The document discusses Johannes Keizer's background and experience in data management. It describes his difficulty finding data from his PhD thesis after many years, highlighting the issue of disappearing data. The presentation emphasizes the importance of open data and infrastructure to ensure long-term access and reuse of critical agricultural knowledge and research data.
Lecture for a course at NTNU, 27th January 2021
CC-BY 4.0 Dag Endresen https://orcid.org/0000-0002-2352-5497
See also http://bit.ly/biodiversityinformatics
https://www.gbif.no/events/2021/lecture-ntnu-gbif.html
dkNET Webinar: "The Microphysiology Systems Database (MPS-Db): A Platform For...dkNET
Abstract
The Microphysiology Systems Database Center (MPS-DbC) developed and implemented the Microphysiology Systems Database (MPS-Db, https://mps.csb.pitt.edu/) for the management, analysis, sharing, integration of preclinical and clinical information, and computational modeling of data in one platform, enhancing the in vitro model value and user workflow. The MPS-Db supports data from a wide range of in vitro models including static and microfluidic 2D and 3D microplates, and microfluidic MPS for single and multiple organ models. Aggregation of metadata, experimental data, and references provides for robust and relevant interpretation of the results, and having a central repository facilitates data sharing among user-specified collaborators and groups. Ready access to experimental data and metadata from any in vitro platform, along with reference data in a mineable format, provides a convenient platform for statistical analysis of performance, and building computational models to predict PK, identify compound mechanisms of actions, and infer pathways of disease progression. The MPS-DbC assists users in capturing and managing MPS data, and the MPS-Db is the central repository for the Tissue Chip Testing Centers, as well as the NCATS Tissue Chips programs. We continue to build the research and commercial value of the MPS-Db by: 1) supporting MPS users to build content; 2) implementing on-line preclinical/clinical concordance analysis capabilities; 3) enhancing the suite of data mining and computational modeling tools; and 4) augmenting methods for ensuring data quality and the secure, controlled release of data to user-specified groups.
The top 3 key questions that Microphysiology Systems Database (MPS-Db) can answer:
1. What models are available, what are their characteristics, how reproducible are they, and how can they be used?
2. How does an organ model A compare with organ model B? For example, where model A and model B are constructed in different laboratories, on different days, or with difference cells, such as iPSCs vs. primary cells.
3. Which readouts from an organ model are predictive of a specific clinical outcome and how reliable is the prediction?
Presenter: Bert Gough, PhD, Association Professor of Computational and Systems Biology, Group Leader Informatics, University of Pittsburgh Drug Discovery Institute
Upcoming webinars schedule: https://dknet.org/about/webinar
re3data.org – Registry of Research Data RepositoriesHeinz Pampel
Heinz Pampel | GFZ German Research Centre for Geosciences, LIS
Maxi Kindling | Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, Berlin School of Library and Information Science Frank Scholze | Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, KIT Library
RDA-Deutschland-Treffen 2015| Potsdam, November 26, 2015
Lecture for a course at NTNU, 27th January 2021
CC-BY 4.0 Dag Endresen https://orcid.org/0000-0002-2352-5497
See also http://bit.ly/biodiversityinformatics
https://www.gbif.no/events/2021/lecture-ntnu-gbif.html
dkNET Webinar: "The Microphysiology Systems Database (MPS-Db): A Platform For...dkNET
Abstract
The Microphysiology Systems Database Center (MPS-DbC) developed and implemented the Microphysiology Systems Database (MPS-Db, https://mps.csb.pitt.edu/) for the management, analysis, sharing, integration of preclinical and clinical information, and computational modeling of data in one platform, enhancing the in vitro model value and user workflow. The MPS-Db supports data from a wide range of in vitro models including static and microfluidic 2D and 3D microplates, and microfluidic MPS for single and multiple organ models. Aggregation of metadata, experimental data, and references provides for robust and relevant interpretation of the results, and having a central repository facilitates data sharing among user-specified collaborators and groups. Ready access to experimental data and metadata from any in vitro platform, along with reference data in a mineable format, provides a convenient platform for statistical analysis of performance, and building computational models to predict PK, identify compound mechanisms of actions, and infer pathways of disease progression. The MPS-DbC assists users in capturing and managing MPS data, and the MPS-Db is the central repository for the Tissue Chip Testing Centers, as well as the NCATS Tissue Chips programs. We continue to build the research and commercial value of the MPS-Db by: 1) supporting MPS users to build content; 2) implementing on-line preclinical/clinical concordance analysis capabilities; 3) enhancing the suite of data mining and computational modeling tools; and 4) augmenting methods for ensuring data quality and the secure, controlled release of data to user-specified groups.
