Bezuidenhout Louise
Dev World Bioeth. 2019 Mar;19(1):18-24. doi: 10.1111/dewb.12183. Epub 2018 Jan 22.
Most scientists recognize the importance of sharing data online in an open fashion. Nonetheless, many studies have documented the concerns that accompany data sharing activities, including loss of credit or IP, misuse and the time needed to curate interoperable data. To this end, discussions around data sharing often identify incentives that could potentially ameliorate these disincentivising concerns. Nonetheless, current Open Data discussions often rely on evidence-based studies to identify the disincentives to overcome. This results in highly specific and directed interventions. In contrast, this paper offers a different interpretation of these concerns. To do so, it makes use of the Thomas Theorem which suggests that: "If men define situations as real, they are real in their consequences". Using empirical evidence from sub-Saharan African (bio)chemistry laboratories, this paper illustrates how individual perceptions of research environments - whether associated with evidence or not - are highly influential in shaping data sharing practices. It concludes with the suggestion that discussion on incentivising data sharing amongst scientific communities need to take a broader set of concerns into account and offer a more creative approach to ameliorating environmental disincentives.
大多数科学家认识到以开放的方式在网上共享数据的重要性。尽管如此,许多研究记录了数据共享活动所伴随的担忧,包括声誉或知识产权的损失、滥用以及整理可互操作数据所需的时间。为此,围绕数据共享的讨论通常会确定可能减轻这些不利因素的激励措施。尽管如此,当前关于开放数据的讨论往往依赖基于证据的研究来确定需要克服的不利因素。这导致了高度具体和有针对性的干预措施。相比之下,本文对这些担忧提供了不同的解释。为此,它运用了托马斯定理,该定理表明:“如果人们将某种情境定义为真实的,那么它们在其后果中就是真实的”。本文利用来自撒哈拉以南非洲地区(生物)化学实验室的经验证据,说明了个人对研究环境的看法——无论是否与证据相关——在塑造数据共享实践方面具有高度影响力。文章最后建议,科学界关于激励数据共享的讨论需要考虑更广泛的一系列问题,并提供一种更具创造性的方法来减轻环境方面的不利因素。