Challenge-Based Funding to Spark Origins Breakthroughs
Cole Mathis, Harrison B. Smith

TL;DR
This paper proposes a challenge-based funding approach with clear goals and 'Finish Lines' to advance origins of life research by fostering community consensus and measurable progress.
Contribution
It introduces a challenge-based framework with explicit goals and success criteria to unify and accelerate research in the origins of life field.
Findings
Defined specific challenges with measurable 'Finish Lines'
Proposed a community-coalescing challenge model
Aims to clarify progress markers in origins research
Abstract
Origins of life research is marred by ambiguous questions and goals, creating uncertainty about when research objectives have been achieved. Because of numerous unknowns and disagreements about definitions and theories, the field lacks clear markers of progress. We argue that the origins community should focus on goals that have agreed-upon meaning and can be consensually categorized as achieved or unachieved. The origins community needs these goals to maintain coherence amongst a federation of problems with the shared, but nebulous aspiration of understanding the origins of life. We propose a list of challenges with clear 'Finish Lines'--explicit descriptions of what will be achieved if each goal is reached--similar to the X-prize model. The intent is not to impose top-down research directions, but to compel the community to coalesce around explicit problems of the highest priority, as…
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Taxonomy
TopicsOrigins and Evolution of Life · Space Science and Extraterrestrial Life · Earth Systems and Cosmic Evolution
