Open Science and Academic Workload

New article by Thomas Hostler in the Journal of Trial and Error:

“There is a high chance that without intervention, increased expectations to engage in open research practices may lead to unacceptable increases in demands on academics.”

Open access: https://doi.org/10.36850/mr5

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@MarkRubin @stsing @academicchatter this is an interesting discussion @johnntowse and @tombeesley

@MarkRubin @academicchatter @tombeesley @robayedavies @stsing
Indeed. And exactly why we concluded in 2021: “Open data is a manageable albeit time consuming target, especially where thoughtful and careful curation takes place and issues of anonymity must be managed. The field should recognize the value, and the temporal and cognitive costs. whilst promoting the potential reward and benefits…”

https://doi.org/10.3758/s13428-020-01486-1

Opening Pandora’s Box: Peeking inside Psychology’s data sharing practices, and seven recommendations for change - Behavior Research Methods

Open data-sharing is a valuable practice that ought to enhance the impact, reach, and transparency of a research project. While widely advocated by many researchers and mandated by some journals and funding agencies, little is known about detailed practices across psychological science. In a pre-registered study, we show that overall, few research papers directly link to available data in many, though not all, journals. Most importantly, even where open data can be identified, the majority of these lacked completeness and reusability—conclusions that closely mirror those reported outside of Psychology. Exploring the reasons behind these findings, we offer seven specific recommendations for engineering and incentivizing improved practices, so that the potential of open data can be better realized across psychology and social science more generally.

SpringerLink
@robayedavies @stsing @tombeesley @academicchatter @MarkRubin
Plus, I think this perspective makes it all the more important that we embed open research into the degree curriculum so that we can broaden awareness and surface the consequences. Especially important perhaps for those beyond the immediate research questions but who can operate the levers of influence & support, those who issue mandates etc