bims: | Biomed News |
eLife Innovation Leader
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•Your project idea:
Researchers have to stay current in their subject matter and they
have to establish themselves as leaders in a field. We propose
“bims: Biomed News” as a tool to help to achieve both aims at
the same time. Bims is an expertise sharing system based on
PubMed. Bims users curate reports on new additions on the topic
of their expertise. This is done weekly and does not take too
much time. Users teach a sophisticated machine learning system on
what papers they want to see. They update the learning model
every week by selecting new papers. Bims provides a service to
both the topic expert and the interest audience. The topic expert
can keep up with PubMed abstracts in a manageable format while
also gaining exposure to the community through their
contribution. The audience receives a curated list from the topic
expert that is free to receive. Hopefully Biomed News will be a
service with hundreds of topic experts around the world providing
their curated selections of abstracts from peer reviewed journals
and preprints to the global scientific community. See
http://biomed.news
•Leading open:
Openness is an absolute requirement for the success
of Biomed News. We must distribute Biomed News reports widely
without restriction. The more pairs of eyes that see the report
issues, the more our users will be seen as subject experts, and
the more they will be motivated to do a good and timely job
producing the report issues. More generally, with the ever
expanding availability of knowledge the access to knowledge
should be available to all that could use it. This knowledge
should be readily available, especially in places where resources
are limited. By providing an open service Biomed News will
provide interested parties with an update of recommended relevant
abstracts that will save on time and costs.
•Resources and capacities:
Bims was created by Thomas Krichel. He assures me he will
continue to maintain the project even in the absence of external
subsidies. He uses the software he has been using for NEP: New
Economics Papers at
http://nep.repec.org and and the
server that is used for that project, while we hope to get a
dedicated server soon. Biomed News has recruited several
volunteers to test out the system who act as testers of the
service so that we can gather feedback on usability. My employer
prides itself to be the “Connected University”. They are
suportive of my role to increase scientific knowledge and to
share this with the scientific and general community. These have
been my goals as an academic scientist since I started 20 years
ago. Biomed News is an important part of this as it shares
knowledge with the wider community. In my position as Associate
Professor I am allocated dedicated time for scholarly activities
to dedicate to research and knowledge transfer. I am beginning
collaborations with colleagues at Staffordshire University in
the School of Computing and Digital Technology.
•Learning from others:
Throughout my 20 year career in academia I
have always been enthusiastic about acquiring new knowledge and
practice. This has been from a variety of encounters and
experiences with fellow researchers and lecturers as well as
members of the general public. I have been fortunate to be able
to work at different universities and research institutes in the
UK, USA and most recently Brazil. These opportunities have
enabled me to interact with academics from all over the world and
to learn about their professional expertise along with customs
and cultures that are incorporated into my work and general
outlook. I feel that from the people I have worked with up until
now I have been able to acquire an understanding of the global
nature of academia and collaborative work. This is something I
feel is important to share with others I work with by including
in my teaching and interactions with colleagues and the general
public. As part of my contribution to increasing the public
appreciation of science I worked with an artist, Yuko Oda, to
present a lecture on the art and science of nature in 2017. Also,
I have learned much from my time working with Thomas Krichel, we
come from very different fields but share a common interest in
making knowledge available. I have learned aspects of programming
and information systems as we work together on a common goal.
•Have you
been or are you currently involved with eLife and/or the Mozilla
Open Leaders programme?
Thomas Krichel was an eLife
Sprint participant in 2019.