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Opening Science: Organizing Collaboration on Scientific Publications: From Email Lists to Cloud Services

Opening Science
Organizing Collaboration on Scientific Publications: From Email Lists to Cloud Services
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table of contents
  1. Cover
  2. Frontmatter
  3. 1. Basics/Background
    1. Towards Another Scientific Revolution
    2. Open Science: One Term, Five Schools of Thought
    3. Excellence by Nonsense: The Competition for Publications in Modern Science
    4. Science Caught Flat-Footed: How Academia Struggles with Open Science Communication
    5. Open Science and the Three Cultures: Expanding Open Science to all Domains of Knowledge Creation
  4. 2. Tools
    1. (Micro)Blogging Science? Notes on Potentials and Constraints of New Forms of Scholarly Communication
    2. Academia Goes Facebook? The Potential of Social Network Sites in the Scholarly Realm
    3. Reference Management
    4. Open Access: A State of the Art
    5. Novel Scholarly Journal Concepts
    6. The Public Knowledge Project: Open Source Tools for Open Access to Scholarly Communication
  5. 3. Vision
    1. Altmetrics and Other Novel Measures for Scientific Impact
    2. Dynamic Publication Formats and Collaborative Authoring
    3. Open Research Data: From Vision to Practice
    4. Intellectual Property and Computational Science
    5. Research Funding in Open Science
    6. Open Innovation and Crowdsourcing in the Sciences
    7. The Social Factor of Open Science
  6. 4. Cases, Recipes and How-Tos
    1. Creative Commons Licences
    2. Organizing Collaboration on Scientific Publications: From Email Lists to Cloud Services
    3. Unique Identifiers for Researchers
    4. Challenges of Open Data in Medical Research
    5. On the Sociology of Science 2.0
    6. How This Book was Created Using Collaborative Authoring and Cloud Tools
    7. History II.O
    8. Making Data Citeable: DataCite
  7. Backmatter

Sönke Bartling and Sascha Friesike (eds.)Opening Science2014The Evolving Guide on How the Internet is Changing Research, Collaboration and Scholarly Publishing10.1007/978-3-319-00026-8_20
© The Author(s) 2014

Organizing Collaboration on Scientific Publications: From Email Lists to Cloud Services

Sönke Bartling1, 2  
(1)
German Cancer Research Center, Heidelberg, Germany
(2)
Institute for Clinical Radiology and Nuclear Medicine, Mannheim University Medical Center, Heidelberg University, Mannheim, Germany
Sönke Bartling
Email: soenkebartling@gmx.de
Abstract
Scientific publications—ranging from full papers, abstracts, and presentations to posters, including grant applications and blog posts—are usually written by one or a few authors and then corrected and reviewed by many authors. Collaboration on scientific publications is a cornerstone of science. Many novel tools exist that can be integrated and facilitate this process. However, novel disadvantages come with the changes of the workflow—the future will tell as to which way to work on documents will be the most efficient one.
Scientific publications—ranging from full papers, abstracts, and presentations to posters, including grant applications and blog posts—are usually written by one or a few authors and then corrected and reviewed by many authors. Collaboration on scientific publications is a cornerstone of science. Many novel tools exist that can be integrated and facilitate this process. However, novel disadvantages come with the changes of the workflow—the future will tell as to which way to work on documents will be the most efficient one.
Here we will discuss several ways of organizing collaboration and discuss the advantages and disadvantages.
The 1.0 way of organizing collaboration:
  • Sending out emails with texts, presentations and manual tracking of the version number
  • Using the track change or compare documents functionality of word processing tools
  • Using data transfer protocols, such as shared local networks or FTP to transfer larger files
  • Manual tracking of versions, backups, etc.
Advantage:
  • Current state of the art
  • Full data control—the process can be organized, so that only known and trusted parties gain access to the content
  • Politics—authors and co-authors can decide who sees which version and when
  • Free and open source solutions available
Disadvantage:
  • Can be hard to keep track of edits and to integrate changes into a summarized version
  • Many “local cultures of keeping track of versions”
  • Simultaneous work needs central organization (leading author?) and might create high workload to keep versions in sync
Solutions:
  • Standard Email and document processor software packages, FTP, network file systems
  • MS Office solutions
  • Open Office
  • Text editors, LaTex
The cloud way of organizing collaboration:
  • Using cloud tools that synchronize folders within the work group and create a version history/backup of old files
  • Using collaborative authoring tools to work simultaneously on documents
Advantage:
  • Simultaneous work
  • No out-of-sync version of documents
  • Complete history
  • No work load overhead for version synchronization and file transfer management
Disadvantages:
  • Only 97 % compatibility with current standard word or presentation software solutions
  • Third party companies gain access to data and texts, therefore have to be trusted
  • Most free solutions are high-maintenance and need high amount of training, local cloud solutions may lack features
  • Scepticism regarding novel concepts with both good and bad arguments (the old fashioned way is usually perceived as secure and well established, while disadvantages of novel concepts are over-perceived)
  • Collaborative authoring tools do not relieve authors from recursively checking the internal integrity of the documents—low threshold to submit changes may decrease the diligence of contributors
Solutions (examples):
  • Dropbox
  • Google documents/drive
  • Zotero
  • other Concurrent version systems (social coding!) with front ends to focus on collaborative text editing
Open Access
This chapter is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Noncommercial License, which permits any noncommercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author(s) and source are credited.

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