Team:Cambridge/Human Practices

From 2010.igem.org

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(Knowledge Recycling)
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==Knowledge Recycling==
==Knowledge Recycling==
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Sustainability considerations in end design also led us to consider the sustainability of the way we conduct our research. The theme of recycling echoed strongly throughout or project due to the desire to recycle luciferin substrate in project firefly and more generally with considerations of minimising the environmental impact of our work. Recycling of physical materials is vital for sustainability but do we treat our intellectual property in the same way? Do we give the ideas we have the maximum chance of being taken forward and used to promote further thought rather than reaching intellectual dead ends?
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''"He who receives an idea from me receives it without lessening me, as he who lights his candle at mine receives light without darkening me."'' – Thomas Jefferson
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Sustainability considerations in designing our system also led us to consider the sustainability of the way we conduct our research. The theme of recycling echoed strongly throughout or project due to the desire to recycle luciferin substrate in project firefly and more generally with considerations of minimising the environmental impact of our work. Recycling of physical materials is vital for sustainability but do we treat our intellectual property in the same way? Do we give the ideas we have the maximum chance of being taken forward and used to promote further thought rather than reaching intellectual dead ends? And what can we do to maximise knowledge recycling?
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We believe the need for openness and sharing of ideas to be of considerable importance to further knowledge, in the iGEM competition and beyond and the information society that we live in makes the sharing of ideas and finding relevant knowledge easier than ever before. The breadth and depth humanity’s current scientific understanding means that it is difficult for any single person to know enough about a particular area to make substantial advances on their own; collaboration is essential. It is not enough to only publicise and publish polished results at the end of a project. Work in progress should be made just as accessible to encourage this collaboration. Making available results from, and information about, experiments that failed is also important. It could prevent someone from wasting time trying exactly the same protocol again and may in fact be an important result in itself (that what was attempted be discovered simply cannot be discovered in that way). It is difficult to get research papers published for experiments that do not work, though journals such as the [http://www.jasnh.com/ Journal of Articles in Support of the Null Hypothesis] are changing this. Instead experiment attempts could be documented on wikis or blogs such that they are still available to someone searching the internet for them - this means all the hand work is not wasted, even if the desired results are not obtained. Protocols and techniques are particularly valuable when shared; reproducibility is a central concept to science and standardising protocols is necessary for this. Putting detailed protocols up on sites such as [http://openwetware.org/wiki/Main_Page open wetware] also helps encourage new researchers to get involved the particular field and prevents time and resources being wasted optimising procedures.   
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After coming to these conclusions from our discussions we made sure we conducted our research in the light of these ideas. We got our Wiki up as early as possible with our aims and ideas and kept the online lab book updated with our ongoing research. We always endeavoured to be open and honest about exactly the protocols we were using and what results they gave. The [https://2010.igem.org/Team:UNAM-Genomics_Mexico UNAM Genomics, Mexico] team contacted us because of the information on our Wiki and we were able to collaborate with them and help them with part of their project. We were also able to have useful discussions with the [https://2010.igem.org/Team:Edinburgh Edinburgh] team based on information we read on each other’s Wikis. From our thoughts about sharing our findings we decided that we should put effort into publicising our science. Our project will be featured on a documentary to be broadcast on [http://www.arte.tv/fr/70.html ARTE] which will bring a better understanding of synthetic biology to the general public. We also wanted to get a message across to the scientific community; the [https://2010.igem.org/Team:Cambridge/Gibson/Introduction Gibson assembly] technique which we performed frequently is not as widely used as we believe it could be so we chose this to publicise and produced a [https://2010.igem.org/Team:Cambridge/Videos music video] to do so. The song has over 3000 views so far and researchers have contacted us for more information about our experience with the technique.
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Many iGEM teams were similarly open with their ideas and results and this helped to foster the culture of collaboration that we believe is important to iGEM. We were however disappointed to see that some teams were less open. Three weeks before the wiki freeze 58 of the 127 teams participating had little more than an abstract on their wiki. This meant we were unable to engage in potentially valuable dialogue because we had little idea about what they were researching. To help encourage future teams and scientists generally to be more open with their work we produced a short video summarising our arguments. Previous iGEM teams have made interesting contributions to the field of human practises which perhaps have not had the desired effect on the way people conduct their science because not enough other scientists have seen them. We hope a short and more light-hearted summary might reach more people and help translate our conclusions into future action.
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Revision as of 02:23, 28 October 2010