4.5 Article

The Chinese Open Science Network (COSN): Building an Open Science Community From Scratch

Related references

Note: Only part of the references are listed.
Article Neurosciences

Increasing diversity in connectomics with the Chinese Human Connectome Project

Jianqiao Ge et al.

Summary: Cultural differences and biological diversity have a significant influence on human brain structure and function. The Chinese Human Connectome Project aims to address the lack of diversity in neuroimaging datasets by collecting data from participants in an Eastern culture. By comparing the Chinese Human Connectome Project with the Human Connectome Project, similarities and differences in brain structure, function, and connectivity were observed.

NATURE NEUROSCIENCE (2023)

Article Psychology, Multidisciplinary

Global Diversity of Authors, Editors, and Journal Ownership Across Subdisciplines of Psychology: Current State and Policy Implications

Zhicheng Lin et al.

Summary: This study investigates the global diversity of psychology journals and finds that top psychology journals have low global diversity, with a strong influence from the United States. Disparity in diversity intensifies along the hierarchy of authors, editors, and journal ownership, and differs significantly between subdisciplines and journal types. Removing the influence of the United States increases global diversity and eliminates differences in diversity between subdisciplines, authors, and editors. Journals from the United States or with U.S. editors-in-chief have the lowest global diversity in authorship and editorship.

PERSPECTIVES ON PSYCHOLOGICAL SCIENCE (2023)

Review Psychology

Replicability, Robustness, and Reproducibility in Psychological Science

Brian A. Nosek et al.

Summary: Replication is an important and often misunderstood practice in psychology, which is gaining more recognition. It is crucial for research progress as it allows for the validation and development of theories. Assessing replicability is productive for generating and testing hypotheses, identifying weaknesses, and promoting innovation. In recent years, replication projects have revealed failures to replicate many published findings and highlighted sociocultural challenges, ultimately prompting improvements in research practices.

ANNUAL REVIEW OF PSYCHOLOGY (2022)

Review Neurosciences

The spectrum of data sharing policies in neuroimaging data repositories

Anita S. Jwa et al.

Summary: Data sharing is essential for scientific progress but raises ethical and legal challenges in the context of human neuroimaging data, particularly regarding data privacy and the risks posed by advances in artificial intelligence technologies.

HUMAN BRAIN MAPPING (2022)

Editorial Material Multidisciplinary Sciences

Build up big-team science

Nicholas A. Coles et al.

NATURE (2022)

Editorial Material Psychology, Biological

A community-sourced glossary of open scholarship terms

Sam Parsons et al.

NATURE HUMAN BEHAVIOUR (2022)

Review Psychology, Biological

The past, present and future of Registered Reports

Christopher D. Chambers et al.

Summary: Registered Reports were introduced a decade ago to improve the rigour and credibility of confirmatory research by peer reviewing study proposals before research is undertaken. While they are not a universal solution for irreproducibility, early evidence suggests that Registered Reports are working as intended and are promoting reproducibility, transparency, and self-correction across disciplines. The policies and practices surrounding Registered Reports are evolving to address limitations and adapt to new challenges.

NATURE HUMAN BEHAVIOUR (2022)

Article Multidisciplinary Sciences

Brain charts for the human lifespan

R. A. I. Bethlehem et al.

Summary: Neuroimaging has become a widely used tool in brain research, but there is currently a lack of reference standards to quantify individual differences over time. In this study, researchers created an open resource that benchmarks brain morphology using a large dataset of MRI scans. The brain charts identified neurodevelopmental milestones and showed high individual stability and robustness to technical and methodological differences.

NATURE (2022)

Editorial Material Multidisciplinary Sciences

Open science, done wrong, will compound inequities

Tony Ross-Heltauer

Summary: Research-reform advocates need to be cautious about unintended consequences.

NATURE (2022)

Editorial Material Psychology, Biological

Promoting computational psychiatry in China

Haiyang Geng et al.

Summary: This comment discusses the necessity of computational psychiatry in China and its benefits to the global field, as well as the challenges of promoting computational psychiatry in China and how to tackle them.

NATURE HUMAN BEHAVIOUR (2022)

Article Psychology, Biological

Leading countries in global science increasingly receive more citations than other countries doing similar research

Charles J. Gomez et al.

