Open Research

Open Research, sometimes referred to as Open Science, is the idea that both the research process and outputs should be made publicly available as soon as possible.

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Overview

Much of the discussion around Open Research focuses on Open Access and Open Data but it also includes peer review, protocols, notebooks, citizen science, software and much more.

It is widely acknowledged that making research more open will support reproducibility, enable collaboration, increase re-use and make it accessible to wider society.


Policy support for Open Research

Policies supporting open access to publications began over a decade ago, all major UK research funders now have open access mandates and the University has an open access policy. These have often been followed by policies encouraging or mandating data sharing from funders and the University, and the Concordat on Open Research Data (PDF, 177KB).

The Concordat calls for data to be made openly available and was signed by Universities UK, UKRI and the Wellcome Trust amongst others.  have led the way in extending their policy to include mandating the sharing of software and materials as well as publications and data. Most recently the University’s Vision has been published which includes a commitment to create an open research culture aligned with the .

These have been supplemented by the , which has been signed by the University of 91̽»¨, and aims to improve how research outputs are assessed and encourage the responsible use of metrics.

This commitment to responsible assessment is reflected in the University’s Academic Career Pathway which emphasises the quality of individual articles rather than the journals they are published in. Researchers are supported in engaging with Open Research by the Library, Research, Partnerships and Innovation, IT Services and the new Research Practice Lead, Tom Stafford.


Practical support for Open Research

Open Research practices vary between disciplines and methodologies, but below we have gathered a range of tools, platforms and practices which support different aspects of open research across disciplines. If you are concerned about what others will be able to do with materials you have shared, or would like to know how you can re-use any materials you have found, then you can contact our copyright team who can provide advice on licensing.

Software

Services such as GitHub, , BitBucket allow researchers to manage software and share it openly during the development process. At the end of the research project software can be archived in  and publications like the  allow researchers to get credit for their software in an academic journal.

Preprints

Posting preprints, research articles which have not yet been peer-reviewed, is an easy way to share results quickly. There are many preprint services for different disciplines and these are detailed in our Scholarly Publishing guidance.

Protocols

Publicly sharing protocols for research experiments can assist others to reproduce your research, speed up progress in a field by improving the methods and allow others to build on the protocols you have developed.

Sharing protocols can also be useful when journals have strict word limits in the methodology section, as you can simply link to the detailed protocol shared separately from your article. There are protocol sharing websites, such as , where you can usually receive a DOI to make your protocol easily citeable or you can share protocols in methods journals, such as .

Registered reports

Registered reports involve breaking down peer review into two stages; the first review is of the idea, design and analysis plan of a project prior to the research being conducted. There is then a second stage of peer review after the research has been undertaken, looking at the final report.

This process supports reproducibility as registering the analysis plan for a project prior to data collection prevents researchers hypothesising after the results are known (also known as HARK-ing). Find out more about the journals involved at .

Hardware

Open hardware refers to making the specifications and designs for physical hardware openly available and licensed for re-use by others. There are detailed descriptions of best practice in making hardware open in .

Notebooks

 can make it easier to open up research workflows, and some groups have even started making their  during the research process.

Peer Review

Peer review is not only affecting the outputs which can be shared, it also has implications for peer review, with some arguing for an open peer review process. There are several platforms which provide post-publication peer review, such as , and journals offering partially open peer review, such as  which publishes peer review reports after publication. Additionally,  allows you to get ‘credit’ for the publications you have reviewed and  provides annotation services, another form of post-publication peer review.

Identifiers

As more research is being made openly available it is becoming increasingly important to add identifiers to each research output so that they can be linked and to ensure that researchers get appropriate credit for their work. Journals and repositories (including ORDA) will routinely assign DOIs (Digital Object Identifiers) to articles, datasets and software that they host.

Doing this makes it easier to persistently link outputs and track their citations. Additionally it is really important to include your ORCiD in each output so that you can be credited for your research. There are also moves to make it clearer who contributed what to an output in order to improve transparency by using the CRediT taxonomy.

Platforms for sharing and discovering other outputs

If you wish to share other outputs or facets of your research then there are a number of platforms which will support this. The University’s research data repository, , accepts most non-article outputs including reports, workflows and posters. Alternatively there are similar public platforms such as  and the  which is particularly popular for sharing research throughout a project to improve reproducibility.

There are also platforms for specific funders, such as  and , which allow the sharing of a wide range of outputs including protocols, descriptions of results and method articles. For teaching focused texts it is worth considering specific textbook platforms such as the .


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