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; Karl Popper, The Open Society and its Enemies : [http://www.livingbooksaboutlife.org/books/Open_science/Attributions Attributions]
; Karl Popper, The Open Society and its Enemies
 
== [http://www.livingbooksaboutlife.org/books/Open_science/Attributions Attributions] ==

Revision as of 14:17, 30 September 2011

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LifetrackingCover1.jpg

Open Science and its Discontents

edited by Gary Hall

Introduction: White Noise: On the Limits of Openness (Living Book Mix)

One of the aims of the Living Books About Life series is to provide a 'bridge' or point of connection, translation, even interrogation and contestation, between the humanities and the sciences. Accordingly, this introduction to Digitize Me, Visualize Me, Search Me, a book in the series on open science, takes as its starting point the so-called ‘computational turn’ to data-intensive scholarship in the humanities.

The phrase ‘the computational turn’ has been adopted to refer to the process whereby techniques and methodologies drawn from computer science and related fields – including science visualization, interactive information visualization, image processing, network analysis, statistical data analysis, and the management, manipulation and mining of data – are being increasingly used to produce new ways of approaching and understanding texts in the humanities - what is sometimes thought of as 'the digital humanities'. (more...)

Open Science

It’s An Open (Science), Open (Access), Open (Source), Open (Notebook) World

Open Notebook Science
Patrick O. Brown, Michael B. Eisen, Harold Varmus
Why PLoS Became a Publisher
Sally Murray, Stephen Choi, John Hoey, Claire Kendall, James Maskalyk, and Anita Palepu
Open Science, Open Access and Open Source Software at Open Medicine

Community Science

BioCurious: A Community Lab for Biotechnology

Richard Stallman
Free Community Science and the Free Development of Science

'This Revolution Will Be Digitized’: Online Tools for Open Science

Biogang

Bill Hooker
The Future of Science is Open, Part 3: An Open Science World
Chris Patil and Vivian Siegel
This Revolution Will Be Digitized: Online Tools for Radical Collaboration

Open Science Publishing

Philip E. Bourne
What Do I Want from the Publisher of the Future?
Cameron Neylon
Science in the Open/or/How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love My Blog

Open Knowledge

Access to Knowledge

Open Knowledge Foundation

Gaelle Krikorian and Amy Kapczynski, eds
Access to Knowledge In the Age of Intellectual Property

New Models for Open Sharing and Open Research

Anne H. Margulies
A New Model for Open Sharing
Thomas B. Kepler, Marc A. Marti-Renom, Stephen M. Maurer, Arti K. Rai, Ginger Taylor, Matthew H. Todd
Open Source Research - The Power of Us

Open Knowledge and its Discontents

J.J. King
The Packet Gang: Openness and its Discontents
Michael Gurstein
Are the Open Data Warriors Fighting for Robin Hood or the Sheriff?: Some Reflections on OKCon 2011 and the Emerging Data Divide

Open Data

Data-Intensive Science

Vincent S. Smith
Data Publication: Towards a Database of Everything
Tony Hey, Stewart Tansley, Kristen Tolle, eds
Scholarly Communication, The Fourth Paradigm: Data-Intensive Scientific Discovery

World of Data

Free Our Data

Simon Rogers
How Canada Became an Open Data and Data Journalism Powerhouse

We Can Know It For You

Omer Tene
What Google Knows: Privacy and Internet Search Engines
Daniel Chandramohan, Kenji Shibuya, Philip Setel, Sandy Cairncross, Alan D. Lopez, Christopher J. L. Murray, Basia Żaba, Robert W. Snow, Fred Binka
Should Data from Demographic Surveillance Systems Be Made More Widely Available to Researchers?

Digitize Me

Encode Me/Decode Me

Human Genome Project

The ENCODE Project Consortium
A User's Guide to the Encyclopaedia of DNA Elements (ENCODE)

deCODEme

Life-Tracking

Quantified Self

Gary Wolf
The Data-Driven Life
Aiden R. Doherty and Alan F. Smeaton
Automatically Augmenting Lifelog Events Using Pervasively Generated Content from Millions of People
Jennifer S. Beaudin, Stephen S. Intille, and Margaret E. Morris
To Track or Not to Track: User Reactions to Concepts in Longitudinal Health Monitoring

The Neurological Turn: or, ‘How the Internet Gets Inside Us'

Adam Gopnik
The Information: How the Internet Gets Inside Us
N. Katherine Hayles
Hyper and Deep Attention: The Generation Divide in Cognitive Modes

Visualize Me

What is Visualization?

Lev Manovich
What is Visualization?
Nathan Yau
Data Visualization Meets Game Design to Explore your Digital Life

Bloom

Mood-mapping

Celeste Biever
Twitter Mood Maps Reveal Emotional States of America

Twitter mood video

[1]

Moodscope

Mappiness

The Visualized Human (or, The Human As Spectacle)

Nicholas Felton
The Annual Felton Report

Deb Roy
The Birth of a Word

Johanna Drucker
Humanistic Approaches to the Graphical Expression of Interpretation

Search Me

Search-Engine Science

Emily H. Chan, Vikram Sahai, Corrie Conrad, and John S. Brownstein
Using Web Search Query Data to Monitor Dengue Epidemics: A New Model for Neglected Tropical Disease Surveillance
Annie Y.S. Lau, Enrico Coiera, Tatjana Zrimec, and Paul Compton
Clinician Search Behaviors May Be Influenced by Search Engine Design

The Science of Control

Alession Signorini Alberto Maria Segre, Philip M. Polgreen
The Use of Twitter to Track Levels of Disease Activity and Public Concern in the U.S. During the Influenza A H1N1 Pandemic
David Parry
Surveillance
Felix Stalder and Christine Mayer
The Second Index: Search Engines, Personalization and Surveillance (Deep Search)

Deep Search

Michael K. Bergman
The Deep Web: Surfacing Hidden Value
Clare Birchall
The Invisible Web, The In/Visible

Media Gifts?

[2]

Web 2.0 Suicide Machine

Freedom Box Foundation

Traceblog

The JJPS Firefox Extension

Appendix

Karl Popper, The Open Society and its Enemies

Attributions