The top 3 key questions that Microphysiology Systems Database (MPS-Db) can answer:
1. What models are available, what are their characteristics, how reproducible are they, and how can they be used?
2. How does an organ model A compare with organ model B? For example, where model A and model B are constructed in different laboratories, on different days, or with difference cells, such as iPSCs vs. primary cells.
3. Which readouts from an organ model are predictive of a specific clinical outcome and how reliable is the prediction?
Presenter: Bert Gough, PhD, Association Professor of Computational and Systems Biology, Group Leader Informatics, University of Pittsburgh Drug Discovery Institute
Upcoming webinars schedule: https://dknet.org/about/webinar
re3data.org – Registry of Research Data RepositoriesHeinz Pampel
Heinz Pampel | GFZ German Research Centre for Geosciences, LIS
Maxi Kindling | Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, Berlin School of Library and Information Science Frank Scholze | Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, KIT Library
RDA-Deutschland-Treffen 2015| Potsdam, November 26, 2015
Ag Data Commons: Adding Value to open agricultural research dataCyndy Parr
A talk presented on 30 September 2013 at the Biodiversity Information Standards (Taxonomic Databases Working Group TDWG) annual meeting in Nairobi, Kenya
re3data.org presented at 3rd RDA Plenary Paul Vierkant
This five minute talk was given in the Birds of Feather Session on Global Registry of Trusted Repositories and Services at the 3rd Plenary of the Research Data Alliance in Dublin
Researchers require infrastructures that ensure a maximum of accessibility, stability and reliability to facilitate working with and sharing of research data. Such infrastructures are being increasingly summarised under the term Research Data Repositories (RDR). The project re3data.org – Registry of Research Data Repositories – began to index research data repositories in 2012 and offers researchers, funding organisations, libraries and publishers an overview of the heterogeneous research data repository landscape. In December 2014 re3data.org listed more than 1,030 research data repositories, which are described in detail using the re3data.org schema (http://dx.doi.org/10.2312/re3.003). Information icons help researchers to identify easily an adequate repository for the storage and reuse of their data. This talk describes the heterogeneous RDR landscape and presents a typology of institutional, disciplinary, multidisciplinary and project-specific RDR. Further, it outlines the features of re3data. org and it shows current developments for integration into data management planning tools and other services.
By the end of 2015 re3data.org and Databib (Purdue University, USA) will merge their services, which will then be managed under the auspices of DataCite. The aim of this merger is to reduce duplication of effort and to serve the research community better with a single, sustainable registry of research data repositories. The talk will present this organisational development as a best practice example for the development of international research information services.
Biodiversity Informatics: An Interdisciplinary ChallengeBryan Heidorn
"Impacto de la Informática en el Conocimiento de la Biodiversidad: Actualidad y Futuro” at Universidad Nacional de Colombia on August 12, 2011. https://sites.google.com/site/simposioinformaticaicn/home
In this webinar, we gave a general introduction of the dkNET portal and showed how dkNET can be used to address a variety of use cases, including:
1) Find funding sources for your research of interest
2) Determine what study section have reviewed this type of research
3) Help with new NIH guidelines for rigor and reproducibility
A keynote given on experiences in curating workflows and web services.
