8 research outputs found
Lessons on Ethical Decision Making from the Bioscience Industry
Mackie and colleagues performed over 100 interviews with managers and executives at 13 bioscience companies to learn about bioindustry ethics from their perspective
Finding balance : an evaluation governance model to ease tension between independence and inclusion
Includes abstract in FrenchPractitioners and theorists have documented the benefits of user engagement and participation in evaluation and, at the same time, the value of neutral and impartial evaluative evidence. Yet producing both an independent and inclusive evaluation is a leading challenge in our field. In this practice note, we present one solution. We describe the design of an evaluation governance structure that was used to find balance between these two themes. We also identify key elements of this experience and present these for adaptation by others, given appropriate tailoring. We have documented our experience as we believe that governance provides currently uncharted potential for this discipline spanning challenge.Les spĂ©cialistes et les thĂ©oriciens ont documentĂ© les avantages de la participation des utilisateurs en Ă©valuation et, de la mĂȘme façon, la valeur dedonnĂ©es dâĂ©valuation neutres et impartiales. Il reste que rĂ©aliser une Ă©valuation aussi indĂ©pendante quâinclusive est encore un dĂ©fi de taille dans notre domaine. Dans la prĂ©sente note de pratique, nous prĂ©sentons une solution. Nous dĂ©crivons le design dâune structure dâĂ©valuation de la gouvernance qui a servi Ă trouver un Ă©quilibre entre les deux thĂšmes. Nous nommons aussi les Ă©lĂ©ments clĂ©s de cette expĂ©rience et expliquons comment ils peuvent ĂȘtre adaptĂ©s pour rĂ©pondre Ă des besoins particuliers. Nous avons documentĂ© notre expĂ©rience puisque nous croyons que la gouvernance est une avenue prometteuse pour relever ce dĂ©fi qui touche de nombreuses disciplines
Guidance for reconciling patent rights and disclosure of findings at scientific meetings
Open collaboration and sharing of information among scientists at scientific meetings can foster innovation and discovery. However, such sharing can be at odds with potential patenting and commercialization objectives. This tension may be mitigated if certain procedures are followed in the context of scientific meetings. The article first discusses what makes a scientific finding patentable and then sets out four specific patent issues for scientists to consider before attending a scientific meeting and sharing their research. Finally, it provides recommendations on how scientists can best protect their intellectual property rights while sharing information at scientific meetings