Perspectives on Public Access to Federally Funded Scientific Research Data. Big Data and Big Challenges for Law and Legal Information, Georgetown Law Library, January 30, 2013.
1. Stewarding Big Data: Perspectives on Public Access
to Federally Funded Scientific Research Data
Big Data and Big Challenges for Law and Legal Information
Georgetown Law Library
January 30, 2013
William G. LeFurgy
Library of Congress
@blefurgy
2. My Perspective on Big Data
Stewardship
• Realizing full potential from big data depends
keeping it accessible over time
• Accessibility depends on life cycle management,
most especially preservation
• Advocate for collaborative, distributed model
• Understand that “stewardship” has a different
meaning for many data creators
3. White House RFI Input
Instructive
• Request for Information on Public Access to
Federally Funded Scientific Research Data, Nov.
2011
• Interested individuals and organizations to
provide recommendations on approaches for
ensuring long-term stewardship and
encouraging broad public access
• Input provided to inform development of agency
policies and standards for managing big data
4. Summary of Responses
• 118 individual responses
– 50% from academic research departments,
professional organizations
– 35% from libraries, repositories and allied
organizations
– 10% from publishers and commercial organizations
– 5% other
• Excellent (unstructured!) data set to analyze
current thinking on big data stewardship
5. Top-Level Policy Recommendations
• Remarkable degree of congruence among
comments
– Broadly allocate adequate resources for data
stewardship
– Extend a collaborative national digital stewardship
infrastructure
– Institute and enforce a data preservation mandate
– Strongly encourage policies to support secondary
use, respect for data
• But… conflicted about IP, copyright, privacy
6. Need: Resources
• Funders to include money in awards for data
stewardship
• Need cost models, other guidance for estimating
data life cycle costs
• Allocate expanded resources to support national
data repositories
7. Need: National Digital Stewardship
Infrastructure
• Leverage current institutional efforts to
define best practices, tools, services
• Extend community of practice for data
stewardship through collaborative action
across disciplines
• Develop a skilled workforce with data
stewardship expertise
8. Need: A Data Preservation Mandate
• Incentivize grant applicants to make realistic
plans for data
– Stronger data manager requirements in application
process
– Tie future awards to demonstrated success with data
stewardship
– Enable direct support of PIs by data stewardship
specialists
9. Support: Secondary Use, Respect for Data
• Broadly apply a citation mechanism for
data sets (e.g., DataCite, DOIs)
• Criteria for evaluating grant applications
tied to secondary use of data
• Give equal credit for publishing articles
and data sets
• Develop robust metrics to track data
publication and use
10. Muddled Picture for IP
• Opinions diverge about role of copyright,
patents, etc., in regard to research data
– Commercial interests see IP as critical
– Many data users favor Creative Commons or public
domain approach
– Data creators fall between these positions
• A significant degree of concern raised regarding
privacy in connection with IRB, personal data
11. Next Steps
• Two interagency working groups within the
National Science and Technology Council
reviewing recommendations
• Groups will develop science agency policies for
data dissemination and stewardship
• Potential for major change, as policies may have
association with funding from the Federal
science agencies
12. Websites
Request for Information: Public Access to Digital Data Resulting From
Federally Funded Scientific Research, http://ow.ly/ePB93
Your Comments on Access to Federally Funded Scientific Research
Results, http://ow.ly/ePBb9
National Science and Technology Council, http://ow.ly/h87Li
Notas do Editor
Thanks for having me here today. I’m going to do my best to give you an overview from the perspective of libraries and archives on keeping big data for scholarship and public policy.
I like the term “stewarding” to sum up all the activities involved in acquiring, preserving and making available data sets. Stewarding is essential if we as a society are going to see the full potential from big data. It’s a pretty basic proposition: somebody must devote time and effort to keeping data and to helping users access it. If this doesn’t happen, data will be hard to use, scattered and even lost. There are two basic considerations here. Collecting organizations need to concern themselves with the full life cycle of data, from initial creation, through use, to “archiving,” to long-term preservation and access, and The job is bigger than any one organization can handle; the volume and complexity of data require many organizations to work together in new ways.
