We interviewed Mark Hahnel, founder of figshare to discuss Collections, a new, free resource developed by the figshare team, and how researchers can use this tool to further their collaborative efforts.
Figshare was a solution to a problem I was having as an academic. I wanted to get credit for all of the videos and datasets I slaved away at, which then were never published and fell victim to the file drawer effect. I started making my own digital research outputs available, in a citable and sharable manner. From this, others started doing the same, and we now have over 3 million public digital research outputs on figshare.
The most exciting thing about working in this space is the amount of research that is being done at the bleeding edge, combined with the speed at which the space is changing. From 3D printable dinosaur fossils to new ways of creating and analysing research, there is always something new and intriguing on the horizon.
Collections is a way in which people can curate collections of digital research outputs. Much like academic papers wrap up the images and graphs of a particular theme, collections allows you to do this with any public digital research output - whether the collector is the author or not. Collections acts as a way of grouping together information to tell a story or back up a theory.
We have come to learn that the way in which we envision features will be used is really only scratching the surface. What started as a nice way of grouping certain types of content for our publisher clients soon became a way to report on all research outputs of a funded grant to the funder, or a collection of posters around a theme. There is no reason why a collection couldn't include a paper, as the context of the research. In this sense, it becomes a state of the art publishing platform - without peer review of course.
Collaboration has a few core components that are often overlooked in pushing academics down this route. There needs to be a win-win situation for both parties. The administrative burden needs to be low, ideally just a part of the academic's workflow and the benefits needs to be quantifiable. This is what we're focussing on at figshare. Lots of people are using the platform to privately collaborate on research. Because they are just one way away from making it public upon completion, we believe we can encourage academics to make the most of more of their research.