8. Fourth Industrial Revolution
• Before: Steam & Water, Electricity &
assembly lines, Computerization
• Current and developing environment in
which disruptive technologies and trends
such as the Internet of Things, robotics,
virtual reality (VR) and artificial intelligence
(AI) are changing the way we live and
work
• Smart technologies to allow machines to
interact, visualise production chain, make
autonomous decisions
8
9. • What is the 4th Industrial Revolution?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?time_co
ntinue=5&v=kpW9JcWxKq0
• Integration between natural & artificial –
become more efficient
9
10. • ”It is characterized by a fusion of
technologies that is blurring the lines
between the physical, digital, and
biological spheres.”
• “Constant connection may deprive us of
one of life’s most important assets: the time
to pause, reflect, and engage in
meaningful conversation.”
https://www.weforum.org/agenda/2016/01/the-fourth-industrial-
revolution-what-it-means-and-how-to-respond
10
13. • Risks & opportunities:
“decision-makers are too often caught in
traditional, linear (and non-disruptive)
thinking or too absorbed by immediate
concerns to think strategically about the
forces of disruption and innovation shaping
our future.“
- Prof Klaus Schwab, Founder & CEO of World Economic Forum
13
14. National Development Plan
• “… offers a long-term perspective. It defines a
desired destination and identifies the role different
sectors of society need to play in reaching that
goal …”
• “ …. aims to eliminate poverty and reduce
inequality by 2030. According to the plan, South
Africa can realise these goals by drawing on the
energies of its people, growing an inclusive
economy, building capabilities, enhancing the
capacity of the state, and promoting leadership
and partnerships throughout society.”
15. The high domestic cost of
broadband internet connectivity is
a major hindrance. All South
Africans should be able to acquire
and use knowledge effectively.
Make high-speed broadband
internet universally available at
competitive prices.
16. Which of your tasks as a librarian in your
library will never be replaced by AI, VR,
robots?
16
18. 18
“The spread of information and
communications technology and global
interconnectedness has great potential to
accelerate human progress, to bridge the
digital divide and to develop knowledge
societies, as does scientific and
technological innovation across areas as
diverse as medicine and energy.”
Transforming our world: the UN2030
Agenda for Sustainable Development -
32. Fake Data, Fake Research
http://www.bbc.com/news/science-environment-39357819
33.
34.
35. 35
“Replications of 21 high-profile social science findings
demonstrate challenges for reproducibility and suggest
solutions to improve research credibility. Eight of the 21
studies failed to find significant evidence for the original
finding, and the replication effect sizes were about 50%
smaller than the original studies.”
https://cos.io/about/news/do-social-science-
research-findings-published-nature-and-science-
replicate/
36. Data bring Power, but also Responsibility
36
Endangered species
Classifying data to keep
poachers, enthusiasts who
might use information to
track & disturb creatures.
BUT
Declassifying data led to
discovery of at least three
new populations.
Pezoporus occidentalis
42. Intellectual Property Rights Policy
“In many African countries,
intellectual property protection
is undeveloped, ineffective,
expensive and unenforced and
in some African countries there
exists uncertainty on protection
of IP and the threat of
innovation being stolen away
from inventors.”
https://ipstrategy.com/2016/12/05/a-new-look-at-intellectual-property-
and-innovation-in-africa/
43. Early years: Awarded to individual researchers
Recently: Researchers working together/ who
collaborate
45. Open Science Defined
“Open Science is the practice of science in
such a way that others can collaborate and
contribute, where research data, lab notes
and other research processes are freely
available, under terms that enable reuse,
redistribution and reproduction of the
research and its underlying data and
methods.” - FOSTER Project, funded by the European
Commission
46. But Open Science is more than just process - it is
also about collaboration, and strong
engagement with and participation of wider
society, of which citizen science is also a
component. It is a vital enabler in maintaining
the rigour and reliability of science; in creatively
integrating diverse data resources to address
complex modern challenges; in open
innovation and in engaging with other societal
actors as knowledge partners in tackling shared
problems. It is fundamental to realisation of the
Sustainable Development Goals.
