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The Center for Open Science is a non-profit technology organization based in Charlottesville, Virginia with a mission to "increase the openness, integrity, and reproducibility of scientific research." [1] Brian Nosek and Jeffrey Spies founded the organization in January 2013, funded mainly by the Laura and John Arnold Foundation and others. [2]
Brian Arthur Nosek is an American social-cognitive psychologist, professor of psychology at the University of Virginia, and the co-founder and director of the Center for Open Science. [1] He also co-founded the Society for the Improvement of Psychological Science and Project Implicit.
The authors emphasized that the findings reflect a problem that affects all of science and not just psychology, and that there is room to improve reproducibility in psychology. In 2021, the project showed that of 193 experiments from 53 top papers about cancer published between 2010 and 2012, only 50 experiments from 23 papers could be replicated.
Social science: Open archive of the social sciences >10,000 [28] 2016 Center for Open Science: SportRxiv: Sports science: Repository dedicated to sport and exercise related research >100 2017 Center for Open Science: SSRN (First Look) Multidisciplinary: Aggregates over 30 preprint servers (Preprints with The Lancet, Cell Sneak Peek, etc.). More ...
Center for Open Science; Center for Scientific Integrity; Cochrane Collaboration; European Network for Knowledge Impact; Evidence-Based Research Network (EBRNetwork) Interdisciplinary Meta-Research Group at The University of Melbourne, Australia; Meta-Research Center at Tilburg University; Meta-Research Innovation Center at Stanford (METRICS)
Open science is the movement to make scientific research (including publications, data, physical samples, and software) and its dissemination accessible to all levels of society, amateur or professional. [2] [3] Open science is transparent and accessible knowledge that is shared and developed through collaborative networks. [4]
There is an annual Metascience Conference hosted by the Association for Interdisciplinary Meta-Research and Open Science (AIMOS) and biannual conference hosted by the Centre for Open Science. [ 187 ] [ 188 ]
It was established in 2012 by the University of California, Berkeley's Center for Effective Global Action. [1] It has worked with the Center for Open Science to define and promote a set of best practices for social scientists to maximize transparency in their research. [2]