Recommendations for interoperability among infrastructures

The BiCIKL project is born from a vision that biodiversity data are most useful if they are presented as a network of data that can be integrated and viewed from different starting points. BiCIKL’s goal is to realise that vision by linking biodiversity data infrastructures, particularly for literatu...

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Veröffentlicht in:Research Ideas and Outcomes 2022-10, Vol.8, p.59-18
Hauptverfasser: Meeus, Sofie, Addink, Wouter, Agosti, Donat, Arvanitidis, Christos, Balech, Bachir, Dillen, Mathias, Dimitrova, Mariya, González-Aranda, Juan Miguel, Holetschek, Jörg, Islam, Sharif, Jeppesen, Thomas, Mietchen, Daniel, Nicolson, Nicky, Penev, Lyubomir, Robertson, Tim, Ruch, Patrick, Trekels, Maarten, Groom, Quentin
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The BiCIKL project is born from a vision that biodiversity data are most useful if they are presented as a network of data that can be integrated and viewed from different starting points. BiCIKL’s goal is to realise that vision by linking biodiversity data infrastructures, particularly for literature, molecular sequences, specimens, nomenclature and analytics. To make those links we need to better understand the existing infrastructures, their limitations, the nature of the data they hold, the services they provide and particularly how they can interoperate. In light of those aims, in the autumn of 2021, 74 people from the biodiversity data community engaged in a total of twelve hackathon topics with the aim to assess the current state of interoperability between infrastructures holding biodiversity data. These topics examined interoperability from several angles. Some were research subjects that required interoperability to get results, some examined modalities of access and the use and implementation of standards, while others tested technologies and workflows to improve linkage of different data types. These topics and the issues in regard to interoperability uncovered by the hackathon participants inspired the formulation of the following recommendations for infrastructures related to (1) the use of data brokers, (2) building communities and trust, (3) cloud computing as a collaborative tool, (4) standards and (5) multiple modalities of access: If direct linking cannot be supported between infrastructures, explore using data brokers to store links Cooperate with open linkage brokers to provide a simple way to allow two-way links between infrastructures, without having to co-organize between many different organisations Facilitate and encourage the external reporting of issues related to their infrastructure and its interoperability. Facilitate and encourage requests for new features related to their infrastructure and its interoperability. Provide development roadmaps openly Provide a mechanism for anyone to ask for help Discuss issues in an open forum Provide cloud-based environments to allow external participants to contribute and test changes to features Consider the opportunities that cloud computing brings as a means to enable shared management of the infrastructure. Promote the sharing of knowledge around big data technologies amongst partners, using cloud computing as a training environment Invest in standards compliance and work with standards
ISSN:2367-7163
2367-7163
DOI:10.3897/rio.8.e96180