Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Jean Claude Bradley

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Doctoral advisor
  
Tony Durst

Died
  
May 2014

Known for
  
Open Notebook Science

Fields
  
Chemistry

Name
  
Jean-Claude Bradley

Books
  
Beautiful Data

Role
  
Chemist


Jean-Claude Bradley wwwchemconnectorcomwpcontentuploads201405j

Institutions
  
Drexel University Duke University

Thesis
  
The synthesis and reactivity of 2-benzylidenebenzocyclobutenones and derivatives (1993)

Doctoral students
  
Patrick Ndungu Khalid Mirza

Notable awards
  
Blue Obelisk award Silver Academic Medal of the Governor-General of Canada, 1989 CIC Silver Medal in Chemistry, 1988

Alma mater
  
Laurentian University, University of Ottawa

Institution
  
Drexel University, Duke University

Similar
  
Cameron Neylon, Peter Norvig, Alon Halevy, Raghu Ramakrishnan

Jean-Claude Bradley was a chemist who actively promoted Open Science in chemistry, including at the White House, for which he was awarded the Blue Obelisk award in 2007. He coined the term "Open Notebook science". He died in May 2014. A memorial symposium was held July 14, 2014 at Cambridge University, UK.

One outcome of his Open Notebook work is the collection of physicochemical properties of organic compounds he was studying. All of this data he made available as Open data under the CCZero license. For example, in 2009 Bradley et al. published their work on making solubility data of organic compounds available as Open data. Later, the melting point data set he collaborated on with Andrew Lang and Antony Williams was published with Figshare. Both data sets were also made available as books via the Lulu.com self-publishing platform.

Jean-Claude Bradley httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

He blogged extensively and contributed to at least 25 individual blogs. In an interview in 2008 with Bora Zivkovic titled "Doing Science Publicly", he spoke of his work and online presence. In 2010, he gave an extensive interview about the impact of Open Notebook science with Richard Poynder.

References

Jean-Claude Bradley Wikipedia