3rd International Digital Curation Conference: "Curating our Digital Scientific Heritage: a Global Collaborative Challenge"
11-13 December 2007
Renaissance Hotel
Washington DC, USA
Carole Goble presents the Bioschemas | OSFair2017 Workshop
Workshop title: How FAIR friendly is your data catalogue?
Workshop overview:
This workshop will build upon the work planned by the EOSCpilot data interoperability task and the BlueBridge workshop held on April 3 at the RDA meeting. We will investigate common mechanisms for interoperation of data catalogues that preserve established community standards, norms and resources, while simplifying the process of being/becoming FAIR. Can we have a simple interoperability architecture based on a common set of metadata types? What are the minimum metadata requirements to expose FAIR data to EOSC services and EOSC users?
DAY 3 - PARALLEL SESSION 6 & 7
Presentation delivered in the context of the Agricultural Data Interoperability WG meeeting, during the RDA 3rd Plenary Meeting in Dublin, Ireland. 26/3/2014.
The presentation is mostly focused on the work done by the agINFRA project towards proposing a methodology for the definition of Germplasm descriptors as RDF, based on the existing work of experts in the field and making use of the existing effort in this direction.
The Nuclear Receptor Signaling Atlas (NURSA) is partnering with dkNET (NIDDK Information Network) to host a dataset challenge, and we invite you to join! Everyone is talking about Big Data. How can we ensure that the impact of individual scientists working on a myriad of small and focused studies that discover and probe new phenomena - is not lost in the Big Data world. In fact, there is more than one way to generate big data and we would like your help in creating and expanding “big data” for NIDDK! In this 30-minute webinar, dkNET team will give a presentation about the overview of challenge task, how to use dkNET to find research resources, and top tips!
GBIF at Living Norway Open Science Lab 2022-03-03Dag Endresen
Presentation of GBIF at the Living Norway Open Science Lab on 2022-03-03. See program at
https://livingnorway.no/join-the-living-norway-ecological-data-network-through-our-open-science-lab/
https://livingnorway.no/2022/02/10/join-our-open-science-lab/
https://www.gbif.no/events/2022/open-science-lab-1.html
Linking Scientific Metadata (presented at DC2010)Jian Qin
Linked entity data in metadata records builds a foundation for semantic web. Even though metadata records contain rich entity data, there is no linking between associated entities such as persons, datasets, projects, publications, or organizations. We conducted a small experiment using the dataset collection from the Hubbard Brook Ecosystem Study (HBES), in which we converted the entities and their relationships into RDF triples and linked the URIs contained in RDF triples to the corresponding entities in the Ecological Metadata Language (EML) records. Through the transformation program written in XML Stylesheet Language (XSL), we turned a plain EML record display into an interlinked semantic web of ecological datasets. The experiment suggests a methodological feasibility in incorporating linked entity data into metadata records. The paper also argues for the need of changing the scientific as well as general metadata paradigm.
In this webinar, we look at how you obtain and use open data, the key role of search engines and how you establish rust in the data you find. The webinar will also look at the quality of data and how to clean and prepare data for analysis. Finally, the session will look at how you can quickly visualise cleaned data and the applications of this in the agriculture sector.
