Disrupting data sharing for a healthier ocean

Author:

Pendleton Linwood H1234,Beyer Hawthorne3,Estradivari 5,Grose Susan O4ORCID,Hoegh-Guldberg Ove3,Karcher Denis B4,Kennedy Emma3,Llewellyn Lyndon6,Nys Cecile4ORCID,Shapiro Aurélie1,Jain Rahul7,Kuc Katarzyna7,Leatherland Terry7,O’Hainnin Kira7,Olmedo Guillermo7,Seow Lynette7,Tarsel Mick7

Affiliation:

1. World Wildlife Fund, 1250 24th Street NW, Washington, DC 20037, USA

2. The Nicholas Institute for Environmental Policy, Duke University, 2117 Campus Drive, P.O. Box 90335, Durham, NC 27708, USA

3. Global Change Institute, Research Road, The University of Queensland, St. Lucia QLD 4072, Australia

4. Ifremer, CNRS, UMR 6308, AMURE, IUEM, University of Western Brittany, Technopôle Brest-Iroise, Rue Dumont D' Urville, Plouzané 29280, France

5. Conservation Science Unit, WWF - Indonesia, Graha Simatupang Tower 2 Unit C, 7th - 11th Floor, Jalan Letjen TB Simatupang Jakarta 12540, Indonesia

6. Australian Institute of Marine Science, Townsville, 1526 Cape Cleveland Road, Cape Cleveland QLD 4810, Australia

7. IBM Corporation, Corporate Citizenship & Corporate Affairs, 2455 South Road, Poughkeepsie, New York 12601, USA

Abstract

Abstract Ocean ecosystems are in decline, yet we also have more ocean data, and more data portals, than ever before. To make effective decisions regarding ocean management, especially in the face of global environmental change, we need to make the best use possible of these data. Yet many data are not shared, are hard to find, and cannot be effectively accessed. We identify three classes of challenges to data sharing and use: uploading, aggregating, and navigating. While tremendous advances have occurred to improve ocean data operability and transparency, the effect has been largely incremental. We propose a suite of both technical and cultural solutions to overcome these challenges including the use of natural language processing, automatic data translation, ledger-based data identifiers, digital community currencies, data impact factors, and social networks as ways of breaking through these barriers. One way to harness these solutions could be a combinatorial machine that embodies both technological and social networking solutions to aggregate ocean data and to allow researchers to discover, navigate, and download data as well as to connect researchers and data users while providing an open-sourced backend for new data tools.

Funder

IBM Corporate Service Corps

WWF- Global Science

Global Change Institute

CGI

University of Queensland

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Ecology,Aquatic Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics,Oceanography

Reference58 articles.

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