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Reinventing Discovery

Reinventing Discovery: The New Era of Networked Science is a book written by Michael Nielsen and released in October 2011. It argues for the benefits of applying the philosophy of open science to research.

Summary

The following is a list of major topics in the book's chapters.

  1. Reinventing Discovery
  2. Online Tools Make Us Smarter
  3. :Kasparov versus the World, The Wisdom of Crowds, various online collaborative projects
  4. Restructuring Expert Attention
  5. :InnoCentive, collective intelligence, Paul Seabright's economic theory, online chat
  6. Patterns of Online Collaboration
  7. :History of Linux, Open Architecture Network, Wikipedia, MathWorks' computer programming contest
  8. The Limits and the Potential of Collective Intelligence
  9. :communication in small groups, particularly as studied by Stasser and Titus; praxis of science; a discussion of communication among scientists
  10. All the World's Knowledge
  11. :Don R. Swanson and Literature-based discovery, predicting influenza with Google searches, Sloan Digital Sky Survey, Allen Institute for Brain Science, Ocean Observatories Initiative, Human Genome Project, Google Translate, playchess.com Tournaments
  12. Democratizing Science
  13. :Galaxy Zoo, Foldit, citizen science, eBird, open access, arXiv, PLoS
  14. The Challenge of Doing Science in the Open
  15. :Complexity Zoo, academic publishing, Bayh–Dole Act
  16. The Open Science Imperative
  17. :Open science, academic journal publishing reform, SPIRES
appendix - The problem solved by the Polymath Project

Reviews

Timo Hannay's review in Nature said that in this book Nielsen gives "the most compelling and comprehensive case so far for a new approach to science in the Internet age".

The Financial Times review said that the book was "the most compelling manifesto yet for the transformative power of networked science".

References

External links