> It’s used since regulators and journals require it to be used.
Which answers the "what benefit does it provide to the researchers publishing the data" question. A quick search answers the funding question as well, it's funded by the NIH, not the individual labs using it.
I think this example supports my point. The NIH came up with a way to give different answers to the two questions I asked, and it gets used. I'm glad the NIH has been making this a thing, it's a great use of public funds.
I'd still caution anyone from trying a "make a data platform and researchers will use it" approach to the problem unless they can answer those questions.
Which answers the "what benefit does it provide to the researchers publishing the data" question. A quick search answers the funding question as well, it's funded by the NIH, not the individual labs using it.
I think this example supports my point. The NIH came up with a way to give different answers to the two questions I asked, and it gets used. I'm glad the NIH has been making this a thing, it's a great use of public funds.
I'd still caution anyone from trying a "make a data platform and researchers will use it" approach to the problem unless they can answer those questions.