Summary: Gomez et al. studied international citation and text similarity networks and found that some countries receive more citations despite researching similar topics as others. They argue that this growing inequality in scientific knowledge production highlights the differences in citation flows, and propose a framework called "citational lensing" to explain this phenomenon.

NATURE HUMAN BEHAVIOUR (2022)

Editorial Material Biology

What senior academics can do to support reproducible and open research: a short, three-step guide

Olivia S. Kowalczyk et al.

Summary: Policies are being introduced to encourage open research practices, but their adoption is still limited. To make open research the norm, senior academics need to be engaged and overcome their unique challenges. This paper suggests three feasible steps for senior academics to improve the quality and productivity of their research, while promoting open research.

BMC RESEARCH NOTES (2022)

Article Biochemistry & Molecular Biology

Recommendations for empowering early career researchers to improve research culture and practice

Brianne A. Kent et al.

Summary: This study summarizes the outputs of a virtual unconventional conference that gathered experts with experience in ECR initiatives to improve the culture and practice of science. The recommendations highlight the need to incentivize and provide resources for ECRs involved in systemic science improvement, involve ECRs in decision-making processes, and address barriers to participation for marginalized groups.

PLOS BIOLOGY (2022)

Article Neurosciences

Questionable Research Practices, Low Statistical Power, and Other Obstacles to Replicability: Why Preclinical Neuroscience Research Would Benefit from Registered Reports

Randall J. Ellis

Summary: Replicability, the ability of scientific findings to be repeated in distinct data sets, has been found to be lacking in recent years across various scientific fields due to questionable research practices, misunderstanding of p-values, and low statistical power. Addressing these issues requires collaboration among researchers, funding sources, and others, with changing academic incentives and adoption of registered reports being crucial solutions.

ENEURO (2022)

Article Psychology, Multidisciplinary

Beyond Statistical Ritual: Theory in Psychological Science

Travis Proulx et al.

Summary: The quality of theories in psychology has declined over the years, leading to a reliance on statistical methods over theoretical rigor. Contemporary psychology is facing a crisis similar to that described by Paul Meehl, with psychologists often opting for synthetic certainties over theory-guided research. Recommendations are made for psychology to fully reengage with theory-based science.

PERSPECTIVES ON PSYCHOLOGICAL SCIENCE (2021)

Article Biology

Understanding the impact of preprocessing pipelines on neuroimaging cortical surface analyses

Nikhil Bhagwat et al.

Summary: The study highlighted the impact of pipeline selection on cortical thickness measures using an open structural MRI dataset (ABIDE). Results showed that software, parcellation, and quality control significantly affect task-driven neurobiological inference.

GIGASCIENCE (2021)

Article Psychology, Developmental

Chinese Color Nest Project : An accelerated longitudinal brain-mind cohort

Siman Liu et al.

Summary: The Chinese Color Nest Project (CCNP) aims to create normative charts for brain structure and function across the human lifespan and link age-related changes in brain imaging measures to psychological assessments. The project has recruited 1520 healthy individuals through three phases and collected data using an accelerated longitudinal design. The initial stage of data collection has been completed, with an emphasis on the developmental phase.

DEVELOPMENTAL COGNITIVE NEUROSCIENCE (2021)

Editorial Material Neurosciences

Brainhack: Developing a culture of open, inclusive, community-driven neuroscience

Remi Gau et al.

Summary: Brainhack is an innovative meeting format that promotes scientific collaboration and education in an open, inclusive environment, complementing conventional formats to augment scientific progress.

NEURON (2021)

Editorial Material Health Care Sciences & Services

Open science saves lives: lessons from the COVID-19 pandemic

Lonni Besancon et al.

Summary: This article discusses the accelerated adoption of open science practices in response to the COVID-19 pandemic, highlighting concerns about violations of open science principles and their potential impact on the quality of research output. It calls for wider adoption of open science practices and emphasizes that scientific research should always be a rigorous, reliable, and transparent process.

BMC MEDICAL RESEARCH METHODOLOGY (2021)

Editorial Material Psychology, Biological

It's time to reimagine sample diversity and retire the WEIRD dichotomy

Sakshi Ghai

NATURE HUMAN BEHAVIOUR (2021)

Article Psychology, Multidisciplinary

Society for the Improvement of Psychological Science Global Engagement Task Force Report

Crystal N. Steltenpohl et al.

