Salvato in:
Dettagli Bibliografici
Autori principali: Sayre, Franklin, Riegelman, Amy
Natura: Recurso educativo Open Access
Lingua:en
Pubblicazione: 2019
Soggetti:
Accesso online:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ1207599
Tags: Aggiungi Tag
Nessun Tag, puoi essere il primo ad aggiungerne!!
_version_ 1867181367670865920
author Sayre, Franklin
Riegelman, Amy
author_facet Sayre, Franklin
Riegelman, Amy
Sayre, Franklin
Riegelman, Amy
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents Replicable Services for Reproducible Research: A Model for Academic Libraries Sayre, Franklin Riegelman, Amy Academic Libraries Library Services Scientific Research Replication (Evaluation) Guidelines Library Science Information Management Scholarship Communication (Thought Transfer) Expertise Information Dissemination Over the past decade, evidence from disciplines ranging from biology to economics has suggested that many scientific studies may not be reproducible. This has led to declarations in both the scientific and lay press that science is experiencing a "reproducibility crisis" and that this crisis has consequences for the extent to which students, faculty, and the public at large can trust research. Faculty build on these results with their own research, and students and the public use these results for everything from patient care to public policy. To build a model for how academic libraries can support reproducible research, the authors conducted a review of major guidelines from funders, publishers, and professional societies. Specific recommendations were extracted from guidelines and compared with existing academic library services and librarian expertise. The authors believe this review shows that many of the recommendations for improving reproducibility are core areas of academic librarianship, including data management, scholarly communication, and methodological support for systematic reviews and data-intensive research. By increasing our knowledge of disciplinary, journal, funder, and society perspectives on reproducibility, and reframing existing librarian expertise and services, academic librarians will be well positioned to be leaders in supporting reproducible research.
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_EJ1207599
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 2019
record_format eric
spellingShingle Replicable Services for Reproducible Research: A Model for Academic Libraries
Sayre, Franklin
Riegelman, Amy
Academic Libraries
Library Services
Scientific Research
Replication (Evaluation)
Guidelines
Library Science
Information Management
Scholarship
Communication (Thought Transfer)
Expertise
Information Dissemination
Replicable Services for Reproducible Research: A Model for Academic Libraries Sayre, Franklin Riegelman, Amy Academic Libraries Library Services Scientific Research Replication (Evaluation) Guidelines Library Science Information Management Scholarship Communication (Thought Transfer) Expertise Information Dissemination Over the past decade, evidence from disciplines ranging from biology to economics has suggested that many scientific studies may not be reproducible. This has led to declarations in both the scientific and lay press that science is experiencing a "reproducibility crisis" and that this crisis has consequences for the extent to which students, faculty, and the public at large can trust research. Faculty build on these results with their own research, and students and the public use these results for everything from patient care to public policy. To build a model for how academic libraries can support reproducible research, the authors conducted a review of major guidelines from funders, publishers, and professional societies. Specific recommendations were extracted from guidelines and compared with existing academic library services and librarian expertise. The authors believe this review shows that many of the recommendations for improving reproducibility are core areas of academic librarianship, including data management, scholarly communication, and methodological support for systematic reviews and data-intensive research. By increasing our knowledge of disciplinary, journal, funder, and society perspectives on reproducibility, and reframing existing librarian expertise and services, academic librarians will be well positioned to be leaders in supporting reproducible research.
title Replicable Services for Reproducible Research: A Model for Academic Libraries
topic Academic Libraries
Library Services
Scientific Research
Replication (Evaluation)
Guidelines
Library Science
Information Management
Scholarship
Communication (Thought Transfer)
Expertise
Information Dissemination
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ1207599