Ag Data Commons: Adding Value to open agricultural research dataCyndy Parr
A talk presented on 30 September 2013 at the Biodiversity Information Standards (Taxonomic Databases Working Group TDWG) annual meeting in Nairobi, Kenya
re3data.org presented at 3rd RDA Plenary Paul Vierkant
This five minute talk was given in the Birds of Feather Session on Global Registry of Trusted Repositories and Services at the 3rd Plenary of the Research Data Alliance in Dublin
Researchers require infrastructures that ensure a maximum of accessibility, stability and reliability to facilitate working with and sharing of research data. Such infrastructures are being increasingly summarised under the term Research Data Repositories (RDR). The project re3data.org – Registry of Research Data Repositories – began to index research data repositories in 2012 and offers researchers, funding organisations, libraries and publishers an overview of the heterogeneous research data repository landscape. In December 2014 re3data.org listed more than 1,030 research data repositories, which are described in detail using the re3data.org schema (http://dx.doi.org/10.2312/re3.003). Information icons help researchers to identify easily an adequate repository for the storage and reuse of their data. This talk describes the heterogeneous RDR landscape and presents a typology of institutional, disciplinary, multidisciplinary and project-specific RDR. Further, it outlines the features of re3data. org and it shows current developments for integration into data management planning tools and other services.
By the end of 2015 re3data.org and Databib (Purdue University, USA) will merge their services, which will then be managed under the auspices of DataCite. The aim of this merger is to reduce duplication of effort and to serve the research community better with a single, sustainable registry of research data repositories. The talk will present this organisational development as a best practice example for the development of international research information services.
Biodiversity Informatics: An Interdisciplinary ChallengeBryan Heidorn
"Impacto de la Informática en el Conocimiento de la Biodiversidad: Actualidad y Futuro” at Universidad Nacional de Colombia on August 12, 2011. https://sites.google.com/site/simposioinformaticaicn/home
In this webinar, we gave a general introduction of the dkNET portal and showed how dkNET can be used to address a variety of use cases, including:
1) Find funding sources for your research of interest
2) Determine what study section have reviewed this type of research
3) Help with new NIH guidelines for rigor and reproducibility
A keynote given on experiences in curating workflows and web services.
3rd International Digital Curation Conference: "Curating our Digital Scientific Heritage: a Global Collaborative Challenge"
11-13 December 2007
Renaissance Hotel
Washington DC, USA
Carole Goble presents the Bioschemas | OSFair2017 Workshop
Workshop title: How FAIR friendly is your data catalogue?
Workshop overview:
This workshop will build upon the work planned by the EOSCpilot data interoperability task and the BlueBridge workshop held on April 3 at the RDA meeting. We will investigate common mechanisms for interoperation of data catalogues that preserve established community standards, norms and resources, while simplifying the process of being/becoming FAIR. Can we have a simple interoperability architecture based on a common set of metadata types? What are the minimum metadata requirements to expose FAIR data to EOSC services and EOSC users?
DAY 3 - PARALLEL SESSION 6 & 7
Presentation delivered in the context of the Agricultural Data Interoperability WG meeeting, during the RDA 3rd Plenary Meeting in Dublin, Ireland. 26/3/2014.
The presentation is mostly focused on the work done by the agINFRA project towards proposing a methodology for the definition of Germplasm descriptors as RDF, based on the existing work of experts in the field and making use of the existing effort in this direction.
The Nuclear Receptor Signaling Atlas (NURSA) is partnering with dkNET (NIDDK Information Network) to host a dataset challenge, and we invite you to join! Everyone is talking about Big Data. How can we ensure that the impact of individual scientists working on a myriad of small and focused studies that discover and probe new phenomena - is not lost in the Big Data world. In fact, there is more than one way to generate big data and we would like your help in creating and expanding “big data” for NIDDK! In this 30-minute webinar, dkNET team will give a presentation about the overview of challenge task, how to use dkNET to find research resources, and top tips!