54. Original Research Data Lifecycle image from University of California, Santa Cruz
http://guides.library.ucsc.edu/datamanagement/
Repositories
Repositories
Tools
Gold/Green OA
Plan
Policy&Infrastructure
55. Benefits of Open Data
• Improve efficiency in science
• Reduce duplication and the costs of creating,
transferring and re-using data
• Enable more research on the same data
• Multiply opportunities for domestic and global
participation in the research process
56. • Increase transparency and quality in the
research validation process
• Allow greater replication and validation of
scientific results
57. • Speed the transfer of knowledge
• Reduce delays in the re-use of the results of
scientific research, including articles and data
sets
• Promote swifter development from research to
innovation
58. • Increase knowledge spill-overs to the
economy
• Increased access to the results of publicly
funded research can foster spill-overs and
boost innovation across the economy
• Increase awareness and conscious choices
among consumers
59. • Promote citizens’ engagement in science
and research
• Open Science and Open Data initiatives may
promote awareness and trust in science
among citizens
• In some cases, greater citizen engagement
may lead to active participation in scientific
experiments and data collection
60. • Address global challenges more
effectively
• Global challenges require coordinated
international actions
• Open Science and Open Data can promote
collaborative efforts and faster knowledge
transfer for a better understanding of
challenges such as climate change, and could
help identify solutions
61. “Several open science activities are
underway across Africa, but a great deal
will be gained if, in the context of
developing inter-regional links, these
activities were to be coordinated and
developed through such a coordinating
initiative.” - CODATA
62. Collaboration
• Strength in collaboration
• Disciplines group themselves together
• Without collaboration, competition will
continue
• Diversity & pooling knowledge together
help to accelerate discoveries
64. Square Kilometre Array (SKA)
Ghana, Zambia, Madagascar, Botswana,
Namibia, Kenya, Mauritius and
Mozambique
65. Testing Albert Einstein’s general theory of relativity; imaging neutral
hydrogen—the building blocks for stars – in the distant universe; and
examining galaxies that were formed billions of years ago
“Construction of the SKA is due to begin in 2018 and finish sometime
in the middle of the next decade.
Data acquisition will begin in 2020, requiring a level of processing
power and data management know-how that outstretches current
capabilities.
Astronomers estimate that the project will generate 35,000-DVDs-
worth of data every second. This is equivalent to “the whole world
wide web every day,” said Fanaroff.”
66.
67. SKA Benefitting the Community
67
“R3 million has been spent
on catering and a further
R4 million on transport in
the area since
construction began in
2012.
One hundred and seven
locals have been
employed by the South
African Astronomical
Observatory between
2015 and 2017.”
68. SKA Benefitting South Africans
SKA SA Managing Director Rob Adam
said, “We have electricians being trained,
boilermakers, fitters and turners and people
splashing the fibre that carries the signal
from the satellites through the computers,
that fibre is being splashed by people from
the local community.”
70. SKA Benefitting Africa
The SKA project will also transfer skills and
knowledge to African countries, which will
build, maintain, operate and use radio
telescopes.
It’s hoped the program will bring new
science opportunities to Africa in a relatively
short timescale and develop radio
astronomy science communities in SKA
partner countries.
71. 71
“These measurements
can provide cities with
new neighborhood-level
insights to help cities
accelerate efforts in
their transition to
smarter, healthier cities.
Data will be publicly
available on Google
BigQuery while full
datasets will be given to
science and academic
communities, according
to Google.”
72. 72
“Artificial Intelligence (AI) can analyse immense amounts of
data to help us better study, diagnose, treat and even prevent
disease.”
73. Data Democratising Agriculture
73
“ … while the big players
are operating using data,
the small holder farmers
are operating blindly
because they have no
access to key information
on how to farm.”
