33 research outputs found

    Pathways Across the Valley of Death: Novel Intellectual Property Strategies for Accelerated Drug Discovery

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    Drug discovery is stagnating. Government agencies, industry analysts, and industry scientists have all noted that, despite significant increases in pharmaceutical R&D funding, the production of fundamentally new drugs - particularly drugs that work on new biological pathways and proteins - remains disappointingly low. To some extent, pharmaceutical firms are already embracing the prescription of new, more collaborative R&D organizational models suggested by industry analysts. In this Article, we build on collaborative strategies that firms are already employing by proposing a novel public-private collaboration that would help move upstream academic research across the valley of death that separates upstream research from downstream drug candidates. By exchanging trade secrecy for contract-based collaboration, our proposal would both protect intellectual property rights and enable many more researchers to search for potential drug candidates

    A Contractually Reconstructed Research Commons for Scientific Data in a Highly Protectionist Intellectual Property Environment

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    This study is part of a larger project in which the Tsumeb municipality, Falun municipality and Falu Energi & Vatten AB work together to change the currently used controlled waste dumping site in Tsumeb into a sanitary landfill. This study aims to recommend a MSWM solution that will divert the organic waste from going to the landfill. The study consist out of a literature study in order to establish a theoretical background for the MSWM solution; a field study in which the current waste flows of Tsumeb were quantified, by using current data, and characterized, by performing a hand-picking analyses according to the UNEP methodology; and an analyses section in which an appropriate MWSM solution was proposed. The current waste consist out of 70% sand and stones, 17% grass and leaves, 6% prunings and trimmings, 4% sewage sludge, 3% branches and stumps, and 1% of other waste. This paper concludes that 99% of the organic waste in Tsumeb can be recycled, by using it as covering material, as biofuel and turning it into compost. This paper also shows that there is a potential for Tsumeb to start economically sound composting facility.

    Database Protection at the Crossroads: Recent Development and Their Impact on Science and Technology

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    This article explores the potentially adverse impact that the emerging legal infrastructure could have on scientific, technical, and educational users of factual data and information-as well as on other sectors of the information economy-unless suitable adjustments are made. It begins by explaining how efforts to accommodate the networked environment to the publishers\u27 fears of market failure will impose a daunting array of legal and contractual restraints on the ability of scientists and engineers to access factual data and information in the near future. It then goes on to examine the most recent efforts to devise a sui generis intellectual property right in noncopyrightable collections of data that would suitably balance public and private interests. It also emphasizes the need to reconcile legal protection of databases with fundamental constitutional mandates concerning free speech and the progress of science. The article concludes with a warning that overly protective initiatives could compromise the research-based institutions that currently ensure the technological predominance of U.S. industry in the global marketplac

    Pathways Across the Valley of Death: Novel Intellectual Property Strategies for Accelerated Drug Discovery

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    Most therapeutic interventions produced by pharmaceutical firms take the form of small molecule drugs, which are mass produced at low marginal cost and ingested orally. Drug therapies typically work by affecting the activity of human proteins, known in the industry as targets, that have been implicated in disease pathways. Thus far, medical science has identified safe and effective therapies for only a few hundred of the estimated 3000 protein targets in the human genome that are potentially susceptible to a drug. Moreover, pharmaceutical firms have encountered major obstacles in producing fundamentally new small molecule drugs, especially those that work against new targets. According to one report, an average of only three drugs that act on novel targets have reached the market annually in recent years. This highly visible problem has attracted commentary in scholarly articles, government white papers, and the popular press. Government agencies, such as the National Institutes of Health, and industry insiders, have also recognized that one of the most serious pitfalls involves the difficulty of moving across the so-called valley of death that separates upstream research on promising genes, proteins, and biological pathways from downstream drug candidates. For example, an upstream finding that a given protein is differentially expressed in individuals with a particular disease may suggest that the protein merits further investigation. However, much more work (especially medicinal chemistry) is necessary to determine how good a target the protein really is and whether a marketable drug candidate that affects the activity of the protein is likely to be developed

    Toward Implementation of the Global Earth Observation System of Systems Data Sharing Principles

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    This White Paper reviews the background issues for implementing the GEOSS Data Sharing Principles and recommends Implementation Guidelines to ensure the strongest possible framework for data sharing, consistent with both the spirit and the “letter” of the Principles. As recognized by the 10-Year Implementation Plan, “ensuring that such information is available to those who need it is a function of governments and institutions at all levels.” It is therefore incumbent on governments and institutions participating in GEOSS to continue to develop and implement appropriate policies and procedures that enable and support the GEOSS Data Sharing Principles in fair and effective ways. The implementation approaches discussed here are intended to facilitate this process

    Research e-infrastructures for open science: The national example of CSTCloud in China

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    ABSTRACTThis paper focuses on research e-infrastructures in the open science era. We analyze some of the challenges and opportunities of cloud-based science and introduce an example of a national solution in the China Science and Technology Cloud (CSTCloud). We selected three CSTCloud use cases in deploying open science modules, including scalable engineering in astronomical data management, integrated Earth-science resources for SDG-13 decision making, and the coupling of citizen science and artificial intelligence (AI) techniques in biodiversity. We conclude with a forecast on the future development of research e-infrastructures and introduce the idea of the Global Open Science Cloud (GOSC). We hope this analysis can provide some insights into the future development of research e-infrastructures in support of open science

    Datos abiertos en un mundo de grandes datos. Un acuerdo internacional ICSU-IAP-ISSC-TWAS

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    The four organizations representing international science (International Council for Science - ICSU, The InterAcademy Partnership – IAP, The World Academy of Sciences – TWAS y el International Social Science Council – ISSC) present this Agreement proposing fundamental principles that must be adopted by scientists, research institutions, academic publishers, research funding agencies, science associations and digital repositories, to respond to the opportunities and challenges of the data revolution as today´s predominant issue for global science policy. This Accord adds the distinctive voice of the scientific community to those of governments and inter-governmental bodies that have made the case for open data as a fundamental pre-requisite in maintaining the rigour of scientific inquiry and maximising public benefit from the data revolution in both developed and developing countries

    Datos abiertos en un mundo de grandes datos. Un acuerdo internacional ICSU-IAP-ISSC-TWAS

    Get PDF
    The four organizations representing international science (International Council for Science - ICSU, The InterAcademy Partnership – IAP, The World Academy of Sciences – TWAS y el International Social Science Council – ISSC) present this Agreement proposing fundamental principles that must be adopted by scientists, research institutions, academic publishers, research funding agencies, science associations and digital repositories, to respond to the opportunities and challenges of the data revolution as today´s predominant issue for global science policy. This Accord adds the distinctive voice of the scientific community to those of governments and inter-governmental bodies that have made the case for open data as a fundamental pre-requisite in maintaining the rigour of scientific inquiry and maximising public benefit from the data revolution in both developed and developing countries

    The Global Open Science Cloud: Vision and Initial Successes

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    The Global Open Science Cloud has the potential to advance the way scientific data and resources are shared and accessed, and how global collaboration happens. However, addressing the challenges associated with its creation and ensuring inclusivity, interoperability, data privacy, and sustainability are crucial for its success. The collaborative efforts of stakeholders from different disciplines, regions, and sectors will be essential in realising the vision of a truly global and open science platform. The achievements of GOSC so far, including successful collaborations, funded projects, and the development of a common reference framework, demonstrate its potential and progress towards its goals
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