GBIF at Living Norway Open Science Lab 2022-03-03Dag Endresen
Presentation of GBIF at the Living Norway Open Science Lab on 2022-03-03. See program at
https://livingnorway.no/join-the-living-norway-ecological-data-network-through-our-open-science-lab/
https://livingnorway.no/2022/02/10/join-our-open-science-lab/
https://www.gbif.no/events/2022/open-science-lab-1.html
Linking Scientific Metadata (presented at DC2010)Jian Qin
Linked entity data in metadata records builds a foundation for semantic web. Even though metadata records contain rich entity data, there is no linking between associated entities such as persons, datasets, projects, publications, or organizations. We conducted a small experiment using the dataset collection from the Hubbard Brook Ecosystem Study (HBES), in which we converted the entities and their relationships into RDF triples and linked the URIs contained in RDF triples to the corresponding entities in the Ecological Metadata Language (EML) records. Through the transformation program written in XML Stylesheet Language (XSL), we turned a plain EML record display into an interlinked semantic web of ecological datasets. The experiment suggests a methodological feasibility in incorporating linked entity data into metadata records. The paper also argues for the need of changing the scientific as well as general metadata paradigm.
In this webinar, we look at how you obtain and use open data, the key role of search engines and how you establish rust in the data you find. The webinar will also look at the quality of data and how to clean and prepare data for analysis. Finally, the session will look at how you can quickly visualise cleaned data and the applications of this in the agriculture sector.
About the Virtual Conference
With the expansion of digital data collection and the increased expectations of data sharing, researchers are turning to their libraries or institutional repositories as a place to store and preserve that data. Many institutions have created such data management services and see the data curation role as a growing and important element of their service portfolio. While some of the experience in managing other types of digital resources is transferrable, the management of large-scale scientific data has many special requirements and challenges. From metadata collection and cataloging data sources, to identification, discovery, and preservation, best practices and standards are still in their infancy.
This Virtual Conference will explore in greater depth than traditional webinars some of the practical lessons from those who have implemented data management and developed best practices, as well as provide some insight into the evolving issues the community faces. It will include discussions related to certification of trusted repositories, provenance and identification issues around data, data citation, preservation, and the work of several repository networks to advance distribution of scientific information.
RDAP13 Lorrie Johnson: Facilitating Access to Scientific DataASIS&T
Lorrie Johnson, U.S. Department of Energy/Office of Science and Technical Information: “Facilitating Access to Scientific Data: The DataCite, Science.gov, and WorldWideScience.org Initiatives”
Panel: Linked data and metadata (co-sponsored by the ASIS&T Digital Libraries SIG)
Research Data Access & Preservation Summit 2013
Baltimore, MD April 4, 2013 #rdap13
Agricultural Data Interest Group & Wheat Data Working Group of RDAVassilis Protonotarios
Presentation delivered during the "Engagement in RDA from Southern-Eastern Europe, Mediterranean and Caucasus region" Workshop. 25/6/2015, Athens, Greece
Reflections on making EFSA an open science organisationNikos Manouselis
Slides of talk at the Workshop on e-Infrastructures supporting Food Safety Risk Assessment, hosted by the European Food Safety Authority (EFSA), Parma, May 13th, 2015.
Vince smith-delivering biodiversity knowledge in the information age-notextVince Smith
Smith, V.S. 2013. Delivering biodiversity knowledge in the information age. Hellenic Botanical Society, Thessaloniki, Greece, 3-6 Oct. 2013. [Delivered via video link through Google Hangouts]
dkNET Webinar: Creating and Sustaining a FAIR Biomedical Data Ecosystem 10/09...dkNET
Abstract
In this presentation, Susan Gregurick, Ph.D., Associate Director of Data Science and Director, Office of Data Science Strategy at the National Institutes of Health, will share the NIH’s vision for a modernized, integrated FAIR biomedical data ecosystem and the strategic roadmap that NIH is following to achieve this vision. Dr. Gregurick will highlight projects being implemented by team members across the NIH’s 27 institutes and centers and will ways that industry, academia, and other communities can help NIH enable a FAIR data ecosystem. Finally, she will weave in how this strategy is being leveraged to address the COVID-19 pandemic.
