Metadata 2020: why we should strive for richer metadata. In this presentation, John Chodacki introduces Metadata 2020; its purpose, and the progress made in its early formation.
Jennifer Kemp, presenter
All parties in the research enterprise aim to improve the discoverability of content. Whether they’re funders, authors, preprint servers, publishers, libraries, repositories. Or the numerous tools seeking to add value through search, discovery, annotation, or analyses. So many of these organizations contribute along the way but often important details get mistyped, misrepresented, mislaid, or missed out entirely.
What if we could make it easy to include as much information as possible? All the basic stuff but also license info, funding/grant data, ORCID iDs, organization IDs, clinical trial data, and--along the way--corrections and retractions? What if it was a simple case of entering once, and watching that work--with clean and “complete” metadata--grow and get added to, permeating through other systems, contributing to research throughout the world?
It’s in the hands of many.
A group of organizations from all over the world have come together to rally the community around this critical issue in scholarly communications: sharing richer metadata. Working together we can build on existing efforts to make research more discoverable. We will seek input from the audience, share user stories about the journey that metadata takes, talk about our goals and tactics for a new metadata advocacy campaign called Metadata 2020.
Metadata 2020 is a campaign that is bigger than just one organization or sector, but a collective responsibility shared by us all. It's also a deadline where by we can try to get the community involved in committing to providing richer metadata - we want to share our plans and get input on the needs of the research library community.
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Jennifer Kemp, presenter
All parties in the research enterprise aim to improve the discoverability of content. Whether they’re funders, authors, preprint servers, publishers, libraries, repositories. Or the numerous tools seeking to add value through search, discovery, annotation, or analyses. So many of these organizations contribute along the way but often important details get mistyped, misrepresented, mislaid, or missed out entirely.
What if we could make it easy to include as much information as possible? All the basic stuff but also license info, funding/grant data, ORCID iDs, organization IDs, clinical trial data, and--along the way--corrections and retractions? What if it was a simple case of entering once, and watching that work--with clean and “complete” metadata--grow and get added to, permeating through other systems, contributing to research throughout the world?
It’s in the hands of many.
A group of organizations from all over the world have come together to rally the community around this critical issue in scholarly communications: sharing richer metadata. Working together we can build on existing efforts to make research more discoverable. We will seek input from the audience, share user stories about the journey that metadata takes, talk about our goals and tactics for a new metadata advocacy campaign called Metadata 2020.
Metadata 2020 is a campaign that is bigger than just one organization or sector, but a collective responsibility shared by us all. It's also a deadline where by we can try to get the community involved in committing to providing richer metadata - we want to share our plans and get input on the needs of the research library community.
I recently was invited to talk about my experience in developing a data-driven culture in the public service at the 3rd Australian Government Data Summit. Here are some of my thoughts on the traits you need
How do you get better outcomes for government? You make sure the right people have the right information to make the right decisions. This is a brief to market asking how they can help government do this.
Presented to a full house at the CBR Innovation Network as the first step forwards by the ACT Government as it seeks to embrace a data-driven culture...
Presented by John Young (ODI) and Laura Harper (Wellcome) at the Public Engagement Workshop, 2-5 Dec. 2008, KwaZulu-Natal South Africa, http://scienceincommunity.wordpress.com/
There are many online and in-person courses available for librarians to learn about research data management, data analysis, and visualization, but after you have taken a course, how do you go about applying what you have learned? While it is possible to just start offering classes and consultations, your service will have a better chance of becoming relevant if you consider stakeholders and review your institutional environment. This lecture will give you some ideas to get started with data services at your institution.
Lightning Talk Session 1: Establishing a Culture of Open Research
Agape – Building an Open Science Practising Community
presented by Cassandra Murphy, Agape Open Science/Maynooth University;
Open Research Practices for Research Integrity
presented by Lai Ma, University College Dublin;
Research Assessment and Incentivising Open Research Practices
presented by David O’Connell, University College Cork
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it discoverable and stimulate new lines of enquiry, encourage
collaboration and fuel innovation. Providing richer metadata
has complex challenges for libraries, publishers, funders and
researchers but the opportunities are significant. Metadata
2020 is a community-led advocacy campaign designed to
provide a framework that will raise awareness, educate key
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(Slides from my workshop at the 2018 UN World Data Forum)
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In 2018, the SciELO Program will celebrate 20 years of operation, in full alignment with the advances of open science.
