Journal:GitHub as an open electronic laboratory notebook for real-time sharing of knowledge and collaboration
Full article title | GitHub as an open electronic laboratory notebook for real-time sharing of knowledge and collaboration |
---|---|
Journal | Digital Discovery |
Author(s) | Scroggie, Kymberley R.; Burell-Sander, Klementine J.; Rutledge, Peter J.; Motion, Alice |
Author affiliation(s) | University of Sydney |
Primary contact | Email: alice dot motion at sydney dot edu dot au |
Year published | 2023 |
Volume and issue | 2 |
Page(s) | 1188-1196 |
DOI | 10.1039/D3DD00032J |
ISSN | 2635-098X |
Distribution license | Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 3.0 Unported |
Website | https://pubs.rsc.org/en/content/articlehtml/2023/dd/d3dd00032j |
Download | https://pubs.rsc.org/en/content/articlepdf/2023/dd/d3dd00032j (PDF) |
This article should be considered a work in progress and incomplete. Consider this article incomplete until this notice is removed. |
Abstract
Electronic laboratory notebooks have expanded the utility of the paper laboratory notebook beyond that of a simple record keeping tool. Open electronic laboratory notebooks offer additional benefits to the scientific community including increased transparency, reproducibility, and integrity. A key element underpinning these benefits is facile and expedient knowledge sharing which aids communication and collaboration. In previous projects, we have used LabTrove and LabArchives as open electronic laboratory notebooks, in partnership with GitHub (an open-source web-based platform originally developed for collaborative coding) for communication and discussion. Here we present our personal experiences using GitHub as the central platform for many aspects of the scientific process, including version-controlled recording of experiments, results and interpretation, data storage, project management, workflows, communication, and collaboration. We report on the utility of GitHub as an open electronic laboratory notebook for chemistry research, and discuss our experiences employing it with the Open Source Mycetoma and Open Source Tuberculosis consortia. By outlining its features and shortcomings through their implementation in our work, we demonstrate how using GitHub as a central platform can aid the real-time sharing of knowledge and collaboration, and further democratise scientific research within both open and traditional research models.
Keywords: electronic laboratory notebook, ELN, GitHub, data sharing, knowledge sharing, chemistry
Introduction
References
Notes
This presentation is faithful to the original, with only a few minor changes to presentation. In some cases important information was missing from the references, and that information was added.