Hi, I am novice to RNA-Seq and currently doing some RNA-Seq Analysis in publicly available reads. I was wondering whether is it possible to publish a work using those publicly available reads.
Hi, I am novice to RNA-Seq and currently doing some RNA-Seq Analysis in publicly available reads. I was wondering whether is it possible to publish a work using those publicly available reads.
Publicly available data sometime still carries restrictions. These may be presented in a "click through" agreement that you agree to (don't we all) as you breeze by. This is important for data that may be still unpublished/under analysis. A common restrictions is that you can't use that data for an independent publication (especially if it is still unpublished).
In short, you would want to do due diligence, before assuming an accessible dataset is public and running with it.
Interesting point. Say you download all assemblies from Trace in search for a single gene, or download raw data from SRA and make my own assembly?
There are also several documents on open data policies:
e.g. the Fort Lauderdale meeting discussing community resource projects, the resulting NHGRI policy statement, and the Toronto statement.
If in doubt, contact the owners of the data.
I guess it is. Of course explain in your methods of your paper how you got your data and what you did with it.
yea that last part is quite important. Though I think it would be hard to lie hands just like that on a licensed data set, but nevertheless, make sure, you fullfill the agreement (it often is, that fully public data set is released just like that, and for the sake of scientific publication you can use it as it is, but very often those datasets have some parts not released fully publicly, and you have to get the permission to obtain and use them, as they are intended to be)
Use of this site constitutes acceptance of our User Agreement and Privacy Policy.
if it's public then it's public, you add citation to give credit when it's due and that's it. Whole metanalysis approaches make a living from this or benchmarking papers
This post can use a different title.
Perhaps "Fair-use of publicly available reads" or "Re- or Meta-analysis of publicly available reads" would be more suitable?