74. African Open Science Platform
74
http://africanopenscience.org.za/
Hosted by DIRISA
african-open-science-
platform@googlegroups.com
https://www.facebook.com/
AfricanOpenSciencePlatform/
@aosp_africa
75. 75
Launched during SFSA 2016
“The creation of the African Open
Science Platform is
an excellent example of the
tangible impact our Science Forum
has already achieved in harnessing
international partnerships to
advance African
science. The Platform will play a
critical role to assist African
countries in developing the
necessary capacities to
manage and exploit scientific data
for the benefit of society. I am
proud that our Department, and
its entities the NRF and ASSAf,
are contributing to this crucial
mission.”
Former Minister of Science and Technology,
Ms Naledi Pandor
76. Outcome of International Accord
76
• Values of open data in
emerging scientific
culture of big data
• Need for an international
framework
• Proposes comprehensive
set of principles
• FAIR Principles
• Provides framework &
plan for African data
science capacity
mobilization initiative
• Proposes African Platform
International Science Council - CODATA
77. Draft SA White Paper on STI, 2018
77
“As part of its commitment to African
STI cooperation, South Africa will also
work to advance the open science
agenda elsewhere on the continent
and within regional frameworks. The
strategic role of the African Open
Science Platform, hosted by the
Academy of Science of South Africa,
which promotes African-wide
development and coordination of data
policies, data training and data
infrastructure, will be leveraged with
the support of the DST and the National
Research Foundation (NRF). In
addition, South Africa is one of the
founding members of the global Open
Government Partnership (OECD) ….”Input by 18 October 2018
80. • Global Network of Science
Academies (IAP)
• International Science
Council(ISC)
• Regional Office for Africa
(ROA)
• Committee on Data for
Science and Technology
(CODATA)
• World Data System (WDS)
• The World Academy of Sciences
(TWAS)
• Research Data Alliance (RDA)
• National Academy of Sciences
(NAS)
• InterAcademy Partnership (IAP)
• African Union/Pan-African
Parliament (PAP)
• World Intellectual Property
Organisation (WIPO)
80
Partnerships & Stakeholders
• African Union/NEPAD
• Association of African
Universities (AAU)
• Network of African
Science Academies
(NASAC)
• African Academy of
Sciences (AAS)
• African Research Councils
(incl. DIRISA, funders)
• African Universities
• African Governments
• NRENs (Internet Service
Providers for Education)
• Other
82. Only one data repository in Africa has CoreTrustSeal
Location of repositories having acquired CoreTrustSeal (accessed September 2018)
Trusted Data Repositories
82
83.
84.
85. Cloud Computing & Networked Services
37 countries connected
Level 4 NRENs: HPC, data
repositories, data ecosystem
(identifiers, metadata),
collaborative environments
and analysis tools, platform
approaches and provision of
software/tools/etc
85
ASREN
WACREN
UbuntuNet
AfricaConnect2 coordinated regions (accessed Sept. 2018)
86. Cloud Computing & Networked Services
86
High Performance Computing in Tanzania, Kenya,
Botswana, Lesotho, Mozambique, South Africa,
Zambia, Zimbabwe
92. UN Key Message
Africa Regional Forum on Sustainable Development,
Dakar, May 2018
UN: Economic Commission for Africa
“79. The creation of an African platform for research
and innovation exchange will enable the
dissemination of goal-relevant African research and
innovation to governments and citizens. It could
form the basis for linking researchers and innovators
with the funding required to scale up their work. The
proposed platform would showcase and share
Africa’s efforts to develop goal-relevant research
and innovation and could be coordinated with the
Global Innovation Exchange.”
92
93. 93
“For [a country] to be competitive, it is
important that it keeps up with the global
trends in the provision of modern LIS that
exploit all the benefits of ICTs.
The LIS sector’s capacity to contribute to the
nation’s ability to convert knowledge into
innovations and wealth will determine its
value to the nation.”
- LIS Transformation Charter (2014) -