PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Center for Open Science awarded grant from Robert Wood Johnson Foundation to preserve and safeguard publicly funded scientific data

2025-11-19
(Press-News.org) Media Contact: pr@cos.io

The Center for Open Science (COS) has been awarded a grant from the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation (RWJF) to develop a community-driven strategic plan for ensuring the long-term preservation, accessibility, and usability of federally-funded scientific data.

COS has long championed policies and practices that increase the openness, integrity, and trustworthiness of research. The success of the open science movement relies on the integrity, sustainability, and resilience of infrastructures that promote access to research outputs, like scientific data. In 2025, the sudden removal of public data from multiple federal agency websites underscored the urgent need for sustainable systems to safeguard and maintain public access to scientific data generated by federally funded researchers.

The RWJF-funded project, Ensuring the Preservation, Accessibility, and Usability of Public Data, will be led by COS, with co-direction from a stakeholder planning committee composed of leaders from across the research and scientific data communities.

Planning committee members are Maria Gould (DataCite), Joel Gurin (CODE), Robert Hanisch (Campostella Research and Consulting), Kristi Holmes (Northwestern University), Lynda Kellam (University of Pennsylvania, Data Rescue Project), Christine Kirkpatrick (San Diego Supercomputer Center, UC San Diego, GO FAIR US), Chris Marcum (Data Foundation), Mark Parsons (ESIP), and Katherine Skinner (IOI). Alex Wade is serving as the project’s lead consultant.

The project aims to complement and coordinate with existing community-driven initiatives—including the Internet Archive, the Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research (ICPSR), and the Data Rescue Project—by developing a framework for long-term stewardship of federally-funded data. The resulting strategic plan will guide how the research community monitors, preserves, and sustains access to at-risk datasets and repositories.

Areas for initial focus and exploration include:

Monitoring at-risk repositories: Clarifying methods for identifying repositories that may face data loss due to funding, staffing, or policy changes. Ensuring FAIRness and resilience of preserved datasets: Establishing processes and building capacity to promote the FAIRness (findability, accessibility, interoperability, and reusability) and resilience of preserved datasets and associated tools to support their continued discoverability and use in a distributed data ecosystem. Dashboard for data health: Creating a shared framework to inform decision making that data stewards and communities can use to score and monitor data health across multiple dimensions, including preservation, resilience, FAIRness, usability and utility for different audiences, and availability of interactive tools. Building governance and sustainability: Outlining models for coordinated community action, avoiding duplication of effort, defining best practices for preservation, and ensuring sustained stewardship of preserved data. Developing an outreach and advocacy framework: Raising awareness and catalyzing action among researchers, funders, policymakers, and the broader public about the importance and vulnerability of public data and associated infrastructures, including guidance on accessing preserved datasets, reporting at-risk resources, and ways to support and advocate for more sustainable and resilient infrastructures. “Together with our expert strategic planning partners, COS is committed to meeting the moment to promote the resilience of the scientific data system. We’re looking forward to continuing to build on the great progress we’ve made to promote greater openness, transparency, and integrity to ensure science continues to serve the public good,” said project co-lead Maryam Zaringhalam, PhD, COS Senior Director of Policy.

The project will run through September 2026. Insights generated during the planning process will also inform COS’s own data infrastructure work through the Open Science Framework (OSF) and related advocacy efforts that support transparency and sustainable data management.

For more information about the project or to get involved, visit the Ensuring the Preservation, Accessibility, and Usability of Public Data webpage.

###

About COS
Founded in 2013, COS is a nonprofit culture change organization with a mission to increase openness, integrity, and reproducibility of scientific research. COS pursues this mission by building communities around open science practices, supporting metascience research, and developing and maintaining free, open source software tools, including the Open Science Framework (OSF).

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia researchers identify genetic factors influencing bone density in pediatric patients

2025-11-19
Philadelphia, November 19, 2025 – Researchers at Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia (CHOP) revealed important genetic components that affect bone density in children and adolescents. This information could help identify pediatric patients who may benefit from strategies to help improve their bone health at an early age, helping them maintain healthy bones and prevent fractures in adulthood. Many children experience fractures due to accidents and recover quickly, but there are many reasons why children may have weak bones or be at risk for developing fragile bones. Chronic health conditions, dietary restrictions and steroid use all impact bone mineral metabolism. ...

Trapping particles to explain lightning

2025-11-19
Using lasers as tweezers to understand cloud electrification might sound like science fiction but at the Institute of Science and Technology Austria (ISTA) it is a reality. By trapping and charging micron-sized particles with lasers, researchers can now observe their charging and discharging dynamics over time. This method, published in Physical Review Letters, could provide key insights into what sparks lightning. Aerosols are liquid or solid particles that float in the air. They are all around us. Some are large and visible, such ...

Teens who play video games with gambling-like elements more likely to start real betting, study suggests

2025-11-19
Young people who play video games with “gambling-like” elements – such as buying loot boxes or in-game items – are more likely to go on to gamble with real money. That’s the suggestion of a new longitudinal study of gambling behaviour and attitudes in young people. A team of experts from Belgian institutions KU Leuven and the University of Ghent quizzed more than 2,000 young gamers twice, with a year gap in-between. In follow-up surveys, it was shown those who engage in games with gambling-like elements were more likely to then gamble with real money than those who did not. The research team, who publish their findings ...

Maternal health program cuts infection deaths by 32%

2025-11-19
A landmark multi-country clinical trial has shown that a structured, sustainable approach to infection prevention and treatment can save women’s lives, cutting severe maternal infections and deaths by about one-third (32%) compared to usual care. The maternal programme of prevention and treatment (APT-Sepsis) was developed by researchers at the University of Liverpool, the World Health Organization (WHO) and the UN’s Special Programme in Human Reproduction (HRP). Maternal infection and sepsis remain ...