Presenter: Susan Gregurick, Ph.D., Associate Director of Data Science and Director, Office of Data Science Strategy at the National Institutes of Health
dkNET Webinar Information: https://dknet.org/about/webinar
Johannes Keizer presented the outcomes of the eROSA project with researchers from the Agricultural Information Institute of CAAS (Chinese Academy of Agricultural Science)
APNIC Foundation, presented by Ellisha Heppner at the PNG DNS Forum 2024APNIC
Ellisha Heppner, Grant Management Lead, presented an update on APNIC Foundation to the PNG DNS Forum held from 6 to 10 May, 2024 in Port Moresby, Papua New Guinea.
1.Wireless Communication System_Wireless communication is a broad term that i...JeyaPerumal1
Wireless communication involves the transmission of information over a distance without the help of wires, cables or any other forms of electrical conductors.
Wireless communication is a broad term that incorporates all procedures and forms of connecting and communicating between two or more devices using a wireless signal through wireless communication technologies and devices.
Features of Wireless Communication
The evolution of wireless technology has brought many advancements with its effective features.
The transmitted distance can be anywhere between a few meters (for example, a television's remote control) and thousands of kilometers (for example, radio communication).
Wireless communication can be used for cellular telephony, wireless access to the internet, wireless home networking, and so on.
This 7-second Brain Wave Ritual Attracts Money To You.!nirahealhty
Discover the power of a simple 7-second brain wave ritual that can attract wealth and abundance into your life. By tapping into specific brain frequencies, this technique helps you manifest financial success effortlessly. Ready to transform your financial future? Try this powerful ritual and start attracting money today!
Bridging the Digital Gap Brad Spiegel Macon, GA Initiative.pptxBrad Spiegel Macon GA
Brad Spiegel Macon GA’s journey exemplifies the profound impact that one individual can have on their community. Through his unwavering dedication to digital inclusion, he’s not only bridging the gap in Macon but also setting an example for others to follow.
2. johannes keizerhttp://aims.fao.org
The Presenter
Johannes Keizer, PhD
• Background Molecular Biology
• More than 25 years experience in
data management
• Team Leader at United Nations
specialized Agency (FAO)
• Expert in Linked Open Data for the
EC Semantic Interoperability
Center
5. johannes keizerhttp://aims.fao.org
2nd Google Search
5
https://www.google.de/search?q=johannes+Keizer++Dissertation+Toxizitaet+und+Bi
otransformation+-
+Unterschiede+in+der&aq=f&oq=johannes+Keizer++Dissertation+Toxizitaet+und+Bi
otransformation+-
+Unterschiede+in+der&aqs=chrome.0.57.60915j0&sourceid=chrome&ie=UTF-8
http://agris.fao.org/agris-
search/search/display.do?f=2012%2FOV%2FOV2012002800028.xml%3BDE199400
07889
6. …at the end I found a record about
my PhD thesis, somewhat proud,
that I found it through AGRIS, our
own service.
But the data could not be found, they
were practically lost in the few print
copies and microfiche of the thesis
6
19. johannes keizerhttp://aims.fao.org
Community
2004 - AIMS
• Community of practice, 2000 practitioners
2007 - CIARD
• Movement for opening access to agricultural knowledge
2013 - GODAN
• High level advocacy for open Data in Agriculture and
Nutrition, influencing government, mobilizing resources
And
2012 – RDA, Research Data Alliance
• Interdisciplinary Forum for all data related issues
22. johannes keizerhttp://aims.fao.org
Institutional Data
Sharing Practice
Data Access and Distribution
Policy
Data
Discovery Tools
Common
Metadata Standards
Digital Object
Identifiers
Data Citation
Standards
Data
Analytics Algorithms
Data
Preservation Practice
Data Scientists and
Expert Support
Sustainable
Economic Models
Curation Practice and
Policy
Auditing, Certification and
Reporting Practice
RDA: Many Infrastructure Building Blocks
Needed to Accelerate Progress
Data Use
and
Re-use
Data Discovery
and Data Sharing
Research Dissemination
and Reproducibility
Data Access (now)
and Preservation
(later)
24. johannes keizerhttp://aims.fao.org
Wheat Data Interoperability Example
0
20
40
60
80
Files in a
local drive
Files in a
shared drive
Local
databases
Shared
databases
SNPs
0
20
40
60
80
100
Files in a
local drive
Files in a
shared drive
Local
databases
Shared
databases
Phenotypes
0
10
20
30
40
Files in a
local drive
Files in a
shared drive
Local
databases
Shared
databases
Physical maps
0
20
40
60
80
Files in a
local drive
Files in a
shared drive
Local
databases
Shared
databases
Genomic annotations
0
20
40
60
80
Files in a
local drive
Files in a
shared drive
Local
databases
Shared
databases
Genetic maps
0
20
40
60
80
100
Files in a
local drive
Files in a
shared drive
Local
databases
Shared
databases
Germplasms
(Counts are
the number
of answers)
27. johannes keizerhttp://aims.fao.org
Widgets
Authoring services
Data Discovery
Services
Analytics services
Onto
Servers
Cloud
CMS
…to RDF
APIs
Aggregators
Mash
Ups
Structured text
(Bibliographie….
