Afraid of Scooping – Case Study on Researcher Strategies against Fear of Scooping in the Context of Open Science

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5334/dsj-2017-029

Keywords:

social science, case study, research integrity, research ethics, open science, open data

Abstract

The risk of scooping is often used as a counter argument for open science, especially open data. In this case study I have examined openness strategies, practices and attitudes in two open collaboration research projects created by Finnish researchers, in order to understand what made them resistant to the fear of scooping. The radically open approach of the projects includes open by default funding proposals, co-authorship and community membership. Primary sources used are interviews of the projects’ founding members. The analysis indicates that openness requires trust in close peers, but not necessarily in research community or society at large. Based on the case study evidence, focusing on intrinsic goals, like new knowledge and bringing about ethical reform, instead of external goals such as publications, supports openness. Understanding fundaments of science, philosophy of science and research ethics, can also have a beneficial effect on willingness to share. Whether there are aspects in open sharing that makes it seem riskier from the point of view of certain demographical groups within research community, such as women, could be worth closer inspection.

Author Biography

Heidi Laine, Doctoral School on Humanities and Social Sciences, University of Helsinki, Helsinki

Heidi Laine is a doctoral student in social science history at the University of Helsinki Doctoral School on Humanities and Social Science Doctoral Programme on Political, Social and Regional Change. Her dissertation, which this article is a part of, studies the development of self-regulation in research integrity, using the over two decades old Finnish regulatory framework as a point of departure and comparison. Laine is an advocate of open science and a member of the Open Knowledge Finland Core Team and the secretary of the Finnish Committee for Research Data.

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Published

2017-06-15

Issue

Section

Research Papers