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SCAR Scientists Data Management Needs

SCAR Data Management SSG Plenary 30 th July 2010 Kim Finney (Manager, Australian Antarctic Data Centre & Chief Officer, SCAR Standing Committee on Antarctic Data Management). SCAR Scientists Data Management Needs. As a data provider: Data submission - simple , least amount of work,

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SCAR Scientists Data Management Needs

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  1. SCAR Data ManagementSSG Plenary30th July 2010Kim Finney (Manager, Australian Antarctic Data Centre & Chief Officer, SCAR Standing Committee on Antarctic Data Management)

  2. SCAR ScientistsData Management Needs • As a data provider: • Data submission - simple, least amount of work, • Acknowledgement of their role in capturing the data/product, • preservation for long-term re-use, • globally discoverable and accessible. • As a data user: • access to data in a wide variety of formats, • harness Google or Google-like facilities to search distributed repositories, • unfettered access to “qualified” data, and • integrate similar data sourced from distributed stores.

  3. The SCAR Community Data Infrastructure Human Readable Metadata registering metadata Antarctic Master Directory (NASA) A user can search a metadata catalogue. Data might be linked ?? National Data Centres

  4. Building A Better SCAR Data Infrastructure Service Registry Scientists are able to use a data discovery portal from one country, that can also access data from another country’s data store. Antarctic Master Directory (with a registry interface) (NASA) Portals Standard Interfaces Standard machine to machine interfaces Data Portal Protocols Harvests from data store data store

  5. Building A Better SCAR Data Infrastructure What if I don’t have anywhere to put my data but I’m happy to share it ? Tom Polar data Publish to Metadata Catalogue & Registry Search Submit data Register in Discover/retrieve Internet Cloud Jerry data bucket I wonder what data is out there for the polar regions ?

  6. Building A Better SCAR Data Infrastructure • What is in place ? • A few National Data Centres with “capability” to deliver data via Portals (e.g. UK, Belgium, Australia), • GCMD trialling registry interface with GEOSS community, • Prototype of the Cloud-based repository service. • What must we do ? • Join with other communities (e.g. Arctic, ICSU World Data Centres, International Oceanographic Data Exchange, WMO) to build a “Polar” information network.

  7. DIMS Implementation Plan • Consist of 3 projects with sub-tasks. • Crafted so that ALL countries can play a role. • Two key projects: • Interoperable data repository network • Collaborating to build our SCAR repository network in harmony with a Polar Data Network (the Polar Information Commons). • SCADM CO was purposefully part of the PIC Steering Committee

  8. www.polarcommons.orgLaunched in June IPY Conference Oslo

  9. PIC Components • Digitally “badge” data as belonging to the PIC, • Assume that data providers and users adhere to community norms (for sharing and accessing data), • An (internet) cloud based repository service to manage data without an immediately obvious home. • A network of Data Centres, or Institutions willing to act as long-term hosts and publication points for polar data.

  10. Badging Data • Three functions of badge: • Labels data with conditions of use • Labels data as being part of commons • Links to norms (expected behaviours for data usage)

  11. Norms • For both data providers and users, • Articulate sensible terms of use: • cite the source • contribute data back • notify source if you find errors • data is public

  12. Cloud Services

  13. PIC Cloud

  14. Repository Network ? • In discussions with the World Data Centre System, • BUT this is where SCAR members need to stand up and be counted ! • Some interest (but very little from SCADM members) • Can’t get GCMD to discuss the registry interface • Need to organise around delivery into science (have a focus for activity): • SOOS or ANTABIF ?

  15. Conclusion • Lots of “proven” technologies out there now to leverage. • Science needs seem pretty clear. • Have some good science drivers to focus activity. • Many architecture components already exist. • Lack of willingness to contribute effort and resources is limiting ability to move forward.

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