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Open Science

Open Science

Open Science —

is an inclusive construct that combines various movements and practices aiming to make multilingual scientific knowledge openly available, accessible and reusable for everyone... ” 

— UNESCO Recommendation on Open Science (2021)

 

Open Science is about increased rigour, accountability, and reproducibility for research. It is based on the principles of inclusion, fairness, equity, and sharing, and ultimately seeks to change the way research is done, who is involved and how it is valued (FOSTER, 2021). 

Why do Open Science

Why do Open Science? 

Implementing open science principles in research activities can be beneficial to the stakeholders that constitute the community (NASA, 2024). 

For Researchers

Image of researchers

  • Receive credits when others using your research results 

  • More visibility and impact 

  • More collaborations 

For Science

Image of science

  • Improve accuracy and ensure academic and research integrity 

  • Lead to more discoveries 

  • Enhance quality and diversity of scholarly communications 

For Society

Image of society

  • Accelerate the Pace of Science 

  • Increase efficiency of science by avoiding duplicated efforts 

  • Attract a diverse set of participants 

 

Research funders across the globe, e.g. UK Research and Innovation, Wellcome Trust, The National Institutes of Health (NIH) of the U.S., members of the cOAlition S, are committed to open access and mandating the research outputs (scholarly publications and/or data) arising from their funded research projects to be made openly available.  

In the regional context, the Hong Kong University Grants Committee (UGC) has introduced the concepts of open access and open data as elements contributing to a “sustainable research culture” in its Research Assessment Exercise (RAE) 2026 framework, while the Research Grants Council (RGC) has already launched its Open Access Plan since 2021 with different scheduled initiatives supporting open access and open data. 

The growing numbers of research funding organizations implementing open access mandates has also become a driving force for an open research culture internationally. 

UNESCO Recommendation on Open Science

 

UNESCO Pillars of Open Science

UNESCO Pillar of Open Science image

Image source: Wikipedia ‘Pillars of the Open Science according to UNESCO's 2021 Open Science recommendation’

How to do Open Science

How to do Open Science? 

Open Science principles and practices can be applicable to a variety of areas and research outputs produced throughout the research lifecycle comprehensively, including but not limited to the followings: 

  • Data Management Plans 

  • Code of conduct, contributor guidelines 

  • Data and metadata 

  • Codes and computational notebooks 

  • Conference abstracts and presentations 

  • Peer-reviewed articles 

  • Talks, seminars, and forum discussions 

  • Blog posts, videos and podcasts, and social media posts

 

Image of the open research workflow

Image Source: NASA. (August 15, 2024). Open Science 101, Module 5: Open Results. https://github.com/nasa/Transform-to-Open-Science/tree/open-science-101/Module_5/Lesson_1

 

This guide will provide more details on the following aspects: 

  • Preregistration and open protocols 

  • Preprints

  • Open access to publications 

  • Open data 

  • Open-source software and codes

  • Responsible use of open materials

Open Science Tools

Open Science Tools 

Open Science tools are any tools that enable and facilitate openness in research, and support responsible Open Science practices as well. It is important to note that Open Science tools are very often open source and/or free, but not necessarily (OpenSciency, 2023). 

There are various open science tools available assisting researchers to make their research progress and output openly accessible across the research lifecycle. In this guide, we will cover tools specifically for protocols, data, code, and results. 

More details on open science tools across the research lifecycle are available on OpenSciency

Reference

FOSTER. (2021). The Open Science Training Handbook. https://open-science-training-handbook.github.io/Open-Science-Training-Handbook_EN/ 

NASA. (2024). Open Science 101. https://nasa.github.io/Transform-to-Open-Science/os101-modules/  

NASA Landsat Science. (2024). Open Science and Data. https://landsat.gsfc.nasa.gov/data/open-science-data/  

OpenSciency Contributors (2023, February 22). Opensciency - A core open science curriculum by and for the research community. Zenodo. DOI 10.5281/zenodo.7392118  

UNESCO. (2021). UNESCO Recommendation on Open Science. https://doi.org/10.54677/MNMH8546