Designing the Microbial Research Commons
eBook - ePub

Designing the Microbial Research Commons

Proceedings of an International Symposium

,
  1. English
  2. ePUB (mobile friendly)
  3. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub

Designing the Microbial Research Commons

Proceedings of an International Symposium

,

About this book

Recent decades have witnessed an ever-increasing range and volume of digital data. All elements of the pillars of science--whether observation, experiment, or theory and modeling--are being transformed by the continuous cycle of generation, dissemination, and use of factual information. This is even more so in terms of the re-using and re-purposing of digital scientific data beyond the original intent of the data collectors, often with dramatic results.We all know about the potential benefits and impacts of digital data, but we are also aware of the barriers, the challenges in maximizing the access, and use of such data. There is thus a need to think about how a data infrastructure can enhance capabilities for finding, using, and integrating information to accelerate discovery and innovation. How can we best implement an accessible, interoperable digital environment so that the data can be repeatedly used by a wide variety of users in different settings and with different applications?With this objective: to use the microbial communities and microbial data, literature, and the research materials themselves as a test case, the Board on Research Data and Information held an International Symposium on Designing the Microbial Research Commons at the National Academy of Sciences in Washington, DC on 8-9 October 2009. The symposium addressed topics such as models to lower the transaction costs and support access to and use of microbiological materials and digital resources from the perspective of publicly funded research, public-private interactions, and developing country concerns. The overall goal of the symposium was to stimulate more research and implementation of improved legal and institutional models for publicly funded research in microbiology.

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Table of contents

  1. Cover Page
  2. Title Page
  3. Copyright Page
  4. Table of Contents
  5. 1. Introduction – Cathy Wu
  6. 2. Microbiology in the 21st Century – Joan W. Bennett
  7. 3. Breaking Anti-Commons Constraints on Global Scientific Research: Some New Moves in “Legal Jujitsu” – Paul A. David
  8. 4. An Industry Perspective: Development of an MTA Harmonious with a Microbial Research Commons – Stephen J. McCormack
  9. 5. Developing Country Perspective: Microbial Research Commons Including Viruses – Ashok Kolaskar
  10. 6. A Compensatory Liability Regime to Promote the Exchange of Microbial Genetic Resources for Research and Benefit Sharing – Jerome H. Reichman
  11. 7. The Agricultural Research Service Culture Collection: Germplasm Accessions and Research Programs – Cletus P. Kurtzman
  12. 8. American Type Culture Collection: A Model for Biological Materials Resource Management – Frank Simione
  13. 9. Contracting to Preserve Open Science: Lessons for a Microbial Research Commons – Peter Lee
  14. 10. Designing the Digital Commons in Microbiology—Moving from Restrictive Dissemination of Publicly Funded Knowledge to Open Knowledge Environments: A Case Study in Microbiology –Paul Uhlir
  15. 11. The Web-Enabled Research Commons: Applications, Goals, and Trends – Thinh Nguyen
  16. 12. Comments on Designing the Microbial Research Commons: Digital Knowledge Resources –Katherine Strandburg
  17. 13. Toward a Biomedical Research Commons: A View from the National Library of Medicine at the National Institutes of Health – Jerry Sheehan
  18. 14. Academic Publications –Fred A. Rainey
  19. 15. StrainInfo: Reducing Microbial Data Entropy – Peter Dawyndt
  20. 16. Research and Applications in Energy and Environment – Daniel Drell
  21. 17. Large Scale Microbial Ecology Cyberinfrastructure – Paul Gilna
  22. 18. Proposal for a Microbial Semi-Commons: Perspectives from the International Cooperative Biodiversity Groups – Flora Katz
  23. 19. The International Treaty on Plant Genetic Resources – Shakeel Bhatti
  24. 20. Microbial Commons: Governing Complex Knowledge Assets – Minna Allarakhia
  25. 21. Digital Research: Microbial Genomics – Nikos Kyrpides
  26. 22. Accessing Microbiological Data: A User’s Perspective – Mark Segal
  27. 23. The Microbial Commons: Journals and Professional Societies – Samuel Kaplan
  28. 24. Microbial Commons: Overview of the Governance Considerations—A Framework for Discussion – Tom Dedeurwaerdere
  29. 25. Institutional Design and Governance in the Microbial Research Commons – Charlotte Hess
  30. 26. International Developments: A Context for the Creation of a Microbiology Commons – Anita Eisenstadt
  31. 27. Options for Governing the Microbial Commons – Michael Halewood
  32. 28. Access and Benefit Sharing under the CBD and Access to Materials for Research – Stefan Jungcurt
  33. 29. Closing Observations – Cathy Wu
  34. Appendix A – Microbial Commons Symposium Agenda
  35. Appendix B – Microbial Commons Symposium Participants