Reported individual costs and benefits of sharing open data among Canadian academic faculty in ecology and evolution

This is a Preprint and has not been peer reviewed. The published version of this Preprint is available: https://doi.org/10.1093/biosci/biab024. This is version 3 of this Preprint.

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Authors

Sandrine Soeharjono, Dominique Roche

Abstract

Open data facilitate reproducibility and accelerate scientific discovery but are hindered by perceptions that researchers bear costs and gain few benefits from publicly sharing their data, with limited empirical evidence to the contrary. We surveyed 140 faculty members working in ecology and evolution across Canada’s top 20-ranked universities and found that more researchers report benefits (47.9%) and neutral outcomes (43.6%) than costs (21.4%) from sharing data. Benefits were independent of career stage and gender, but men and early career researchers were more likely to report costs. We outline proposed mechanisms to reduce individual costs of data sharing and increase benefits.

DOI

https://doi.org/10.32942/osf.io/473pn

Subjects

Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Life Sciences

Keywords

data sharing, FAIR data, open science, public data archiving, reproducibility, transparency

Dates

Published: 2020-10-05 10:17

Last Updated: 2021-02-08 13:55

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License

CC-By Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International