Elizabeth R. Ellwood, Wouter Addink, John Bates, Andrew Bentley, Jutta Buschbom, Alina Freire-Fierro, Jose Fortes, David Jennings, Kerstin Lehnert, Bertram Ludäscher, Keping Ma, James Macklin, Austin Mast, Joe Miller, Gil Nelson, Nicky Nicolson, Jyotsna Pandey, Deborah Paul, Sinlan Poo, Richard Rabeler, Pamela S. Soltis, Elycia Wallis, Michael Webster, Andrew Young, Breda Zimkus
{"title":"Connecting the Dots: Aligning human capacity through networks toward a globally interoperable Digital Extended Specimen (DES) infrastructure","authors":"Elizabeth R. Ellwood, Wouter Addink, John Bates, Andrew Bentley, Jutta Buschbom, Alina Freire-Fierro, Jose Fortes, David Jennings, Kerstin Lehnert, Bertram Ludäscher, Keping Ma, James Macklin, Austin Mast, Joe Miller, Gil Nelson, Nicky Nicolson, Jyotsna Pandey, Deborah Paul, Sinlan Poo, Richard Rabeler, Pamela S. Soltis, Elycia Wallis, Michael Webster, Andrew Young, Breda Zimkus","doi":"10.3897/biss.7.112390","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Thanks to substantial support for biodiversity data mobilization in recent decades, billions of occurrence records are openly available, documenting life on Earth and enabling timely research, awareness raising, and policy-making. Initiatives across local to global scales have been separately funded to serve different, yet often overlapping audiences of data users, and have developed a variety of platforms and infrastructures to meet the needs of these audiences. The independent progress of biodiversity data providers has led to innovations as well as challenges for the community at large as we move towards connecting and linking a diversity of information from disparate sources as Digital Extended Specimens (DES). Recognizing a need for deeper and more frequent opportunities for communication and collaboration across the globe, an ad-hoc group of representatives of various international, national, and regional organizations have been meeting virtually since 2020 to provide a forum for updates, announcements, and shared progress. This group is provisionally named International Partners for the Digital Extended Specimen (IPDES), and is guided by these four concepts: Biodiversity, Connection, Knowledge and Agency. Participants in IPDES include representatives of the Global Biodiversity Information Facility (GBIF), Integrated Digitized Biocollections (iDigBio), American Institute of Biological Sciences (AIBS), Biodiversity Collections Network (BCoN), Natural Science Collections Alliance (NSCA), Distributed System of Scientific Collections (DiSSCo), Atlas of Living Australia (ALA), Biodiversity Information Standards (TDWG), Society for the Preservation of Natural History Collections (SPNHC), National Specimen Information Infrastructure of China (NSII), and South African National Biodiversity Institute (SANBI), as well as individuals involved with biodiversity informatics initiatives, natural science collections, museums, herbaria, and universities. Our global partners group strives to increase representation from around the globe as we aim to enable research that contributes to novel discoveries and addresses the societal challenges leading to the biodiversity crisis. Our overarching mission is to expand on the community-driven successes to connect biodiversity data and knowledge through coordination of a globally integrated network of stakeholders to enable an extensible technical and social infrastructure of data, tools, and working practices in support of our vision. The main work of our group thus far includes publishing a paper on the Digital Extended Specimen (Hardisty et al. 2022), organizing and hosting an array of activities at conferences, and asynchronous online work and forum-based exchanges. We aim to advance discussion on topics of broad interest to our community such as social and technical capacity building, broadening participation, expanding social and data networks, improving data models and building a backbone for the DES, and identifying international funding solutions. This presentation will highlight some of these activities and detail progress towards a roadmap for the development of the human network and technical infrastructure necessary to support the DES. It provides an opportunity for feedback from and engagement by stakeholder communities such as TDWG and other initiatives with a focus on data standards and biodiversity informatics, as we solidify our plans for the future in support of integrated and interconnected biodiversity data and credit for those doing the work.","PeriodicalId":9011,"journal":{"name":"Biodiversity Information Science and Standards","volume":"13 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2023-09-08","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Biodiversity