Use of head CT scans in ERs more than doubles over 15 years

2025-11-19
EMBARGOED FOR RELEASE UNTIL 4 P.M. ET, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 2025 MINNEAPOLIS — A new study shows large increases in the use of computed tomography (CT) scans of the head in emergency departments across the United States from 2007 to 2022. The study, which was published on November 19, 2025, in Neurology®, the medical journal of the American Academy of Neurology, also found disparities in use of head CTs by race, type of insurance and hospital location.  “Head CT scans are a critical tool for diagnosing neurological emergencies, but their growing use raises concerns about cost, ...

Open spaces in cities may be hotspots for coyote-human interaction

2025-11-19
COLUMBUS, Ohio – Open semi-natural settings in urban areas – like parks and golf courses teeming with plants and small mammals – are possible hotspots for interaction between coyotes and humans, a new study suggests. Researchers analyzed times and locations in Chicago when coyotes were on the move at the same time people were working, socializing or otherwise occupied outside the home. The analysis showed that overlap of human and coyote activity would be far more probable in areas with a high proportion of open space and less likely to ...

Focused ultrasound passes first test in treatment of pediatric brain cancer

2025-11-19
NEW YORK, NY--Columbia University researchers are the first to show that focused ultrasound — a non-invasive technique that uses sound waves to enhance the delivery of drugs into the brain — can be safely used in children being treated for brain cancer.  The focused ultrasound technique, developed by Columbia engineers, was tested in combination with chemotherapy in three children with diffuse midline glioma, a rare and ...

Beef vs. plant-based meat: UT Austin study finds diet alters breast milk composition in under a week

2025-11-19
AUSTIN, Texas — Swapping beef for a plant-based meat substitute changed breast milk composition in just six days — even when the rest of the diet was made up of whole, unprocessed foods — according to a first-of-its-kind study from researchers at The University of Texas at Austin.  The findings, published in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, reveal that even small shifts in a breastfeeding family’s diet can quickly alter the types of fats their infant receives through breast milk. These changes could have implications for brain development and immune function. The study tested the effect of food processing by using meals that were nutritionally ...

Two new studies from Schneider Electric and the Boston University Institute for Global Sustainability reveal 95 barriers and 50 risks slowing decarbonization in the building sector

2025-11-19
In the race against time to meet 2050 climate targets, building decarbonization looms large—but high upfront costs and a lack of public awareness are two of the biggest barriers for many countries, slowing the adoption of energy efficiency and electrification technologies. The top risks center on performance and reliability. These findings come from two new studies by Schneider Electric and Boston University’s Institute for Global Sustainability (IGS), published in Nature Communications and Energy and Buildings, that identify 95 sociotechnical barriers ...

Women authors underrepresented among retracted medical papers

2025-11-19
Women are underrepresented among authors of retracted publications, particularly in cases involving multiple retractions, according to a new study published November 19, 2025 in the open-access journal PLOS One by Paul Sebo of the University of Geneva, Switzerland. Gender disparities in scientific authorship are well documented, yet little is known about gender representation among authors of retracted publications. However, understanding the demographics of authors of retracted publications could shed light on the social and professional dynamics that lead to retractions. In the new study, Sebo analyzed 878 retracted publications from 131 high-impact medical journals across ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Cool comfort: beating the heat with high-tech clothes

New study reveals how China can cut nitrogen pollution while safeguarding national food security

Two thirds of women experience too much or too little weight gain in pregnancy

Thousands of NHS doctors trapped in insecure “gig economy” contracts

Two thirds of women gain too much or too little weight in pregnancy: Global study

Livestock manure linked to the rapid spread of hidden antibiotic resistance threats in farmland soils

National Women’s Soccer League launches Hands-Only CPR effort, led by player Savy King

School accountability yields long-term gains for students

Half of novelists believe AI is likely to replace their work entirely, research finds

World's largest metabolomic study completed, paving way for predictive medicine

Center for Open Science awarded grant from Robert Wood Johnson Foundation to preserve and safeguard publicly funded scientific data

Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia researchers identify genetic factors influencing bone density in pediatric patients

Trapping particles to explain lightning

Teens who play video games with gambling-like elements more likely to start real betting, study suggests

Maternal health program cuts infection deaths by 32%

Use of head CT scans in ERs more than doubles over 15 years

Open spaces in cities may be hotspots for coyote-human interaction

Focused ultrasound passes first test in treatment of pediatric brain cancer

Beef vs. plant-based meat: UT Austin study finds diet alters breast milk composition in under a week

Two new studies from Schneider Electric and the Boston University Institute for Global Sustainability reveal 95 barriers and 50 risks slowing decarbonization in the building sector

Women authors underrepresented among retracted medical papers

Is it light or humidity? Scientists identify the culprits of emerald green degradation in masterpieces

Bandage-like device brings texture to touchscreens

Rocks on faults can heal following seismic movement

Researchers find microplastics in 100 per cent of donkey faecal samples tested

New clues to why some women experience recurrent miscarriage

New data on donor selection in allogeneic stem cell transplantation – young age is gaining in importance

High blood pressure in adolescence a silent risk of atherosclerosis later in life

New study reveals central America’s “five great forests” are lifelines for North America’s migratory birds

American Physical Society to launch new open access journal on AI and machine learning in scientific research

[Press-News.org] Center for Open Science awarded grant from Robert Wood Johnson Foundation to preserve and safeguard publicly funded scientific data