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Collecting Experiments: Making Big Data Biology [Pehme köide]

  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 392 pages, kõrgus x laius: 229x152 mm
  • Ilmumisaeg: 17-Jun-2019
  • Kirjastus: University of Chicago Press
  • ISBN-10: 022663504X
  • ISBN-13: 9780226635040
Teised raamatud teemal:
  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 392 pages, kõrgus x laius: 229x152 mm
  • Ilmumisaeg: 17-Jun-2019
  • Kirjastus: University of Chicago Press
  • ISBN-10: 022663504X
  • ISBN-13: 9780226635040
Teised raamatud teemal:
Databases have revolutionized nearly every aspect of our lives. Information of all sorts is being collected on a massive scale, from Google to Facebook and well beyond. But as the amount of information in databases explodes, we are forced to reassess our ideas about what knowledge is, how it is produced, to whom it belongs, and who can be credited for producing it.
 
Every scientist working today draws on databases to produce scientific knowledge. Databases have become more common than microscopes, voltmeters, and test tubes, and the increasing amount of data has led to major changes in research practices and profound reflections on the proper professional roles of data producers, collectors, curators, and analysts.
 
Collecting Experiments traces the development and use of data collections, especially in the experimental life sciences, from the early twentieth century to the present. It shows that the current revolution is best understood as the coming together of two older ways of knowing—collecting and experimenting, the museum and the laboratory. Ultimately, Bruno J. Strasser argues that by serving as knowledge repositories, as well as indispensable tools for producing new knowledge, these databases function as digital museums for the twenty-first century.

Arvustused

"You might think that museums are for collecting and laboratories for experimenting. Bruno J. Strasser tracks the creation of a hybrid culture--a 'way of knowing' that was comparative and experimental at the same time. Molecular biologists used the protein sequences of very various species to crack the genetic code. From bacteria to blood and protein to DNA, this engaging book restores collecting to the experimentalist tradition and gives 'big data' biology the history it needs."--Nick Hopwood, author of Haeckel's Embryos: Images, Evolution, and Fraud "Amidst all the hype surrounding Big Data and the life sciences, Bruno J. Strasser uncovers the deep continuities of collecting and comparing that link the latest data banks to venerable natural history museums. This bold book rethinks the relationship between field, laboratory, and archive, with important implications for the ethos of open publication in science."--Lorraine Daston, Max Planck Institute for the History of Science "The long-contested line between experimental life sciences and those that collect, compare, and classify is once more unsettled. It is now accepted that comparative sciences are open to experiment and always have been. And Bruno J. Strasser now argues that the celebrated achievements of experimental biology have similarly depended on practices of collecting and curating. And not just in our own new world of digital databases, but historically: from when experimenters first thought to make collecting forever obsolete. Strasser supports his bold revision with case studies of a broad range of sciences, from taxonomy to serology, experimental and then molecular biology, and bio-informatics. In its historical depth and breadth this is a benchmark book; and for all who want to know how life sciences really work, it's a must read."--Robert E. Kohler, University of Pennsylvania "A masterful, groundbreaking work: Strasser explores collecting activities in multiple branches of biology and medicine across several centuries, covering the territory from natural historical specimens to blood and proteins, and on to DNA sequences and contemporary big-data biology. His book assesses issues of lasting salience, including control of the collections, access to specimens and data, modes of publication, and assignment of authorship and credit. Strasser contends that big-data biology is not a sharp departure from the past but a hybrid, a joining of the experimentalist-reductionist inquiries into model organisms with the practices of collectors who classified and characterized their specimens and compared them with others. Strasser's research is wide and deep, his prose lucidly informative, and his analysis subtle, discerning, and persuasive." --Daniel J. Kevles, Yale University "Collecting Experiments is an exciting and welcome addition to the historiography of the long-standing debates about the changing roles of experimentation and description in the life sciences. Rejecting the older notion of an impassable dichotomy, Bruno J. Strasser suggests that the rise of experimental approaches to biology in the nineteenth century did not eclipse the more descriptive work of natural history, but rather became a part of an overall 'way of knowing' that included both approaches. 'Big data, ' whether obtained by experimental or observational methods had to be analyzed in the same manner. Strasser has done a great service to clarify the historical relationship between these two methodologies. It is a must for all scholars in the history of biology."--Garland Allen, Washington University in Saint Louis

Acknowledgments xi
Introduction 7(22)
Biology, Computers, Data
6(2)
Biology Transformed
8(9)
Naturalists vs. Experimentalists?
17(10)
The Laboratory and Experimentalism
27(1)
The Museum and Natural History
28(5)
1 Live Museums
29(4)
Microbes at the American Museum of Natural History
33(7)
The Industrialization of Mice
40(4)
Corn in an Agricultural Station
44(5)
Sharing Flies
49(5)
Viruses, Bacteria, and the Rise of Molecular Genetics
54(4)
Putting Stock Centers on the Federal Agenda
58(5)
Biological Collections Become Mainstream
63(4)
2 Blood Banks
67(46)
Measuring Species, ca. 1900
69(5)
Alan A. Boyden's Serological Systematics
74(7)
A Museum in a Laboratory
81(8)
Between Field and Laboratory: Charles G. Sibley
89(3)
Collecting in the Field
92(13)
Hybridization, Not Invasion
105(8)
3 Data Atlases
113(42)
Understanding How Proteins Work
117(4)
Cracking the Genetic Code
121(3)
From the Field to the Laboratory
124(3)
Margaret O. Dayhoff, Computers, and Proteins
127(8)
The Atlas of Protein Sequence and Structure
135(4)
A Work of Compilation?
139(7)
The Gender of Collecting
146(1)
Research with the Atlas
147(4)
Whose Data? Whose Database?
151(4)
4 Virtual Collections
155(40)
From Physical to Virtual Models
159(4)
The Systematic Study of Protein Structures
163(6)
The Creation of the Protein Data Bank
169(5)
The Natural History of Macromolecules
174(13)
Privacy, Priority, and Property
187(2)
A New Tool for Research
189(6)
5 Public Databases
195(32)
Information Overload on the Horizon
197(5)
Margaret O. Dayhoff vs. Walter B. Goad
202(3)
Europe Takes the Lead
205(7)
Mobilizing the National Institutes of Health
212(2)
Collecting Data, Negotiating Credit and Access
214(5)
Distributing Data, Negotiating Ownership
219(5)
A Conservative Revolution
224(3)
6 Open Science
227(28)
Databases, Journals, and the Gatekeepers of Scientific Knowledge
228(9)
Databases and the Production of Experimental Knowledge
237(2)
Sequence Databases, Genomics, and Computer Networks
239(5)
The Rise of Open Science
244(8)
Databases, Journals, and the Record of Science
252(3)
Conclusion
255(18)
The End of Model Organisms?
256(7)
The New Politics of Knowledge
263(10)
Archives Consulted 273(2)
Bibliography 275(42)
Notes 317(70)
Index 387
Bruno J. Strasser is professor at the University of Geneva and adjunct professor at Yale University.