The Lens, platform for innovation cartography, now available through Research4Life

Published: Wednesday 30th September 2020
Category: News

We have some great news for innovation professionals and researchers, as The Lens is now available as a resource through all Research4Life programs. What started out as a patent database is now a rich resource of linked information on scholarly communications and innovation. We talked to Osmat Jefferson, Director of Product Development, and Mark Garlinghouse, Director of Business Development at The Lens to find out more!

What is The Lens?

Mark Garlinghouse
Osmat Jefferson

Jefferson: “The Lens is an independent public resource built on a corpus of global patent records and metadata of scholarly publications, which are connected through their citations. The combined scholarly data and patents give researchers and innovators unique opportunities for discovery and analytics.”

“Knowledge around information is strongly siloed. Our mission is to reduce friction in innovation for all participants. To do this, we build tools that bridge scholarly and patent information silos needed for innovation and make information accessible and usable as a public good.”

Why is a platform like The Lens necessary?

Garlinghouse: “As a global society, we are facing unprecedented crises ranging from climate change, COVID-19, food supply and so forth. We can only solve these through collective innovation. The Lens is important because it makes its toolkits universally accessible, empowering a new and an alternative generation of problem-solvers.”

When you access The Lens for the first time, the platform guides you through all its functionalities.

“The Lens is a 20-year-old project of the non-profit organization Cambia. It is Cambia’s mission to create equitable and inclusive capabilities to solve problems using science and technology. Guided by the FA.I.R. data principles, The Lens seeks to render the innovation data Findable, Accessible, Interoperable Reusable. But, to truly show an impact on society, Cambia believes that we also need an “E” at the end to represent “Enabling” because solving problems informed by science and technology requires an understanding of the context, permissions, and capabilities under which FAIR data is applied. Hence, the use of  F.A.I.R.E, meaning in French “to make or to do”, would seem more appropriate to reflect the requirements needed to move open and reusable information into actionable knowledge with potential impact.”

Who can use your platform?

Jefferson: “Anyone can use the Lens.org. We have users from more than 180 countries around the world. The user-friendly interface was designed for people who need to make informed decisions based on open, transparent, and verifiable metrics, or who need help from literature to create alternative solutions for problems.”

“The ability to discover, analyze, and navigate scholarly literature, patent information and their linked metadata, including the patent sequence information (PatSeq) can help research offices, policymakers, universities, and even individual researchers conduct better research, seek more productive partnerships and enable evidence-based decision-making.”

Garlinghouse: “The Lens’ management tools allow users to build collections, analyze results with Lens Dashboards and share data privately or publicly. We are also excited about the upcoming release of Lens Reports, which will enable users to manage and combine all these tools to create knowledge maps for their most relevant subjects.”

Why did you join Research4Life?

Jefferson: “Our mission is strongly aligned to that of Research4Life. Like Research4Life, The Lens is committed to “closing the knowledge gap”. We are also impressed with the organization’s broad community reach. The Lens is committed to making information accessible as a public good and inclusive access is a critical part of this.”

Do you offer any training materials to users?

Garlinghouse: “When you log on to Lens.org for the first time, you can participate in an automated tour that introduces key features. We also have some training materials in the Lens support center and offer support via email. Additionally, we regularly share stories of how researchers are using The Lens around the world. The Lens’ landing page has news on the latest updates to the platform.”

“As we continue to develop new functionalities, we seek community support to create and share new training materials. We welcome input from the Research4Life community.”

Jefferson: “We are grateful for the work that Research4Life has done and we are excited to be a partner!”


Research4Life users can access The Lens through all Research4Life program portals. In the portal, click ‘Databases for discovery’ and then select your The Lens product of choice.

The Lens services on the Research4Life platform are segmented into three products:

  • Scholarly Works: Discovery and analytics tools access a corpus of scholarly literature metadata with citation indexing. 
  • Patents: Discovery and analytics tools on a comprehensive collection of patent literature with citation indexing. 
  • PatSeq: Search and analyze biological sequences disclosed in patent literature.

Hinari