Information Science and Standards","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.3897/biss.7.112390","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Thanks to substantial support for biodiversity data mobilization in recent decades, billions of occurrence records are openly available, documenting life on Earth and enabling timely research, awareness raising, and policy-making. Initiatives across local to global scales have been separately funded to serve different, yet often overlapping audiences of data users, and have developed a variety of platforms and infrastructures to meet the needs of these audiences. The independent progress of biodiversity data providers has led to innovations as well as challenges for the community at large as we move towards connecting and linking a diversity of information from disparate sources as Digital Extended Specimens (DES). Recognizing a need for deeper and more frequent opportunities for communication and collaboration across the globe, an ad-hoc group of representatives of various international, national, and regional organizations have been meeting virtually since 2020 to provide a forum for updates, announcements, and shared progress. This group is provisionally named International Partners for the Digital Extended Specimen (IPDES), and is guided by these four concepts: Biodiversity, Connection, Knowledge and Agency. Participants in IPDES include representatives of the Global Biodiversity Information Facility (GBIF), Integrated Digitized Biocollections (iDigBio), American Institute of Biological Sciences (AIBS), Biodiversity Collections Network (BCoN), Natural Science Collections Alliance (NSCA), Distributed System of Scientific Collections (DiSSCo), Atlas of Living Australia (ALA), Biodiversity Information Standards (TDWG), Society for the Preservation of Natural History Collections (SPNHC), National Specimen Information Infrastructure of China (NSII), and South African National Biodiversity Institute (SANBI), as well as individuals involved with biodiversity informatics initiatives, natural science collections, museums, herbaria, and universities. Our global partners group strives to increase representation from around the globe as we aim to enable research that contributes to novel discoveries and addresses the societal challenges leading to the biodiversity crisis. Our overarching mission is to expand on the community-driven successes to connect biodiversity data and knowledge through coordination of a globally integrated network of stakeholders to enable an extensible technical and social infrastructure of data, tools, and working practices in support of our vision. The main work of our group thus far includes publishing a paper on the Digital Extended Specimen (Hardisty et al. 2022), organizing and hosting an array of activities at conferences, and asynchronous online work and forum-based exchanges. We aim to advance discussion on topics of broad interest to our community such as social and technical capacity building, broadening participation, expanding social and data networks, improving data models and building a backbone for the DES, and identifying international funding solutions. This presentation will highlight some of these activities and detail progress towards a roadmap for the development of the human network and technical infrastructure necessary to support the DES. It provides an opportunity for feedback from and engagement by stakeholder communities such as TDWG and other initiatives with a focus on data standards and biodiversity informatics, as we solidify our plans for the future in support of integrated and interconnected biodiversity data and credit for those doing the work.
由于近几十年来对生物多样性数据动员的大力支持,数十亿的生物发生记录可以公开获取,记录了地球上的生命,并使及时的研究、提高认识和决策成为可能。从地方到全球范围的举措已分别获得资助,以服务不同但往往重叠的数据用户受众,并开发了各种平台和基础设施,以满足这些受众的需求。生物多样性数据提供者的独立发展为整个生物多样性社区带来了创新和挑战,因为我们正朝着连接和连接来自不同来源的多样性信息作为数字扩展标本(DES)的方向发展。认识到需要在全球范围内建立更深入、更频繁的沟通与合作机会,自2020年以来,各种国际、国家和地区组织的代表组成了一个特设小组,通过虚拟方式举行会议,为更新、公告和共享进展提供论坛。该组织暂时被命名为数字扩展标本国际合作伙伴(IPDES),并以这四个概念为指导:生物多样性、联系、知识和代理。IPDES的参与者包括全球生物多样性信息设施(GBIF)、综合数字化生物馆藏(iDigBio)、美国生物科学研究所(AIBS)、生物多样性馆藏网络(BCoN)、自然科学馆藏联盟(NSCA)、科学馆藏分布式系统(DiSSCo)、澳大利亚生活图集(ALA)、生物多样性信息标准(TDWG)、自然历史馆藏保存协会(SPNHC)、中国国家标本信息基础设施(NSII)和南非国家生物多样性研究所(SANBI),以及参与生物多样性信息学倡议的个人、自然科学收藏、博物馆、植物标本馆和大学。我们的全球合作伙伴小组致力于增加来自全球各地的代表性,因为我们的目标是使研究有助于新发现和解决导致生物多样性危机的社会挑战。我们的首要任务是扩大社区驱动的成功,通过协调全球整合的利益相关者网络,将生物多样性数据和知识联系起来,使数据、工具和工作实践的可扩展技术和社会基础设施成为可能,以支持我们的愿景。到目前为止,我们小组的主要工作包括发表一篇关于数字扩展标本的论文(Hardisty et al. 2022),组织和主持一系列会议活动,以及异步在线工作和基于论坛的交流。我们的目标是推进对我们社区广泛感兴趣的主题的讨论,如社会和技术能力建设、扩大参与、扩大社会和数据网络、改进数据模型和建立经济发展系统的主干,以及确定国际筹资解决方案。本报告将重点介绍其中的一些活动,并详细介绍支持DES所需的人际网络和技术基础设施发展路线图的进展情况。它为利益相关者社区(如TDWG)和其他关注数据标准和生物多样性信息学的倡议提供了反馈和参与的机会。随着我们巩固我们的未来计划,以支持综合和相互关联的生物多样性数据,并赞扬那些从事这项工作的人。