| Literature DB >> 22434828 |
Sarah Burge1, Teresa K Attwood, Alex Bateman, Tanya Z Berardini, Michael Cherry, Claire O'Donovan, Loannis Xenarios, Pascale Gaudet.
Abstract
Curated databases are an integral part of the tool set that researchers use on a daily basis for their work. For most users, however, how databases are maintained, and by whom, is rather obscure. The International Society for Biocuration (ISB) represents biocurators, software engineers, developers and researchers with an interest in biocuration. Its goals include fostering communication between biocurators, promoting and describing their work, and highlighting the added value of biocuration to the world. The ISB recently conducted a survey of biocurators to better understand their educational and scientific backgrounds, their motivations for choosing a curatorial job and their career goals. The results are reported here. From the responses received, it is evident that biocuration is performed by highly trained scientists and perceived to be a stimulating career, offering both intellectual challenges and the satisfaction of performing work essential to the modern scientific community. It is also apparent that the ISB has at least a dual role to play to facilitate biocurators' work: (i) to promote biocuration as a career within the greater scientific community; (ii) to aid the development of resources for biomedical research through promotion of nomenclature and data-sharing standards that will allow interconnection of biological databases and better exploit the pivotal contributions that biocurators are making. DATABASE URL: http://biocurator.org.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22434828 PMCID: PMC3308150 DOI: 10.1093/database/bar059
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Database (Oxford) ISSN: 1758-0463 Impact factor: 3.451
Figure 1.The age and sex distribution of survey respondents.
Figure 2.The types of data annotated by biocurators.
Main motivations for selecting biocuration as a career
| Motivations | % |
|---|---|
| Wanted to move away from experimental research | 48 |
| Intellectual challenge | 43 |
| Biocuration is essential for modern science | 41 |
| I needed a job | 40 |
| Natural transition from previous work | 37 |
| The diversity of the work was appealing | 33 |
| Previous biocuration experience | 11 |
| Knew other biocurators | 9 |
| Financial reward | 6 |
Rewarding aspects of biocuration work
| Job aspect | Average rating | Number of ‘Enjoyable or very enjoyable’ ratings |
|---|---|---|
| Intellectual challenges and problem solving | 4.39 | 187 |
| Working with a wide range of scientific data | 4.32 | 183 |
| Working extensively with scientific data | 4.21 | 181 |
| A quantifiable sense of progress | 3.87 | 144 |
| Interaction with end users and data submitters | 3.72 | 130 |
| Scientific work that's not results-driven | 3.33 | 94 |
| Repetitive nature of day-to-day work | 2.45 | 24 |
Important aspects for job satisfaction, and how those aspects are met according to biocurators surveyed
| Job aspect | Importance | Job meets expectation | Average difference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Feeling intellectually challenged | 4.42 | 3.88 | −0.45 |
| Having an input into the overall direction of your resource | 4.27 | 3.84 | −0.36 |
| Keeping abreast of current developments in your scientific area | 4.14 | 3.81 | −0.27 |
| Autonomy over work | 4.06 | 3.58 | −0.39 |
| Feeling part of a community of scientists | 4.06 | 3.45 | −0.48 |
| Recognition from other scientists | 3.86 | 3.30 | −0.46 |
| Feeling part of a community of biocurators | 3.74 | 3.24 | −0.39 |
| Freedom to choose curation projects | 3.73 | 3.05 | −0.54 |
| Freedom to conduct research outside of your core curation responsibilities - both curation-based research and other research | 3.36 | 2.51 | −0.70 |
The numbers presented represent the average score for each aspect, with 1 being the lowest and 5 the highest.