“The first challenge that OSDD’s cyber-community assigned itself was to glean more information from the M. tuberculosis genome. It was sequenced in 1998, but researchers had clues to the functions of only a quarter of its 4000 genes. In December 2009, OSDD set out to reannotate all possible genes. Some 500 volunteers got the job done in a mere 4 months. Now OSDD is trying to exploit these data. “The more people you put to work on the problem, the more chances you will have to identify the set of compounds that will likely make it through compound optimization, animal models, preclinical, and, eventually, clinical trials. If you increase your success chances, then your overall costs decrease,” says Marc Marti-Renom of the National Center for Genomic Analysis in Barcelona, Spain.”
FoldIt, GalaxyZoo, now this. Is the next phase of computing networked human computing?