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Open Data in science - technical and cultural aspects

<!--HTML--><b>Note: Peter's slides are web-page-based and can be downloaded and then viewed from the file communal.oai4/index.html. It requires an SVG-enabled HTML viewer.</b> Research in STM fields routinely generates and requires large amounts of data in electronic form. Th...

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Autor principal: Murray-Rust, Peter
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: 2005
Materias:
Acceso en línea:http://cds.cern.ch/record/1552885
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author Murray-Rust, Peter
author_facet Murray-Rust, Peter
author_sort Murray-Rust, Peter
collection CERN
description <!--HTML--><b>Note: Peter's slides are web-page-based and can be downloaded and then viewed from the file communal.oai4/index.html. It requires an SVG-enabled HTML viewer.</b> Research in STM fields routinely generates and requires large amounts of data in electronic form. The growth of scientific research using infrastructures such as the Grid, UK's eScience programme and cyber infrastructure requires the re-use, repurposing and redissemination of this information. Fields like bioinformatics, astronomy, physics, and earth/environmental sciences routinely use such data as primary research input. Much of this is now carried out by machines which harvest data from multiple sources in dynamic and iterative ways, validate, filter compute and republish it. The current publication process and legal infrastructure is now a serious hindrance to this. Most STM data are never published and the re-usability of those that are is often unclear as authors and publishers give no explicit permission. However almost all authors intend that published data (non-copyrightable “facts”) are for the re-use of and redissemination to the STM community and the world in general. Many publishers agree with this, but most do not actively support the effective publication of data, through disinterest or the lack of a viable business proves. Some, however, appear to assert ownership and control over factual data, debarring robots and charging for access. The new technology offers enormous scope for different models for the publication and use of Open STM data and some will be demonstrated. To develop the necessary culture for this, SPARC has generously agreed to provide a discussion list (SPARC-OpenData) on which PM-R will be the first moderator. PM-R home page: <a href="http://wwmm.ch.cam.ac.uk">http://wwmm.ch.cam.ac.uk</a>
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spelling cern-15528852022-11-02T22:23:17Zhttp://cds.cern.ch/record/1552885engMurray-Rust, PeterOpen Data in science - technical and cultural aspectsCERN workshop on Innovations in Scholarly Communication (OAI4)Conferences<!--HTML--><b>Note: Peter's slides are web-page-based and can be downloaded and then viewed from the file communal.oai4/index.html. It requires an SVG-enabled HTML viewer.</b> Research in STM fields routinely generates and requires large amounts of data in electronic form. The growth of scientific research using infrastructures such as the Grid, UK's eScience programme and cyber infrastructure requires the re-use, repurposing and redissemination of this information. Fields like bioinformatics, astronomy, physics, and earth/environmental sciences routinely use such data as primary research input. Much of this is now carried out by machines which harvest data from multiple sources in dynamic and iterative ways, validate, filter compute and republish it. The current publication process and legal infrastructure is now a serious hindrance to this. Most STM data are never published and the re-usability of those that are is often unclear as authors and publishers give no explicit permission. However almost all authors intend that published data (non-copyrightable “facts”) are for the re-use of and redissemination to the STM community and the world in general. Many publishers agree with this, but most do not actively support the effective publication of data, through disinterest or the lack of a viable business proves. Some, however, appear to assert ownership and control over factual data, debarring robots and charging for access. The new technology offers enormous scope for different models for the publication and use of Open STM data and some will be demonstrated. To develop the necessary culture for this, SPARC has generously agreed to provide a discussion list (SPARC-OpenData) on which PM-R will be the first moderator. PM-R home page: <a href="http://wwmm.ch.cam.ac.uk">http://wwmm.ch.cam.ac.uk</a>oai:cds.cern.ch:15528852005
spellingShingle Conferences
Murray-Rust, Peter
Open Data in science - technical and cultural aspects
title Open Data in science - technical and cultural aspects
title_full Open Data in science - technical and cultural aspects
title_fullStr Open Data in science - technical and cultural aspects
title_full_unstemmed Open Data in science - technical and cultural aspects
title_short Open Data in science - technical and cultural aspects
title_sort open data in science - technical and cultural aspects
topic Conferences
url http://cds.cern.ch/record/1552885
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