ICampus Application for OWW: Difference between revisions

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#'''Research collaborations:'''  By providing a common space for people to post information about their work, researchers can more easily keep apprised of work going on in other labs.  This will increases the likelihood of collaboration and also a provide a source for determining where certain expertise lies.
#'''Research collaborations:'''  By providing a common space for people to post information about their work, researchers can more easily keep apprised of work going on in other labs.  This will increases the likelihood of collaboration and also a provide a source for determining where certain expertise lies.
#'''Shared materials information:'''  There is much general information which is of use to a variety of labs like materials (chemical, vectors and strains), resources (online tools and references), protocols and equipment.  OpenWetWare enables centralization of all of this information in one flexible location.
#'''Shared materials information:'''  There is much general information which is of use to a variety of labs like materials (chemical, vectors and strains), resources (online tools and references), protocols and equipment.  OpenWetWare enables centralization of all of this information in one flexible location.
#'''Student/Post-Doc/Faculty Recruiting:''' It is rare, on conventional websites, to find dynamic information about a lab which can convey the actual lab and research atmosphere and outlook to a potential new lab member. Since all lab members can contribute to the wiki content, the personality of the lab becomes more clear, and it is a lesser burden for the lab as a whole to keep its current research posted and accessible online.


===Key participants===
===Key participants===

Revision as of 15:03, 8 November 2005

The MIT-Microsoft Alliance has provided funds for the development of tools to help research in technology education. This page will be used to collaboratively develop an application for funds to push OWW to be a more useful tool. Please put your input below. This is still in the early draft stages, so please put ideas down.

Preliminary Student Proposal Questions

Title for this proposal

Give a short, descriptive title for this project

  • OpenWetWare: A collaborative information tool for the biological research community
  • Please list other ideas here because the one above is lame

Name and email address of proposer

The proposer must be a registered MIT student (graduate or undergraduate). You must supply a valid email address that we can use to communicate with you. List only one address only. This person will be the point of contact for all communications about the proposal. This person also must be the person who mails in the proposal, with the correct FROM email address.

If other's would like to take the lead, speak now. Right now there is an operating assumption that no one really wants to take the lead on this proposal.

Project description

Please provide a brief (a few paragraphs at most) description of the proposed project.

  • OpenWetWare is an effort to promote the sharing of information, know-how, and wisdom among researchers and groups who are working in biology. OWW provides a place for labs, individuals, and groups to organize their own information and collaborate with others easily and efficiently. In the process, we hope that OWW will not only lead to greater collaboration between member groups, but also provide a useful information portal to our colleagues, and ultimately the rest of the world.

Significance

Describe, as succinctly and as compellingly as you can, why you think this project is significant - from an educational perspective, a technical perspective, or other.

OpenWetWare addresses many of the problems facing researchers in biological sciences and engineering.

  1. Persistant information: The amount of information and expertise that is accrued in labs is tremendous. Conveying this information and expertise to new lab members and to the greater scientific community currently relies on talking and interacting closely with the right people. One reason for this is that it is quite difficult to put these thoughts down in a systematic way. Tremendous amounts of individual expertise and information is lost when lab members leave (a key problem given the high turnover rate of academic labs). OpenWetWare provides a low-barrier of entry method for lab members to contribute their expertise to a database which will persist after they leave the lab.
  2. Dynamic information: The methods and information generated in biological research is constantly changing. The dynamic nature of OpenWetWare allows the structure to form into the most useful way to convey information. The ease of linking between pages enables richer information sources than is possible with static documents. For instance, a user can link out to informative pages about particular words enabling someone reading the document who doesn't understand a concept to quickly locate a reliable, accurate definition. Moreover, since everyone can revise the information content of a wiki, mistakes are more quickly caught and corrected.
  3. Research collaborations: By providing a common space for people to post information about their work, researchers can more easily keep apprised of work going on in other labs. This will increases the likelihood of collaboration and also a provide a source for determining where certain expertise lies.
  4. Shared materials information: There is much general information which is of use to a variety of labs like materials (chemical, vectors and strains), resources (online tools and references), protocols and equipment. OpenWetWare enables centralization of all of this information in one flexible location.
  5. Student/Post-Doc/Faculty Recruiting: It is rare, on conventional websites, to find dynamic information about a lab which can convey the actual lab and research atmosphere and outlook to a potential new lab member. Since all lab members can contribute to the wiki content, the personality of the lab becomes more clear, and it is a lesser burden for the lab as a whole to keep its current research posted and accessible online.

Key participants

Who are the key participants in this project? What year are they at MIT? Will they all still be students through the fall semester 2006?

  • Barry Canton -- 3rd year graduate student (will be a student in Fall 2006)
  • Austin Che -- ?
  • Jason Kelly -- 3rd year graduate student (will be a student in Fall 2006)
  • Sriram Kosuri -- 5th year graduate student (unsure if he will be a student in Fall 2006)
  • Reshma Shetty -- 4th year graduate student (will be a student in Fall 2006)
  • Jeff Gritton -- 4th year graduate student (will be a student in Fall 2006)

Add your name here

Goals for the spring

List two or three specific milestones to be achieved in the project by May 2006.

Goals for the one-year project

List two or three specific milestones to be achieved in the project by December 2006.

Funding

What kinds of things are you requesting funding for (e.g., what equipment, UROP positions, other)?

  1. Advertising
    • Funds to send users to conferences to educate others researchers about OpenWetWare
  2. Tool Development
    • Automatic login for MIT Users
    • Better tools to make websites from wiki pages. For an example, see here.
  3. Informational Development
    • Informational pages specific to MIT.
    • Questions and Answers areas.
    • Tutorial Development
  4. Hardware/Support Funding

Advisor

Who is your project advisor?

Other

Any other comments or questions.

References

MIT iCampus Student Awards page

List of Past Student Projects