Skip to main content

An Experiment in Open Science – My fermentation journal

I’m a strong believer in the notion that science, especially academic science that is performed with public money, should be openly accessible to everyone.

This article was published in Scientific American’s former blog network and reflects the views of the author, not necessarily those of Scientific American


I'm a strong believer in the notion that science, especially academic science that is performed with public money, should be openly accessible to everyone. I'm sort of on the radical fringe of this belief, as I think that not only published results, but lab notebooks, and in-process stuff as well should be shared.

Alas, since science is also collaborative, I can't actually make this choice on my own. There are structural impediments to openness - namely, since publications are the only currency that matters, leaked data/ideas could be grabbed by someone else. If they publish, there's no mechanism to give me credit for what I produced. In my fantasy future, scientific publications could link to blog posts/personal web pages as citations (so my posts could have an "impact factor"), but this is not the world we live in.

When (hopefully someday) I have my own lab, I intend to engage in this radical openness anyway, but the collaborative nature of science means that I can almost never make this decision just for myself. I'll have to disclose to students, post-docs and collaborators that this is the case, and I suspect that many will be unwilling to take the risk. And I certainly can't take that stance while I'm still only a postdoc myself. If I share ideas/results from my lab, I would not just be risking my own professional advancement, but that of my PI and the rest of the lab as well.


On supporting science journalism

If you're enjoying this article, consider supporting our award-winning journalism by subscribing. By purchasing a subscription you are helping to ensure the future of impactful stories about the discoveries and ideas shaping our world today.


So, I can't tell you much about what I'm doing in lab (it involves cheese and cheese microbes!). But I can tell you about my own personal experiments with fermentation. And Ihavebeen. In the interest of experimenting with an open lab notebook, and because I can't write a post every time I start a new ferment (seriously, I've got like 5 going at this moment), I'm sharing my evernote fermentation notebook.

I'm also working on setting up a personal blog for discussing open science, my adventures in python coding (I'm doing some rudimentary bioinformatics for lab) and other stuff. Stay tuned!

Kevin Bonham is a Curriculum Fellow in the Microbiology and Immunobiology department at Harvard Medical school. He received his PhD from Harvard, where he studied how the cells of the immune system detect the presence of infectious microbes. Find him on Google+, Reddit.

More by Kevin Bonham