“Web 2.0” is the mantra enthusiastically repeated in the past few years on anything concerning the production of culture, dialogue and online communication. Even science is changing, along with the processes involving the communication, collaboration and cooperation created through the web, yet rooted in some of its historical features of openness. For this issue, JCOM has asked some experts on the most recent changes in science to analyse the potential and the contradictions lying in online collaborative science. The new open science feeds on the opportunity to freely contribute to knowledge production, sharing not only data, but also software and hardware. But it is open also to the outside, where citizens use Web 2.0 instruments to discu...
Modern information and communication technologies, together with a cultural upheaval within the rese...
Web 2.0 represents a revolution in terms of the possibilities it offers for facilitating communicati...
In this talk, I try to explain why we are talking about Open Science now by examining the history of...
“Web 2.0” is the mantra enthusiastically repeated in the past few years on anything concerning the p...
Since the early 1980s, the scholarly community has been witnessing a considerable increase in the us...
A small but growing number of researchers (and not just the younger ones) have begun to carry out th...
An increasingly digital world gives us an unprecedented opportunity to harness the scientific potent...
This essay is based on a lecture(https://zenodo.org/record/2578025#.XHeX55NKjOQ) held during the “Fu...
Open science is based on the concept that free access to knowledge is a basic requirement for human ...
The advent of new technologies and paradigms is constantly changing the land-scape of scientific pub...
The advent of new technologies and paradigms is constantly changing the landscape of scientific publ...
This introduction presents the essays belonging to the JCOM special issue on User-led and peer-to-pe...
This paper examines the MOVING MOOC “Science 2.0 and open research methods”, an online course for op...
This study attempts to trace the evolution of scholarly communication from the days of publication o...
This study attempts to trace the evolution of scholarly communication from the days of publication o...
Modern information and communication technologies, together with a cultural upheaval within the rese...
Web 2.0 represents a revolution in terms of the possibilities it offers for facilitating communicati...
In this talk, I try to explain why we are talking about Open Science now by examining the history of...
“Web 2.0” is the mantra enthusiastically repeated in the past few years on anything concerning the p...
Since the early 1980s, the scholarly community has been witnessing a considerable increase in the us...
A small but growing number of researchers (and not just the younger ones) have begun to carry out th...
An increasingly digital world gives us an unprecedented opportunity to harness the scientific potent...
This essay is based on a lecture(https://zenodo.org/record/2578025#.XHeX55NKjOQ) held during the “Fu...
Open science is based on the concept that free access to knowledge is a basic requirement for human ...
The advent of new technologies and paradigms is constantly changing the land-scape of scientific pub...
The advent of new technologies and paradigms is constantly changing the landscape of scientific publ...
This introduction presents the essays belonging to the JCOM special issue on User-led and peer-to-pe...
This paper examines the MOVING MOOC “Science 2.0 and open research methods”, an online course for op...
This study attempts to trace the evolution of scholarly communication from the days of publication o...
This study attempts to trace the evolution of scholarly communication from the days of publication o...
Modern information and communication technologies, together with a cultural upheaval within the rese...
Web 2.0 represents a revolution in terms of the possibilities it offers for facilitating communicati...
In this talk, I try to explain why we are talking about Open Science now by examining the history of...