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From Now On You'll Be Able To Access NASA Research For Free (vice.com)

An anonymous reader writes:Fancy some super nerdy bedtime reading? NASA has announced that it will now provide public access to all journal articles on research funded by the agency. Any scientists publishing NASA-funded work will be required to upload their papers to a free, online database called PubSpace within a year of publication. PubSpace is managed by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) PubMed Central, which archives biomedical research. You can see NASA-funded studies here, with recent examples including a paper on cardiovascular disease in Apollo astronauts and one on Martian tsunamis caused by meteor impacts. NASA explains that the new web portal is a response to a 2013 government request for federally-funded research to be more accessible. There are a few obvious exceptions to what's included, such as and material that's related to national security or affected by export controls. NASA's openness follows a trend to make science results more accessible outside of published, often paywalled journals.

2 of 64 comments (clear)

  1. Similar to PubMed by WillAffleckUW · · Score: 4, Informative

    PubMed is the open access research paper depository for all federally funded medical research. It's open and free too.

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    1. Re:Similar to PubMed by WillAffleckUW · · Score: 3, Informative

      No, it's PubSpace.

      Just because the depository behind it is hosted on the same server doesn't mean it's not different.

      One of our servers in our department hosts something like 14 databases, each of which has a few hundred tables of data. Permissions and access vary between all of them.

      If you go in through the PubSpace portal, you see space-related research, but you probably won't see the other stuff. I frequently get notified of scientific articles on different accumulator lists, such as genetics, biofuel, and environmental sciences filters. They all point to the same journal article, but the reference that pointed to them is a different framework.

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