Upload
dwayne-snow
View
218
Download
4
Embed Size (px)
Citation preview
NEERI
Panel
Collaboration for Data & Tools• Access to data and tools is the quintessence of most digital research
infrastructures or e-infrastructures in the (social) sciences, humanities and cultural heritage. It is therefore essential that the collaboration among research infrastructures across disciplines be enhanced.
• Yes, different approaches for data-ID‘s will be harmful for cross-disciplinary differentiation (an enhanced publication using different ID-schemes) + how many local environments Atlas-TI and DDI3 can you have?
• No, it introduces organisational overheads that will impede the evolution of subject-focused system
• Disciplines have to participate in defining high-level standards (IDs, Descriptive Metadata, AA) but will develop and operate the specifics themselves
Grid and cloud computing• Grid and cloud computing (both for data storage and for high
performance computing) are important for (future) research in the digital humanities and e-social sciences. As yet, only few researchers in the social sciences and humanities (SSH) are aware of the potential of the grid. It is a challenge for research infrastructures in the SSH to bridge the gap between the grid and the SSH research communities.
• Yes, web-based services (e.g. terminology) need to adhere to grid/cloud principles in order to be widely usable + e.g. text-mining or automatic-categorizers will directly need it
• No, lightweight protocols and local services will suffice• Grid/Clouds are needed as a capacity and a concept for distributed
deployment but may not meet any small and lightweight requirement
Access for Research Purposes
• Providing access to digital cultural heritage for research purposes is conceptually more demanding than providing acces to content for the general public.
• Yes, OpenAIRE would need to introduce very many specific standards (e.g. a DDI3-search)
• No, each research community already itself organizes „deeper“ services anyway
• A thin common cross-disciplinary layer is what is needed that is the starting point for researchers
Interoperability and Quality
• Data integration and interoperability of distributed resources, adherence to (metadata) standards, and data quality are paramount for the successful provision of data.
• Yes, provider-sided standards will prevent explosion of service-sided costs
• No, because it‘s not about standards – it‘s about compliance and homogenization will be done by the machines in the future
• Syntax standards are needed, semantics remain to be seen.
Single Point of Access
• Providing integrated single point access to data produced by scientific research, official statistics, and government administration is a sign of maturity of a research infrastructure
• Yes, it provides an authoritative starting point and allows for sustainable funding
• No, it will always fail to represent the underlying dynamics of research
• A thin, authoritative layer has to be sustainably provided and taking into acount a constant struggle between permanence and dynamics