open-discussion > Advancing Software Citation Implementation
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Feb 16, 2023 05:02 PM | David Kennedy
Advancing Software Citation Implementation
Announcing a report entitled: "Advancing Software Citation
Implementation (Software Citation Workshop 2022)".
https://arxiv.org/abs/2302.07500
Authored by: Daina Bouquin, Ana Trisovic, Oliver Bertuch, Elena Colón-Marrero
Abstract: Software is foundationally important to scientific and social progress, however, traditional acknowledgment of the use of others' work has not adapted in step with the rapid development and use of software in research.
This report outlines a series of collaborative discussions that brought together an international group of stakeholders and experts representing many communities, forms of labor, and expertise. Participants addressed specific challenges about software citation that have so far gone unresolved. The discussions took place in summer 2022 both online and in-person and involved a total of 51 participants. The activities described in this paper were intended to identify and prioritize specific software citation problems, develop (potential) interventions, and lay out a series of mutually supporting approaches to address them. The outcomes of this report will be useful for the GLAM (Galleries, Libraries, Archives, Museums) community, repository managers and curators, research software developers, and publishers.
https://arxiv.org/abs/2302.07500
Authored by: Daina Bouquin, Ana Trisovic, Oliver Bertuch, Elena Colón-Marrero
Abstract: Software is foundationally important to scientific and social progress, however, traditional acknowledgment of the use of others' work has not adapted in step with the rapid development and use of software in research.
This report outlines a series of collaborative discussions that brought together an international group of stakeholders and experts representing many communities, forms of labor, and expertise. Participants addressed specific challenges about software citation that have so far gone unresolved. The discussions took place in summer 2022 both online and in-person and involved a total of 51 participants. The activities described in this paper were intended to identify and prioritize specific software citation problems, develop (potential) interventions, and lay out a series of mutually supporting approaches to address them. The outcomes of this report will be useful for the GLAM (Galleries, Libraries, Archives, Museums) community, repository managers and curators, research software developers, and publishers.
Dec 25, 2023 09:12 AM | Adam Luiz
RE: Advancing Software Citation Implementation
Originally posted by David Kennedy:
Announcing a report entitled: "Advancing Software Citation Implementation (Software Citation Workshop 2022)". https://arxiv.org/abs/2302.07500 Authored by: Daina Bouquin, Ana Trisovic, Oliver Bertuch, Elena Colón-Marrero Abstract: Software is foundationally important to scientific and social progress, however, traditional acknowledgment of the use of others' work has not adapted in step with the rapid development and use of software in research. This report outlines a series of collaborative discussions that brought together an international group of stakeholders and experts representing many communities, forms of labor, and expertise. Participants addressed specific challenges about software citation that have so far gone unresolved. The discussions took place in summer 2022 both online and in-person and involved a total of 51 participants. The activities described in this paper were intended to identify and prioritize specific software citation problems, develop (potential) interventions, and lay out a series of mutually supporting approaches to address them. The outcomes of this report will be useful for the GLAM (Galleries, Libraries, Archives, Museums) community, repository managers and curators, research software developers, and publishers.
The multifaceted nature of these challenges became apparent as we delved into the intricacies of software citation problems. It was evident that the traditional modes of acknowledgment have not kept pace with the dynamic nature of software contributions.
