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Antarctic Data A Physical Sciences Perspective Tony Phillips

Antarctic Data A Physical Sciences Perspective Tony Phillips

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Page 1: Antarctic Data A Physical Sciences Perspective Tony Phillips

Antarctic Data A Physical Sciences Perspective

Tony Phillips

Page 2: Antarctic Data A Physical Sciences Perspective Tony Phillips

Our research

Understanding past climate change

Predicting future climate change

Page 3: Antarctic Data A Physical Sciences Perspective Tony Phillips

The data we use

Page 4: Antarctic Data A Physical Sciences Perspective Tony Phillips
Page 5: Antarctic Data A Physical Sciences Perspective Tony Phillips
Page 6: Antarctic Data A Physical Sciences Perspective Tony Phillips

Our data• We have identified the best current data sets (for us)

• We maintain our own archives of commonly-used data

• Everything is held in UK Met Office ‘PP’ format

• I maintain a web-based data catalogue

• I can provide figures, data or pointers to data

Page 7: Antarctic Data A Physical Sciences Perspective Tony Phillips

Acquiring data

• Data discovery is not generally something that I have to deal with

• I have only used the AMD on one occasion and found it hard to use

– Relative prominence of browsing and searching

– Restricting the view to data sets available online

– Getting to the data, rather than metadata

– Prominence of relevant results when browsing

– Leads to too many apparent ‘dead ends’

Page 8: Antarctic Data A Physical Sciences Perspective Tony Phillips

The wider physical science community

• What data sets do they generally use?

• Do they use the AMD and/or NADCs to get data?

• If not, where do they go?

• What is most important to them when they’re looking for data?

Page 9: Antarctic Data A Physical Sciences Perspective Tony Phillips

Use of the AMD

• About half of the respondents were aware of having used the AMD

• Those who had, generally found what they were looking for and thought of the AMD as ‘similar to’ other online databases

• Limitations of spatial searching in the AMD

• Issue over awareness of the AMD?

Page 10: Antarctic Data A Physical Sciences Perspective Tony Phillips

How do people acquire data?

• Places that researchers already use

• ‘Widely known international data centres’ for a subject area

• Asking the relevant person in the community

• Googling for the data

Page 11: Antarctic Data A Physical Sciences Perspective Tony Phillips

What is most important?

• Knowing that where they’re searching will take them to the data, not just metadata

• Knowing that the data are:

– available online

– in a useful format (ASCII, Excel, NetCDF)

– supported by relevant metadata (format, origination, quality control)

Page 12: Antarctic Data A Physical Sciences Perspective Tony Phillips

Simplifying access to data

• There are many sources of data, providing data in a variety of formats

• Data centres can add value by making sure the data are easily accessible in a uniform, standard format

• WDC in Boulder were praised for taking data in ‘almost any format’ and doing the work to make it usable

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Key points

• Raising awareness of the AMD

• Making the AMD easier to use for users with less experience

• Ensuring that the most generally-relevant results appear first

• Ensuring that the data are easily accessible

• Use of simple, standard data formats

• Understanding what users need is key