AI Article Synopsis

  • The analysis of astronomers' data sharing practices over the last fifteen years shows a significant increase in URL links included in published papers, peaking at around 1500 per year from 1997 to 2005, but with many links becoming broken over time.
  • In-depth interviews and surveys at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics reveal that while astronomers are generally open to data sharing, practical challenges like large data sizes, outdated sharing methods, and misconceptions about researchers' willingness to share impede more efficient practices.
  • The paper concludes with a discussion of a new user-friendly data sharing system, theastrodata.org, aimed at improving data sharing in the astronomy community, and evaluates its adoption thus far.

Article Abstract

We analyze data sharing practices of astronomers over the past fifteen years. An analysis of URL links embedded in papers published by the American Astronomical Society reveals that the total number of links included in the literature rose dramatically from 1997 until 2005, when it leveled off at around 1500 per year. The analysis also shows that the availability of linked material decays with time: in 2011, 44% of links published a decade earlier, in 2001, were broken. A rough analysis of link types reveals that links to data hosted on astronomers' personal websites become unreachable much faster than links to datasets on curated institutional sites. To gauge astronomers' current data sharing practices and preferences further, we performed in-depth interviews with 12 scientists and online surveys with 173 scientists, all at a large astrophysical research institute in the United States: the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, in Cambridge, MA. Both the in-depth interviews and the online survey indicate that, in principle, there is no philosophical objection to data-sharing among astronomers at this institution. Key reasons that more data are not presently shared more efficiently in astronomy include: the difficulty of sharing large data sets; over reliance on non-robust, non-reproducible mechanisms for sharing data (e.g. emailing it); unfamiliarity with options that make data-sharing easier (faster) and/or more robust; and, lastly, a sense that other researchers would not want the data to be shared. We conclude with a short discussion of a new effort to implement an easy-to-use, robust, system for data sharing in astronomy, at theastrodata.org, and we analyze the uptake of that system to-date.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4148308PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0104798PLOS

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