Literature DB >> 21667776

The experimenter's museum: GenBank, natural history, and the moral economies of biomedicine.

Bruno J Strasser1.   

Abstract

Today, the production of knowledge in the experimental life sciences relies crucially on the use of biological data collections, such as DNA sequence databases. These collections, in both their creation and their current use, are embedded in the experimentalist tradition. At the same time, however, they exemplify the natural historical tradition, based on collecting and comparing natural facts. This essay focuses on the issues attending the establishment in 1982 of GenBank, the largest and most frequently accessed collection of experimental knowledge in the world. The debates leading to its creation-about the collection and distribution of data, the attribution of credit and authorship, and the proprietary nature of knowledge-illuminate the different moral economies at work in the life sciences in the late twentieth century. They offer perspective on the recent rise of public access publishing and data sharing in science. More broadly, this essay challenges the big picture according to which the rise of experimentalism led to the decline of natural history in the twentieth century. It argues that both traditions have been articulated into a new way of producing knowledge that has become a key practice in science at the beginning of the twenty-first century.

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Year:  2011        PMID: 21667776     DOI: 10.1086/658657

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Isis        ISSN: 0021-1753            Impact factor:   0.688


  23 in total

1.  The Bermuda Triangle: The Pragmatics, Policies, and Principles for Data Sharing in the History of the Human Genome Project.

Authors:  Kathryn Maxson Jones; Rachel A Ankeny; Robert Cook-Deegan
Journal:  J Hist Biol       Date:  2018-12       Impact factor: 1.326

2.  Practice and place in twentieth-century field biology: a comment.

Authors:  Robert E Kohler
Journal:  J Hist Biol       Date:  2012       Impact factor: 1.326

3.  The long and winding road of molecular data in phylogenetic analysis.

Authors:  Edna Suárez-Díaz
Journal:  J Hist Biol       Date:  2014       Impact factor: 1.326

4.  Moving Past the Systematics Wars.

Authors:  Beckett Sterner; Scott Lidgard
Journal:  J Hist Biol       Date:  2018-03       Impact factor: 1.326

Review 5.  Molecular Evolution in Historical Perspective.

Authors:  Edna Suárez-Díaz
Journal:  J Mol Evol       Date:  2016-12-02       Impact factor: 2.395

6.  Towards "a natural history of data": evolving practices and epistemologies of data in paleontology, 1800-2000.

Authors:  David Sepkoski
Journal:  J Hist Biol       Date:  2013       Impact factor: 1.326

7.  Modernizing Natural History: Berkeley's Museum of Vertebrate Zoology in Transition.

Authors:  Mary E Sunderland
Journal:  J Hist Biol       Date:  2013       Impact factor: 1.326

8.  Globalizing Genomics: The Origins of the International Nucleotide Sequence Database Collaboration.

Authors:  Hallam Stevens
Journal:  J Hist Biol       Date:  2018-12       Impact factor: 1.326

Review 9.  Sharing Data to Build a Medical Information Commons: From Bermuda to the Global Alliance.

Authors:  Robert Cook-Deegan; Rachel A Ankeny; Kathryn Maxson Jones
Journal:  Annu Rev Genomics Hum Genet       Date:  2017-04-17       Impact factor: 8.929

Review 10.  Opportunities and challenges of macrogenetic studies.

Authors:  Deborah M Leigh; Charles B van Rees; Katie L Millette; Martin F Breed; Chloé Schmidt; Laura D Bertola; Brian K Hand; Margaret E Hunter; Evelyn L Jensen; Francine Kershaw; Libby Liggins; Gordon Luikart; Stéphanie Manel; Joachim Mergeay; Joshua M Miller; Gernot Segelbacher; Sean Hoban; Ivan Paz-Vinas
Journal:  Nat Rev Genet       Date:  2021-08-18       Impact factor: 53.242

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