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  2. Science project - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Science_project

    A science project is an educational activity for students involving experiments or construction of models in one of the science disciplines. Students may present their science project at a science fair, so they may also call it a science fair project. Science projects may be classified into four main types. Science projects are done by students ...

  3. Translational research - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Translational_research

    Translational research (also called translation research, translational science, or, when the context is clear, simply translation) [1] [2] is research aimed at translating (converting) results in basic research into results that directly benefit humans. The term is used in science and technology, especially in biology and medical science.

  4. Open Science Infrastructure - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Open_Science_Infrastructure

    Open Science Infrastructure (or open scholarly infrastructure) is an information infrastructure that supports the open sharing of scientific productions such as publications, datasets, metadata or code. In November 2021 the Unesco recommendation on Open Science describe it as "shared research infrastructures that are needed to support open ...

  5. Citizen science - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Citizen_science

    Citizen science. Citizen science (similar to community science, crowd science, crowd-sourced science, civic science, participatory monitoring, or volunteer monitoring) is research conducted with participation from the general public, or amateur /nonprofessional researchers or participants for science, social science and many other disciplines.

  6. Big science - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Big_science

    Big science is a term used by scientists and historians of science to describe a series of changes in science which occurred in industrial nations during and after World War II, as scientific progress increasingly came to rely on large-scale projects usually funded by national governments or groups of governments. [1]

  7. Open research - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Open_research

    Open research is research that is openly accessible by others. Those who publish research in this way are often concerned with making research more transparent, more collaborative, more wide-reaching, and more efficient. Open research aims to make both research methods and the resulting data freely available, often via the internet, in order to ...

  8. Public science - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Public_science

    By definition, such public science projects are outside the walls of the science centre or science museum, where the main focus of the particular space is not typically science outreach. [9] An example of a specific public science initiative in astronomy is From Earth to the Universe (FETTU), [10] a project of the International Year of ...

  9. Science - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Science

    Science is a rigorous, systematic endeavor that builds and organizes knowledge in the form of testable explanations and predictions about the world. Modern science is typically divided into three major branches: the natural sciences (e.g., physics, chemistry, and biology), which study the physical world; the social sciences (e.g., economics, psychology, and sociology), which study individuals ...