The debate on open science and reproducible research has reached Washington, DC.
On February 22, John Holdren (Assistant to the President for Science and Technology and Director of the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy) issued a Memorandum on Increasing Access to the Results of Federally Funded Scientific Research to the heads of all federal agencies that sponsor research and development projects. The memo states
Access to digital data sets resulting from federally funded research allows companies to focus resources and efforts on understanding and exploiting discoveries. For example, open weather data underpins the forecasting industry, and making genome sequences publicly available has spawned many biotechnology innovations. In addition, wider availability of peer reviewed publications and scientific data in digital formats will create innovative economic markets for services related to curation, preservation, analysis, and visualization. Policies that mobilize these publications and data for re-use through preservation and broader public access also maximize the impact and accountability of the Federal research investment. These policies will accelerate scientific breakthroughs and innovation, promote entrepreneurship, and enhance economic growth and job creation.
The memo obliges every agency to come up with a strategy for making both scientific publications and digital scientific data resulting from Federally funded research publicly available.
..the more data are open, the faster we will validate new theories and overturn old ones, and the more efficiently we will transform new discoveries into innovations that will create jobs and make us healthier and more prosperous. The movement toward open data is not primarily about scientific integrity, its mostly about speeding up the process of scientific discovery and innovation.
Victoria Stodden, an Assistant Professor of Statistics at Columbia University and a famous advocate for reproducible research, testified:
Making research data and software conveniently available also has valuable corollary effects beyond validating the original associated published results. Other researchers can use them for new research, linking datasets and augmenting results in other areas, or applying the software and methods to new research applications. These powerful benefits will accelerate scientific discovery. Benefits can also accrue to private industry. Again, data and software availability permit business to apply these methods to their own research problems, link with their own datasets, and accelerate innovation and economic growth.
sfpow multiplies the input data by a gain function of the form
$$G(x_1,x_2,\ldots,x_n)=x_1^{p_1}\,x_2^{p_2} \cdots x_n^{p_n}$$
The powers $p_1,p_2,\ldots,p_n$ are given by pow1=, pow2=, etc. parameters.
For backward compatibility, sftpow tpow= is an alias for sfpow pow1=.
The following example from geo391/hw1/tpow shows an application of sfpow pow1=2 *to a shot gather. The gain of *pow1=2 for seismic data was advocated by Jon Claerbout.
To estimate an appropriate power gain from the data, you can try sffpow.
The official birthday of the Madagascar project is June 11, 2006, when the project was first publicly announced. However, the initial work on the project (called RSF at the time) started sometime in early 2003, 10 years ago.
The age of a car is usually measured in miles, not years. Similarly, the age of an open-source project is best measured in the number of revisions and commits to the repository. Madagascar revision number 10,000 happened yesterday! The author of the anniversary revision, Professor William Symes from Rice University will receive a commemorative Madagascar stein. According to Ohloh, the number of commits to the Madagascar repository has increased by 63% in the last 12 months, and the number of contributors during the same period has increased from 21 to 27.