<a href="http://scientificdatasharing.com/about/">http://scientificdatasharing.com/about/</a><br><br><br>ABOUT THE DATA SHARING PROJECT<br><br>While many data sharing programs exist worldwide, widespread sharing of raw<br>
data has not yet won across-the-board acceptance in the scientific community,<br>and the very existence of all these databases makes the approach fractured at<br>best.<br><br>The Data Sharing Project, launched last year by University of California-San<br>
Francisco Professor Michael Weiner, has two goals: One is to make widespread<br>raw data sharing a reality — initially in the realm of medicine — through<br>creation of a repository system accessible to all researchers; the second goal<br>
is to foster broad scientific support for this move and its adoption in other<br>fields of research.<br><br>HISTORY<br><br>While there is a long-established tradition in the scientific realm of collaborative<br>efforts to enhance knowledge, this has generally been limited to the sharing<br>
of pre-prints. There is considerable resistance among many scientists to full-scale<br>sharing of all data, both raw and analyzed, due to its cost, time requirements<br>and researchers’ fears they will be denied proper credit and financial gain<br>
for their findings.<br><br>This resistance remains although several highly regarded programs, including<br>the Human Genome Project, have shown that such sharing can produce rapid scientific<br>breakthroughs that otherwise would not have occurred.<br>
<br>Examine, for instance, a brief description of success provided by the Genome<br>project, which shared its raw data as soon as it was produced:<br><br>“Technology and resources promoted by the Human Genome Project are starting<br>
to have profound impacts on biomedical research and promise to revolutionize<br>the wider spectrum of biological research and clinical medicine. Increasingly<br>detailed genome maps have aided researchers seeking genes associated with dozens<br>
of genetic conditions, including myotonic dystrophy, fragile X syndrome,<br>neurofibromatosis types 1 and 2, inherited colon cancer, Alzheimer’s disease,<br>and familial breast cancer.” (Human Genome Project: About The HGP)<br>
<br>With major projects demonstrating the tremendous scientific breakthroughs made<br>possible by data sharing and with the decline of technological barriers impeding<br>such efforts, the time has come to work to achieve widespread sharing of raw<br>
data worldwide.<br><br>The Data Sharing Project proposes to further this goal initially in the field<br>of medicine by working to create a raw data sharing program that will serve<br>as a model to other disciplines attempting to make their own way in this arena.<br>
<br>The Northern California Institute for Research and Education (NCIRE) — together<br>with the University of California-San Francisco and support from the Michael<br>J. Fox Foundation — is now in the process of canvassing the scientific community<br>
to analyze the best possible data sharing program and practices to establish<br>in the field of medicine.<br><br>