Semi structured
text…CMS
Unstructured
text/HTML…
Prepare data
for
meaningful
services
Semantic
Enrichment
Highly structured
data (data bases)
Semi structured
data
LOD –Triple
Stores
Images
LOD – Infrastructure Services
Dataset
Directories
28. johannes keizerhttp://aims.fao.org
Infrastructure elements
The RING
• http://ring.ciard.net
Vocabulary Server
• AGROVOC, CABT, NALT
• http://www.agrisemantics.org
The “VEST registry” (Tools, metadata)
Customized Content Management on the
cloud
• Agridrupal, AgriOcean Dspace
Tools and Methodologies to produce LOD
29. johannes keizerhttp://aims.fao.org
Infrastructure: Agrisemantics
Creating a common access point for
Ontologies, taxonomies, vocabularies
Aligning the 3 agricultural thesauri (Agrovoc,
NALT, CABT) Global Agricultural Concept
Scheme
Cutting edge editing environments
(VocBench and Skosmos) have already
been deployed
GACS prototype to be released in spring
2015
29
30. johannes keizerhttp://aims.fao.org
Applications
AGRIS
• Basis bibliographical database with more than 7 million
records
• Uses AGROVOC and bib metadata to link to other open
datasets
AgriProfiles
• Based on the “Vivo” application,
• Harvests Expert data from different sources and gives the
possibility for semantic searches
AgriFeeds
• Aggregated News and Events Feeds semantically organized
30
31. johannes keizerhttp://aims.fao.org
Content Coverage
International System for Agricultural Science
and Technology
Food science, forestry, aquaculture,
fisheries
Grey literature, small and big publishers
7,802,156 multilingual bibliographic records
200,585,375 triples
31
32. johannes keizerhttp://aims.fao.org
AGRIS’ users
Accessed from more than 200 countries and
territories
Peaks of 250,000 visits/month (G.A.)
Users’ categories:
• Researchers, professors, graduated students
• Librarians, cataloguers
• Small journal publishers, professional associations,
conference organizers
• Government officers asking for reports on a certain
topic
32
36. There is a lot to do!
Some problems need to be resolved,
especially on interoperability
standards
But there is an enormous potential in
making linked open data available
From government, science and
business…
3
I am coming from FAO. FAO is the agency of the United Nations to combate hunger and rural poverty. Having access to information is essential to improve agriculture and access to food
SOA…Service oriented Architecture
BPM…Business Process Management
http://cms.web.cern.ch/news/about-higgs-boson
The working group on Wheat data interoperability is an example for what RDA is doing. The Working group aims to release guidelines how to produce data on wheat that are interoperable. The slide shows results from a survey about where data at the moment are located and where they should be located.
I have to mention that China as the biggest Wheat producer is not present at the moment! This should change