The SciELO 20 Years Conference will address and debate – during its three-day program – the main political, methodological and technological issues that define today’s state of the art in scholarly communication and the trends and innovations that is shaping the future of the universal openness of scholarly publishing and its relationship with today’s Open Access journals, in particular those of the SciELO Network.
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The celebration of SciELO’s 20-year anniversary constitutes an important landmark in SciELO’s evolution, and an exceptional moment to promote the advancement of an inclusive, global approach to scholarly communication and to the open access movement while respecting the diversities of thematic and geographic areas, as well as of languages of scientific research.
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3. 90 minutes; 3 sections
1. Introduction, goals, mission, & work so far
2. Help define the issues - small group work
3. Discussion
Feel free to tweet @metadata2020
4. What is Metadata 2020?
Metadata 2020 is a collaboration that
advocates richer, connected, and reusable,
open metadata for all research outputs,
which will advance scholarly pursuits for
the benefit of society.
5.
6.
7.
8. - Ginny Hendricks, Instigator, Metadata 2020
“The goal? To demonstrate why
richer metadata should be the
scholarly community's top
priority, how we can all evaluate
ourselves and improve, and what
can be achieved when we work
harder, and work together.”
9. – Eva Mendez Rodriguez, Deputy VP Strategy &
Digital Education, Universidad Carlos III , Spain
“Everyone benefits from better
discoverability. Make the
content easier to find and
disambiguate. As the metadata
gets richer the more you can do
with it, so it just gets better and
better.”
10. - Metadata 2020 interviewee
“Metadata is the means to the
end, not the goal. We need to
demonstrate the importance of
the interconnected whole.”
14. Who is involved? A “core team”:
Ginny Hendricks - Instigator
John Chodacki - Convenor
Clare Dean - Communicator
Paula Reeves - Brander
Ed Pentz - Sponsor
15. John Chodacki, California Digital Library - Chair
Cameron Neylon, Curtin University
Caroline Sutton, Taylor & Francis
Dario Taraborelli, Wikimedia
Eva Mendez Rodriguez, UC3M
Ed Pentz, Crossref
Genevieve Early, Taylor & Francis
Ginny Hendricks, Crossref
Juan Pablo Alperin, Public Knowledge Project
Kristen Ratan, Coko Foundation
Carly Strasser, Moore Foundation
Who is involved? Interviewees & advisors
Laure Haak / Alice Meadows, ORCID
Mark Patterson, eLife
Mike Taylor, Digital Science
Natalia Manola, OpenAIRE
Patricia Cruse, DataCite
Paul Dlug, American Physical Society
Roy Tennant, OCLC
Scott Plutchak, University of Alabama
Stefanie Haustein, University of Ottawa
Steve Byford, JISC
16. Who is involved? Community working groups
Funders - 3 organisations: Arcadia,
Gates, Moore - looking for more!
Services, platforms and tools - Led by
Marianne Calilhanna, Cenveo; 17
individuals from 15 organizations
Data publishers/repositories - Led by
John Chodacki, California Digital
Library; 6 individuals
Publishers - Individuals from 13
Publishers
Librarians - Led by Juliane Schneider,
Harvard Catalyst; Individuals from 8
organizations
Researchers - Led by Cameron Neylon,
Curtin; Individuals from 7 organizations
across 5 countries
17. Activity & outputs
● Stories per community, good and bad
● Identification of barriers + problems statements
● Shared results
● Business cases / value propositions
● Consistent language!
● Self-evaluation + guided steps for levelling up
● Beyond 2020!
24. Some questions
How do we make better use of what we
have?
As metadata creators and users, what do
you need that you don’t have?
25. – Metadata 2020 interviewee
"In the end it's in everybody's
best interest to have improved
outputs. We would, as a
community, redeem ourselves if
we were able to use all this
infrastructure and data to
delight our users and improve
their lives."