Posts Tagged ‘wikipedia’

The 2015 Bradley-Mason prize for open chemistry.

Friday, June 26th, 2015

Open principles in the sciences in general and chemistry in particular are increasingly nowadays preached from funding councils down, but it can be more of a challenge to find innovative practitioners. Part of the problem perhaps is that many of the current reward systems for scientists do not always help promote openness. Jean-Claude Bradley was a young scientist who was passionately committed to practising open chemistry, even though when he started he could not have anticipated any honours for doing so. A year ago a one day meeting at Cambridge was held to celebrate his achievements, followed up with a special issue of the Journal of Cheminformatics. Peter Murray-Rust and I both contributed and following the meeting we decided to help promote Open Chemistry via an annual award to be called the Bradley-Mason prize. This would celebrate both “JC” himself and Nick Mason, who also made outstanding contributions to the cause whilst studying at Imperial College. The prize was initially to be given to an undergraduate student at Imperial, but was also extended to postgraduate students who have promoted and showcased open chemistry in their PhD researches.

Peter and I are delighted to announce the inaugural winners of this prize.

The postgraduate winner is Tom Phillips for his open blog describing his experiences as a PhD student and for leading by example. He has published his instrumental codes on Github (and now Zenodo[1]) and data and codes for reproducing the graphs in his work on the “lab on a chip” in Figshare[2] and through his blog has encouraged other research students to do the same. Tom has worked assiduously to ensure that all the articles describing his PhD work are or will be open access.[3]

The undergraduate winner is Tom Arrow for his “spare time” involvement with WikiMedia (the foundation that underpins the open Wikipedia), including participating in a Wikimedia EU hackathon in Lyon France, and feeding his experiences and skills back into his undergraduate environment as well as enhancing the teaching Wiki used by his fellow students. Tom took the lead in introducing us to Wikidata[4] for storing chemical data in an open Wikibase data repository and in promoting its use for enriching Wikipedia chemistry pages and showcasing open data in undergraduate teaching environments.

References

  1. T. Phillips, and S. Macbeth, "pumpy: Zenodo release", 2015. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.19033
  2. T. Phillips, J.H. Bannock, and J.D. Mello, "Data for microscale extraction and phase separation using a porous capillary", 2015. https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.1447208
  3. T.W. Phillips, J.H. Bannock, and J.C. deMello, "Microscale extraction and phase separation using a porous capillary", Lab on a Chip, vol. 15, pp. 2960-2967, 2015. https://doi.org/10.1039/c5lc00430f
  4. D. Vrandečić, and M. Krötzsch, "Wikidata", Communications of the ACM, vol. 57, pp. 78-85, 2014. https://doi.org/10.1145/2629489

Digital repositories. An update.

Saturday, July 21st, 2012

I blogged about this two years ago and thought a brief update might be in order now. To support the discussions here, I often perform calculations, and most of these are then deposited into a DSpace digital repository, along with metadata. Anyone wishing to have the full details of any calculation can retrieve these from the repository. Now in 2012, such repositories are more important than ever. 

In the UK, the main funding organisations are increasingly requiring researchers to deposit their primary data in such open archives, and some disciplines are better than others at this (chemistry does not rank very highly in general however in terms of deposition of data). Our DSpace server is a local one running at Imperial College, but a few months back I became aware of Figshare, which aspires to operate on a much wider and more general scale.  So I have injected one of the calculations reported in another post (the IRC for the sodium tolyl thiolate reaction with dichlorobutenone) into Figshare, making use of the API which has recently been developed for this purpose and implemented by  Matt Harvey. As with DSspace, it issues a DOI, which can be then quoted wherever appropriate (and particularly in scientific articles). This particular deposition is 10.6084/m9.figshare.93096

This repository is still undergoing a lot of development, but already one can see many interesting features, such as export to Endnote or Mendeley, and a QR barcode for devices with cameras. I would encourage anyone who regularly generates e.g. computational chemistry data, or knows a group that does, to encourage them to make use of such facilities.

Postscript: If you have a look at this deposition in Figshare you may already notice some of the developments I note above.  Matt Harvey (who, with Mark Hahnel of Figshare, developed our publish script) has added to the entry:

* A data descriptor document URL

* Wikipedia and pubchem links (automatically resolved from Inchi/Key searches)

* Links to chemspider searches

* Links to all other objects in the  Spectra DSpace repository with a common Inchi/Key