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Hello SciCrunch/NIF Community! Please read below for Dr. Bandrowski's post on "Reproducibility in the Recipes of Science"Reproducibility in the Recipes of ScienceReproducibility in science is a very d...
We believe that reproducing science starts with being able to know what "materials" were used in generating the results.Along with a truly dedicated group of volunteers from academia, government and n...
If the Neuroscience Information Framework is any guide, we are certainly in an era of “Openness” in biomedical science. A search of the NIF Registry of tools, databases and projects for biomedic...
The following is is a guest blog by Krystyna Gutowska in collaboration with the author of the articles, Dr. Witkiewicz.*All Figures can be viewed at https://openi.nlm.nih.gov/gridquery.php?q=Halina%20...
An interesting report out of the UBC, there is very little data left after a few years. Vines et al. 2014 point out that after articles are published, the data is lost at a rate of about 17% per year....
by Maryann E MartoneI was speaking with a colleague recently who, like many of us, had experienced the frustration of trying to support his on-line resources. He has assembled a comprehensive on-lin...
by Anita Bandrowski,This may seem a silly question, but lets see if you are more like a fifth grader or more like me. It appears that a fifth grade class I recently interacted with can answer a questi...
by Maryann MartoneA recent post at the London School of Economics Social Science Impact blog on "Finding the time to blog" reminded me that I wanted to write a blog about why I started to blog. The u...
The NIF team recently attended the Neuroinformatics Conference, held in Munich, Germany. The conference featured several lively discussions on the reproducibility problem in neuroscience (and neuroi...
A recent blog post by Dorothy Bishop on "How to bury your academic writing" came through this week that considers the question of the relative impact of book chapters vs published articles. She con...