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Crowd-Funded Micro-Grants for Genomics and "Big Data": An Actionable Idea Connecting Small (Artisan) Science, Infrastructure Science, and Citizen Philanthropy

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Title Crowd-Funded Micro-Grants for Genomics and "Big Data": An Actionable Idea Connecting Small (Artisan) Science, Infrastructure Science, and Citizen Philanthropy
 
Creator OZDEMIR, V
BADR, KF
DOVE, ES
ENDRENYI, L
GERACI, CJ
HOTEZ, PJ
MILIUS, D
NEVES-PEREIRA, M
PANG, T
ROTIMI, CN
SABRA, R
SARKISSIAN, CN
SRIVASTAVA, S
TIMS, H
ZGHEIB, NK
KICKBUSCH, I
 
Subject NEGLECTED TROPICAL DISEASES
AMERICAN DIPLOMACY
CIVILIAN POWER
PUBLIC-HEALTH
GLOBAL HEALTH
NEED
21ST-CENTURY
DISCOVERY
MEDICINE
SOCIETY
 
Description Biomedical science in the 21st century is embedded in, and draws from, a digital commons and "Big Data" created by high-throughput Omics technologies such as genomics. Classic Edisonian metaphors of science and scientists (i.e., "the lone genius" or other narrow definitions of expertise) are ill equipped to harness the vast promises of the 21st century digital commons. Moreover, in medicine and life sciences, experts often under-appreciate the important contributions made by citizen scholars and lead users of innovations to design innovative products and co-create new knowledge. We believe there are a large number of users waiting to be mobilized so as to engage with Big Data as citizen scientists-only if some funding were available. Yet many of these scholars may not meet the meta-criteria used to judge expertise, such as a track record in obtaining large research grants or a traditional academic curriculum vitae. This innovation research article describes a novel idea and action framework: micro-grants, each worth $1000, for genomics and Big Data. Though a relatively small amount at first glance, this far exceeds the annual income of the "bottom one billion"-the 1.4 billion people living below the extreme poverty level defined by the World Bank ($1.25/day). We describe two types of micro-grants. Type 1 micro-grants can be awarded through established funding agencies and philanthropies that create micro-granting programs to fund a broad and highly diverse array of small artisan labs and citizen scholars to connect genomics and Big Data with new models of discovery such as open user innovation. Type 2 micro-grants can be funded by existing or new science observatories and citizen think tanks through crowd-funding mechanisms described herein. Type 2 micro-grants would also facilitate global health diplomacy by co-creating crowd-funded micro-granting programs across nation-states in regions facing political and financial instability, while sharing similar disease burdens, therapeutics, and diagnostic needs. We report the creation of ten Type 2 micro-grants for citizen science and artisan labs to be administered by the nonprofit Data-Enabled Life Sciences Alliance International (DELSA Global, Seattle). Our hope is that these micro-grants will spur novel forms of disruptive innovation and genomics translation by artisan scientists and citizen scholars alike. We conclude with a neglected voice from the global health frontlines, the American University of Iraq in Sulaimani, and suggest that many similar global regions are now poised for micro-grant enabled collective innovation to harness the 21st century digital commons.
 
Publisher MARY ANN LIEBERT, INC
 
Date 2014-10-15T13:59:42Z
2014-10-15T13:59:42Z
2013
 
Type Article
 
Identifier OMICS-A JOURNAL OF INTEGRATIVE BIOLOGY, 17(4)161-172
1536-2310
1557-8100
http://dx.doi.org/10.1089/omi.2013.0034
http://dspace.library.iitb.ac.in/jspui/handle/100/15047
 
Language en