I thought a good way to frame this discussion would be to summarize what a variety of organizations said in response to a recent White House request for information. This request asked for input about ensuring stewardship and encouraging broad public access to federally funded scientific research data. The White House will use the information submitted to draft revised agency policies in connection with big data. This has huge potential. The revised policies could cover requirements for data management tied to billions in funding from the National Science Foundation, the National Institutes of Health and other funding agencies.
The White House says they received 118 individual responses, all of which are made available on their website. There’s an interesting mix of respondents. Half came from discipline-specific academic research departments or professional organizations. I’d characterize them as data creators and data users. About a third of the submissions came from libraries, archives and other collecting entities. The rest came from a mix of individuals, publishers and commercial organizations. What we have here is an excellent data set that offers a broad-based snapshot of current thinking on data preservation. The response data set is seriously unstructured, as it is made up of randomly formatted textual documents, but it fairly easy to analyze.
I was pleasantly surprised at the degree of congruence among the comments. Nearly everyone enthusiastically agreed that enhanced data stewardship was critical, both to support primary scientific research and broad secondary use by the public. Most submissions explicitly called for increased resources for data stewardship. There was heavy agreement that a distributed national digital stewardship infrastructure was the right vehicle for the infusion of new funding. Apart from money, the comments also aligned in calling for a strong data preservation mandate from funding agencies. The basic idea is that receipt of funding awards should be tied to a clear expectation for long-term data management. Many of you won’t be surprised to hear that there was much less agreement on traditionally thorny topics such as intellectual property, copyright and personal privacy.
In terms of a push for increased resources, the comments clustered around three intentions. Individual funding awards should include a dedicated line item for data stewardship There is a need for models for projecting the lifetime cost of keeping data. Funding also needs to be channeled to a national infrastructure, most especially to support a distributed network of data repositories.
The focus on a national data infrastructure zeroed in on ideas for extending work that’s already underway in terms of standards, tools, and best practices. There was enthusiasm for boosting the present community of practice for data stewardship, most particularly in a way that bridges different research disciplines. This really makes sense to me. While there is excellent work going on, much of it tends to reside in specialty silos. We need to accept that, at a certain level, data stewardship has a common set of requirements that are best addressed collectively. Related to this is a pressing need for a much expanded work force of data stewards.
The need for a data preservation mandate comes down to what economists call “incentivizing.” In other words, if we want better data management, principal investigators have to be properly motivated. This motivation can come in different forms. Funding applications could call for detailed attention to data management. Evaluation of funding awards can be tied to prior demonstrated success with data stewardship And there could be provisions for data stewardship specialists to support PIs.
There was strong support for what I characterize as “respect for data,” which is linked to recognizing the broad potential for secondary use. Ideas for enabling this include adoption of a citation mechanism for data sets, such as that offered by the DateCite organization. Related to this was the proposal to give the same credit for providing useful data sets as is now given for published articles. Securing this kind of credit depends on developing a new set of metrics to track data sets and their use.
It’s no shock that consensus evaporated when it came to traditional hot-button issues. Commercial interests see control of IP as critical, while data users want relaxed IP barriers. Data creators fall between these endpoints—some want more stringent control, while others see the benefit of wider use. The issue of data privacy, most especially in connection with personal data collected under IRB rules, was strongly voiced by a number of creators, some of whom said that rules essentially barred any secondary use of certain data sets.
In terms of next steps, the ball is in the White House’s court. Two interagency working groups are mulling over the comments and will use them to draft new policies governing data stewardship. As I noted earlier, we have the potential for major improvements in how federally funded data is kept and used. But I hasten to add that the outcome is still uncertain. What is clear, however, is that there is a strong consensus among data producers, users and keepers about what should happen.
Here is a list of the websites I used in developing this presentation. Thank you.