Ascoli Giorgio A
Krasnow Institute for Advanced Study, George Mason University, Fairfax, Virginia, United States of America.
PLoS Biol. 2015 Oct 8;13(10):e1002275. doi: 10.1371/journal.pbio.1002275. eCollection 2015 Oct.
Routine data sharing is greatly benefiting several scientific disciplines, such as molecular biology, particle physics, and astronomy. Neuroscience data, in contrast, are still rarely shared, greatly limiting the potential for secondary discovery and the acceleration of research progress. Although the attitude toward data sharing is non-uniform across neuroscience subdomains, widespread adoption of data sharing practice will require a cultural shift in the community. Digital reconstructions of axonal and dendritic morphology constitute a particularly "sharable" kind of data. The popularity of the public repository NeuroMorpho.Org demonstrates that data sharing can benefit both users and contributors. Increased data availability is also catalyzing the grassroots development and spontaneous integration of complementary resources, research tools, and community initiatives. Even in this rare successful subfield, however, more data are still unshared than shared. Our experience as developers and curators of NeuroMorpho.Org suggests that greater transparency regarding the expectations and consequences of sharing (or not sharing) data, combined with public disclosure of which datasets are shared and which are not, may expedite the transition to community-wide data sharing.
常规数据共享极大地惠及了多个科学学科,如分子生物学、粒子物理学和天文学。相比之下,神经科学数据仍然很少被共享,这极大地限制了二次发现的潜力以及研究进展的加速。尽管神经科学各子领域对数据共享的态度并不统一,但广泛采用数据共享实践将需要该领域的文化转变。轴突和树突形态的数字重建构成了一种特别“可共享”的数据类型。公共数据库NeuroMorpho.Org的受欢迎程度表明,数据共享对用户和贡献者都有益处。数据可用性的提高也正在催化互补资源、研究工具和社区倡议的基层发展和自发整合。然而,即使在这个罕见的成功子领域,未共享的数据仍然比共享的数据多。我们作为NeuroMorpho.Org的开发者和管理者的经验表明,提高关于共享(或不共享)数据的期望和后果的透明度,以及公开披露哪些数据集被共享、哪些未被共享,可能会加速向全领域数据共享的转变。