Health Commons from Science Commons

Ismael Peña, a colleague at Open University of Catalonia and a friend of mine, has been working on issues relative with Open Access, Open Science, Open Educational Resources, Open Source Software, etc. His post titled Introduction to the open paradigm sum up the main features of Open movement. Talking about “paradigm” is a tricky question so I have suggested him to title his introduction as Openness at the informationalism paradigm. Anyway, a few days ago he sent me a link to The Health Commons

Health Commons is a coalition of parties interested in changing the way basic science is translated into the understanding and improvement of human health. Coalition members agree to share data, knowledge, and services under standardized terms and conditions by committing to a set of common technologies, digital information standards, research materials, contracts, workflows, and software. These commitments ensure that knowledge, data, materials and tools can move seamlessly from partner to partner across the entire drug discovery chain. They enable participants to offer standardized services, ranging from simple molecular assays to complex drug synthesis solutions, that others can discover in directories and integrate into their own processes to expedite development — or assemble like LEGO blocks to create new services.

This is the new project from Science Commons that has “the ambition of achieving for the world of science and data, what Creative Commons had begun to achieve for the world of culture, art and educational material: to ease unnecessary legal and technical barriers to sharing, to promote innovation, to provide easy, high quality tools that let individuals and organizations specify the terms under which they wished to share their material” (see An Introduction to Science Commons).

John Wilbanks and Marty Tenenbaum have written Health Commons: Therapy Development in a Networked World - an introduction and overview and have produced a video titled An Introduction to Health Commons

I’m very interested in these kind of initiatives or project. Please contact me flupianez[at]ictconsequences.net if you have or know any initiative related to Health and Openness at the informationalism paradigm as Health Commons or the examples I’m collecting at my wiki under the category Openness at Health.


Health said

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john wilbanks said

Hi, thanks for the link - we’re going to be in Barcelona later this summer if you’d like to set up a time for a coffee.


Francisco Lupiáñez-Villanueva said

I really like the idea. Summer is a wonderful season in Barcelona, plenty of terraces to set up a time for a coffee. Congratulations for your project.

Best wishes,
Paco


Mike said

Back in the 1990s there was talk of Scholarly Skywriting - and open peer commentary . The BMJ and some other journals now have e-prints of papers that are queued in the production line. There is something about speed - quality -access here. Speed because we want new innovations asp and in some cases this make bring new treatments. Quality because we must have high quality evidence and research - and how do we define and ensure ‘quality’? Access because we want to be able to read and use this material. Can the ‘wisdom of crowds’ , ‘co-production’ and other Web 2.0 processes contribute to good science? At one level - no - because some science requires hard to find expertise and small teams. At another level - yes - because more ‘eyes on’ an issue can lead to innovative solutions.
So where am I going here? I want better ways of providing new insights into the human condition. I also want better ways of doing my own work. Health commons is a welcome contribution to this.


Francisco Lupiáñez-Villanueva said

Thanks Mike for comment. I’m collecting those kind of initiatives here: http://www.ictconsequences.net/wiki/index.php?title=Category:Open_Health
any suggestion will be very welcome.
Could that list be the material for a good paper?
Best,