof. Eileen Scanlon (Open University, UK)
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:http://cds.cern.ch/record/1500457
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author Dr. Richard Holliman & Prof. Eileen Scanlon (Open University, UK)
author_facet Dr. Richard Holliman & Prof. Eileen Scanlon (Open University, UK)
author_sort Dr. Richard Holliman & Prof. Eileen Scanlon (Open University, UK)
collection CERN
description <!--HTML-->Digital media have extended the number of channels that scientists (and other academics) use to communicate and share information. Digital technologies have the potential to make all stages of the research process more visible in the public sphere, and to audiences that have, on occasion, opportunities for interaction and engagement. But digital technologies also are introducing novel demands on researchers, requiring skills and competencies on the part of scientists that are encapsulated by the concept of digital scholarship. In this presentation we explore this developing context via a case study: the publication of emails from the Climatic Research Unit at the University of East Anglia (also known as ‘climategate’). The findings of three reviews of ‘climategate’ will be discussed in terms of their implications for science communication. This episode may indirectly influence the ways that scientific knowledge is produced and verified, and what information and data are required to be archived for circulation in the public sphere when a peer reviewed paper is published. In the light of this, we argue that there is a need to develop norms to inform scientific publication in the widest sense of the term, to include all forms of science communication that are available in the public sphere.
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spelling cern-15004572022-11-02T22:19:50Zhttp://cds.cern.ch/record/1500457engDr. Richard Holliman & Prof. Eileen Scanlon (Open University, UK)EXCEPTIONAL COLLOQUIUM : Digital scholarship and the changing nature of scientific publication EXCEPTIONAL COLLOQUIUM : Digital scholarship and the changing nature of scientific publication CERN Colloquium<!--HTML-->Digital media have extended the number of channels that scientists (and other academics) use to communicate and share information. Digital technologies have the potential to make all stages of the research process more visible in the public sphere, and to audiences that have, on occasion, opportunities for interaction and engagement. But digital technologies also are introducing novel demands on researchers, requiring skills and competencies on the part of scientists that are encapsulated by the concept of digital scholarship. In this presentation we explore this developing context via a case study: the publication of emails from the Climatic Research Unit at the University of East Anglia (also known as ‘climategate’). The findings of three reviews of ‘climategate’ will be discussed in terms of their implications for science communication. This episode may indirectly influence the ways that scientific knowledge is produced and verified, and what information and data are required to be archived for circulation in the public sphere when a peer reviewed paper is published. In the light of this, we argue that there is a need to develop norms to inform scientific publication in the widest sense of the term, to include all forms of science communication that are available in the public sphere. oai:cds.cern.ch:15004572010
spellingShingle CERN Colloquium
Dr. Richard Holliman & Prof. Eileen Scanlon (Open University, UK)
EXCEPTIONAL COLLOQUIUM : Digital scholarship and the changing nature of scientific publication
title EXCEPTIONAL COLLOQUIUM : Digital scholarship and the changing nature of scientific publication
title_full EXCEPTIONAL COLLOQUIUM : Digital scholarship and the changing nature of scientific publication
title_fullStr EXCEPTIONAL COLLOQUIUM : Digital scholarship and the changing nature of scientific publication
title_full_unstemmed EXCEPTIONAL COLLOQUIUM : Digital scholarship and the changing nature of scientific publication
title_short EXCEPTIONAL COLLOQUIUM : Digital scholarship and the changing nature of scientific publication
title_sort exceptional colloquium : digital scholarship and the changing nature of scientific publication
topic CERN Colloquium
url http://cds.cern.ch/record/1500457
work_keys_str_mv AT drrichardhollimanprofeileenscanlonopenuniversityuk exceptionalcolloquiumdigitalscholarshipandthechangingnatureofscientificpublication