Motivating participation in open science by examining researcher incentives

ELife
Sarah E Ali-KhanE Richard Gold

Abstract

Support for open science is growing, but motivating researchers to participate in open science can be challenging. This in-depth qualitative study draws on interviews with researchers and staff at the Montreal Neurological Institute and Hospital during the development of its open science policy. Using thematic content analysis, we explore attitudes toward open science, the motivations and disincentives to participate, the role of patients, and attitudes to the eschewal of intellectual property rights. To be successful, an open science policy must clearly lay out expectations, boundaries and mechanisms by which researchers can engage, and must be shaped to explicitly support their values and those of key partners, including patients, research participants and industry collaborators.

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Citations

Apr 18, 2019·The Journal of Law, Medicine & Ethics : a Journal of the American Society of Law, Medicine & Ethics·Mark Phillips, Bartha M Knoppers
Jul 14, 2020·EMBO Reports·Thijs DevriendtPascal Borry
Dec 19, 2019·Gates Open Research·E Richard GoldMike Thelwall
May 1, 2021·Biopreservation and Biobanking·Thijs DevriendtPascal Borry
Jan 1, 2018·MNI Open Research·Sarah E Ali-KhanE Richard Gold

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Software Mentioned

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