The American National Science Foundation (NSF) has recently announced new requirements for handling and sharing data from projects funded by the agency.
"Science is becoming data-intensive and collaborative," noted Ed Seidel, acting assistant director for NSF's Mathematical and Physical Sciences directorate. "Researchers from numerous disciplines need to work together to attack complex problems; openly sharing data will pave the way for researchers to communicate and collaborate more effectively."
"This is the first step in what will be a more comprehensive approach to data policy," added Cora Marrett, NSF acting deputy director. "It will address the need for data from publicly-funded research to be made public."
The new requirements, although publicly stated to encourage better sharing of data within the science community, are almost certainly related to the recent Climategate fiasco. It should be seen as a reminder to us all to follow proper procedures when writing software, especially in the area of source code control.
For more information on Climategate see the articles in Wikipedia, Wallstreet Journal, the original files related to the scandal, and an analysis of the emails.
For more information on the subjects that are more directly computer related see the articles in Wikipedia for LIMS, data management, and source code control.
Monday, May 24, 2010
New Requirements by NSF for Data Management
Labels:
revision control,
source code
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