Theoretical And Technological Building Blocks For An Innovation Accelerator
Frank van Harmelen, George Kampis, Katy Borner, Peter van den, Besselaar, Erik Schultes, Carole Goble, Paul Groth, Barend Mons, and Stuart Anderson, Stefan Decker, Conor Hayes, Thierry Buecheler, and Dirk Helbing

TL;DR
This paper reviews theoretical and technological components for creating an innovative platform to reform the scientific system, aiming to enhance collaboration, transparency, and efficiency in research and innovation.
Contribution
It proposes a comprehensive framework for an innovation accelerator platform based on reimagining the scientific process and integrating new technological and organizational building blocks.
Findings
Redesigning incentives can reduce conservatism and hype.
Breaking up monolithic publications enables better data and resource sharing.
Semantic technologies can integrate computer collaboration in science.
Abstract
The scientific system that we use today was devised centuries ago and is inadequate for our current ICT-based society: the peer review system encourages conservatism, journal publications are monolithic and slow, data is often not available to other scientists, and the independent validation of results is limited. Building on the Innovation Accelerator paper by Helbing and Balietti (2011) this paper takes the initial global vision and reviews the theoretical and technological building blocks that can be used for implementing an innovation (in first place: science) accelerator platform driven by re-imagining the science system. The envisioned platform would rest on four pillars: (i) Redesign the incentive scheme to reduce behavior such as conservatism, herding and hyping; (ii) Advance scientific publications by breaking up the monolithic paper unit and introducing other building blocks…
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