Summary: SIPS is an organization focused on improving methods and practices in psychological science, acknowledging the need for diversity and global engagement. The Global Engagement Task Force seeks to address issues of inclusion and access for scholars from diverse regions, amid challenges posed by the COVID-19 pandemic and civil unrest.

COLLABRA-PSYCHOLOGY (2021)

Article Psychology, Multidisciplinary

The Theory Crisis in Psychology: How to Move Forward

Markus Eronen et al.

Summary: Theories in psychology often come and go, with little cumulative progress; developing good psychological theories is extremely difficult; understanding the reasons behind this difficulty is crucial for moving forward in the theory crisis.

PERSPECTIVES ON PSYCHOLOGICAL SCIENCE (2021)

Article Multidisciplinary Sciences

Why East Asians but not South Asians are underrepresented in leadership positions in the United States

Jackson G. Lu et al.

PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA (2020)

Article Multidisciplinary Sciences

The citation advantage of linking publications to research data

Giovanni Colavizza et al.

PLOS ONE (2020)

Article Multidisciplinary Sciences

Variability in the analysis of a single neuroimaging dataset by many teams

Rotem Botvinik-Nezer et al.

NATURE (2020)

Article Psychology

Measurement Schmeasurement: Questionable Measurement Practices and How to Avoid Them

Jessica Kay Flake et al.

ADVANCES IN METHODS AND PRACTICES IN PSYCHOLOGICAL SCIENCE (2020)

Article Information Science & Library Science

Millennial researchers in a metric-driven scholarly world: An international study

David Nicholas et al.

RESEARCH EVALUATION (2020)

Article Psychology, Multidisciplinary

Questionable research practices among Brazilian psychological researchers: Results from a replication study and an international comparison

Andre L. A. Rabelo et al.

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF PSYCHOLOGY (2020)

Editorial Material Biology

Be the change you seek in science

Michael P. Milham et al.

BMC BIOLOGY (2019)

Article Biochemistry & Molecular Biology

Open science challenges, benefits and tips in early career and beyond

Christopher Allen et al.

PLOS BIOLOGY (2019)

Editorial Material Psychology, Biological

Harnessing reliability for neuroscience research

Xi-Nian Zuo et al.

NATURE HUMAN BEHAVIOUR (2019)

Editorial Material Multidisciplinary Sciences

A journal club to fix science

Amy Orben

NATURE (2019)

Editorial Material Neurosciences

The Costs of Reproducibility

Russell A. Poldrack

NEURON (2019)

Article Multidisciplinary Sciences

Assessment of the impact of shared brain imaging data on the scientific literature

Michael P. Milham et al.

NATURE COMMUNICATIONS (2018)

Editorial Material Multidisciplinary Sciences

Data sharing and the future of science

[Anonymous]

NATURE COMMUNICATIONS (2018)

Article Psychology

The Psychological Science Accelerator: Advancing Psychology Through a Distributed Collaborative Network

Hannah Moshontz et al.

ADVANCES IN METHODS AND PRACTICES IN PSYCHOLOGICAL SCIENCE (2018)

Article Computer Science, Information Systems

Publish or impoverish An investigation of the monetary reward system of science in China (1999-2016)

Wei Quan et al.

ASLIB JOURNAL OF INFORMATION MANAGEMENT (2017)

Editorial Material Multidisciplinary Sciences

DATA SHARING An open mind on open data

Virginia Gewin

NATURE (2016)

Article Multidisciplinary Sciences

Comment: The FAIR Guiding Principles for scientific data management and stewardship

Mark D. Wilkinson et al.

SCIENTIFIC DATA (2016)

Article Multidisciplinary Sciences

Estimating the reproducibility of psychological science

Alexander A. Aarts et al.

SCIENCE (2015)

Editorial Material Mathematical & Computational Biology

Post-publication peer review: opening up scientific conversation

Jane Hunter

FRONTIERS IN COMPUTATIONAL NEUROSCIENCE (2012)

News Item Multidisciplinary Sciences

Report finds massive fraud at Dutch universities

Ewen Callaway

NATURE (2011)

Article Psychology, Biological

The weirdest people in the world?

Joseph Henrich et al.

BEHAVIORAL AND BRAIN SCIENCES (2010)

Article Medicine, General & Internal

Why most published research findings are false

JPA Ioannidis

PLOS MEDICINE (2005)