Published September 21, 2024 | Version v2
Presentation Open

Resisting Contextual Collapse: How an Internet of Places (iPlaces) Supports Research Stations Operationalize FAIR and CARE (Talk in Progress)

  • 1. ROR icon Metadata Game Changers (United States)
  • 2. ROR icon Gump South Pacific Research Station
  • 3. ROR icon University of California, Berkeley
  • 4. ROR icon Tetiaroa Society

Contributors

Contact person:

  • 1. ROR icon Metadata Game Changers (United States)

Description

Presentation given for the Common Tools for Common Socio-Environmental Problems (hybrid event) 

Google Slides here

This talk develops ideas for an abstract submitted to the 2024 Fall AGU Meeting. Research stations help scientists gather data at source and witness the resilience and fragility of our planet firsthand. Despite their role in understanding the complex physical, biogeochemical, ecological, social, and economic interactions that constitute place, station contributions and those of the local community often remain unrecognized. Metadata describing the samples/data they help originate is too easily stripped or lost as value is added downstream. To fight this “contextual collapse,” we present a new publishing platform (iPlaces) that empowers investigators to publish descriptions of their field projects (marker papers) in a station journal, providing each project with a landing page and a digital object identifier. Through the familiar manuscript review process (with the station director acting as editor), iPlaces introduces a way to layer ethical, legal, social, and scientific metadata to field research. Part of a collaborative ecosystem, iPlaces links and leverages a suite of online services (e.g., GEOME, ORCID, DataCite, iSamples, Local Contexts), promoting their uptake in place-based research. In this talk, I will focus on our recent work with Local Contexts, where iPlaces enables a station to issue ‘notices’ for a proposed project, thus initiating dialogue with local communities and combatting “parachute science”. Communities can then issue ‘labels’, a form of social metadata (e.g., Prior Informed Consent), to projects and their downstream field samples/data, helping to operationalize CARE as well as FAIR data principles. As data and samples move downstream, value-added products are linked automatically through the global open science infrastructure, ensuring the connection back to place (the station and its associated communities). iPlaces thus positions stations as crucial partners connecting nature and communities to the global research enterprise, supporting scientific discovery and environmental stewardship in the service of people, places, and planet. 

This work was supported by the SEEKCommons project with funding from the U.S. National Science Foundation, grant #2226425"

 

Files

SEEKCommons - September 2024 (2).pdf

Files (6.9 MB)

Name Size Download all
md5:22f8d091c87dfb6f1919e942c625b120
6.9 MB Preview Download

Additional details

Related works

Cites
Other: 10.17913/100501.9190 (DOI)

Funding

U.S. National Science Foundation
Disciplinary Improvements: The SEEKCommons Research Coordination Network 2226425