Digitize Me, Visualize Me, Search Me

Digitize Me, Visualize Me, Search Me: From Open Science to Open Humanities and Beyond

edited by Gary Hall


Gary Hall

Introduction: White Noise (coming soon...)


Open Science


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

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


Open Notebook Science


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

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


Biogang


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


Community Science

Richard Stallman

Free Community Science and the Free Development of Science


BioCurious: A Community Lab for Biotechnology


Open Knowledge


Open Access to Knowledge

Gaelle Krikorian and Amy Kapczynski, eds,

Access to Knowledge In the Age of Intellectual Property


Open Knowledge Foundation


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

JJ 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

Part 4: 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

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?


Gary Hall

We Can Know It For You: The Secret Life of Metadata


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
Gary Wolf

The Data-Driven Life


Quantified Self

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’

N. Katherine Hayles

Hyper and Deep Attention: The Generation Divide in Cognitive Modes


Adam Gopnik

The Information: How the Internet Gets Inside Us


Visualize Me!

What is Visualisation?
Lev Manovich, ‘What is Visualization?’