science

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The Commons of Science—Why It Takes a Village: Christine Borgman on Collaboration, Curation, and the Invisible Infrastructure of Knowledge

This article examines the evolution of scientific knowledge infrastructures through the influential work of Christine L. Borgman, Distinguished Research Professor at UCLA. Framed around the concept of science as a commons, it traces a three-decade transformation—from digital libraries in the 1990s to cyberinfrastructure in the 2000s, culminating in today’s sociotechnical framing of knowledge infrastructures. Borgman’s scholarship highlights how data acquire value not in isolation, but through complex systems of people, practices, tools, and institutions that enable their curation, sharing, and reuse.

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Translation

How Does Scientific Research Influence Policymaking?

According to Nathan Caplan, scientists and policymakers belong to two distinct communities: the former prioritize conceptual understanding, while the latter emphasize the practical applicability of knowledge. So, how exactly does science shape policy? By analyzing the pathways through which research articles are cited in policy documents, we may uncover the underlying mechanisms of this complex interaction.

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InfoFireMultimedia

AI for Science: A Fireside Chat with Tony Hey, eScience Pioneer

In this InfoFire episode, I am in conversation with eScience pioneer Tony Hey on the topic of “AI for Science.” Our fireside chat commences with the profound words of Richard Feynman, who had a significant influence on Tony Hey, and centers around the two books— Feynman Lectures on Computation: Anniversary Edition and Artificial Intelligence for Science: A Deep Learning Revolution, edited/coedited by Tony Heyand, published in 2023.

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