Badges to Acknowledge Open Practices: A Simple, Low-Cost, Effective Method for Increasing Transparency
Center for Open Science · University of Belgrade · +6 more institutions
Abstract
Beginning January 2014, Psychological Science gave authors the opportunity to signal open data and materials if they qualified for badges that accompanied published articles. Before badges, less than 3% of Psychological Science articles reported open data. After badges, 23% reported open data, with an accelerating trend; 39% reported open data in the first half of 2015, an increase of more than an order of magnitude from baseline. There was no change over time in the low rates of data sharing among comparison journals. Moreover, reporting openness does not guarantee openness. When badges were earned, reportedly available data were more likely to be actually available, correct, usable, and complete than when…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 71.14
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 20
Authors
13Topics & keywords
- Openness to experience
- Open science
- Open data
- Transparency (behavior)
- USable
- Data sharing
- Simple (philosophy)
- Baseline (sea)