Affiliation:
1. CNR - Institute of Atmospheric Pollution Research, Florence, Italy
2. European Commission - Joint Research Centre, Ispra, Italy
Abstract
Collaborative research poses important challenges and opportunities to scientific communities, such as the realization of effective interactions between different groups and organizations. Data sharing is growing increasingly important, as repositories are growing in size, number, and variety in the different domains. The underlying challenge is interoperability: between data, services, applications, models, and ultimately people. Abstraction and standardization (e.g. of data and services) have historically played an essential role in enabling interoperability. However, they proved not to be sufficient alone to let large-scale collaborative research thrive. For different spheres (e.g. social/economic realms), intermediation approaches were successfully applied to pursue similar goals in the so-called brokering approach. This chapter argues that brokering is useful to enable collaborative research as well, both by addressing technological interoperability and supporting socio-organizational challenges. A technological brokering framework, implemented to help the earth system science collaborative research, is finally presented, along with success stories.
Reference54 articles.
1. Azad, B., & Wiggins, L. L. (1995). Dynamics of Inter-Organizational Geographic Data Sharing. In H. J. Onsrud, & G. Rushton (Eds.), Sharing Geographic Information (pp. 22-43). Rutgers.
2. Supradisciplinary research practices: history, objectives and rationale
3. Technology-use mediation
4. Bigagli, L., Nativi, S., Mazzetti, P., & Villoresi, G. (2004). GI-Cat: a Web service for dataset cataloguing based on ISO 19115. In Proceedings of Database and Expert Systems Applications, (pp. 846-850). Munich, Germany: IEEE.
5. From Shared Databases to Communities of Practice: A Taxonomy of Collaboratories
Cited by
6 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献