FAIR Practices in Europe
Author(s) -
Peter Wittenburg,
Michael Lautenschlager,
Hannes Thiemann,
Carsten Baldauf,
Paul Trilsbeek
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
data intelligence
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2096-7004
pISSN - 2641-435X
DOI - 10.1162/dint_a_00048
Subject(s) - stewardship (theology) , harmonization , quality (philosophy) , space (punctuation) , correctness , political science , data science , computer science , engineering ethics , management science , public relations , engineering , law , philosophy , physics , epistemology , politics , acoustics , programming language , operating system
Institutions driving fundamental research at the cutting edge such as for example from the Max Planck Society (MPS) took steps to optimize data management and stewardship to be able to address new scientific questions. In this paper we selected three institutes from the MPS from the areas of humanities, environmental sciences and natural sciences as examples to indicate the efforts to integrate large amounts of data from collaborators worldwide to create a data space that is ready to be exploited to get new insights based on data intensive science methods. For this integration the typical challenges of fragmentation, bad quality and also social differences had to be overcome. In all three cases, well-managed repositories that are driven by the scientific needs and harmonization principles that have been agreed upon in the community were the core pillars. It is not surprising that these principles are very much aligned with what have now become the FAIR principles. The FAIR principles confirm the correctness of earlier decisions and their clear formulation identified the gaps which the projects need to address.
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