19th International CODATA Conference
Category: World Summit on the Information Society
(WSIS)
Cherishing
the Memory of Science: Towards International Guidelines for Access to Research
Data from Public Funding
Peter Schröder (p.schroder@minocw.nl)
Co-ordinator for Information Policy, The Ministry of Education and Science,
The Netherlands
Sir Isaac Newton hit the nail on the head when writing in 1676 : "If I
have seen further it is by standing on the shoulders of giants". Only after
a serious search through the data, information and knowledge generated by the
long standing international community of scientists, a scientist will be able
to observe, analyze and discover natural phenomena "on his own" (and
qualify for the Nobel prize). To be able to climb the shoulders of the scientific
giants of Newton's time, access to a limited corpus of written sources, letters,
journals and books in libraries and archives was sufficient. Finding your scientific
way in the expanding universe of our contemporary global science system requires
capacities and facilities of quite another order. Since the brain capacity of
researchers has not increased, climbing the ladder to the shoulders of science's
giants now calls for access to ever more extensive and complex ICT facilities
: giant databases, mega repositories of scientific journals, colossal archives
and the contiously expanding Internet to connect researchers with information.
The recent jumps in scales
and scope of these facilities is bringing dramatic changes to the way our global
science system operates. Digitisation has become an essential part of the scientific
process and the management of research. To sum these changes up in a simplified
manner: Yesterday's scientists studied Nature, but today's scientists study
digital data. Digital data on Nature to be sure.
Yesterday Sir Isaac Newton did not need more than a pencil and a pad to process
his observational data into the ground breaking scientific laws we know him
by.
But today the next step in physics demands a Large Hadron Collider that will
produce 12 to 14 Petabytes of digital data per year, the full capacity of about
16 million CD ROM's, to be analysed by some 6.000 researchers, scattered around
the world, but tightly knit by the Grid computer-network of our global science
system.
In this way use of ICT has made collections of scientific data in many respects comparable to musical scores: to be used time and again for a diversity of performances by a diversity of artists for the different audiences of society. Optimum access to research data should enable researchers from all over the world to compose the full score for our knowledge based international society.
Consequently, access to
the gold mine of research data has become quickly a major issue in international
science policy and research management. The traditional exchange arrangements
between scientific colleagues no longer suffice to guarantee the necessary openness
of access to digital data resources. Optimum access requires formal agreements
on the conditions of access on the national and international levels.
The main task of establishing an adequate regulatory framework lies within the
research community: the national research councils, institutes and funding agencies.
But the general principles to build data access regimes should be a responsibility
of governments. Considering the international dimensions of the scientific effort
in general and of access to data in particular, national data access regimes
will only work when closely connected to international agreements.
At the meeting at ministerial
level of OECD's Committee for Scientific and Technological Policy on January
30, 2004, the ministers responsible for science policy endorsed a Declaration
on Access to Research data from Public Funding including a draft set of principles
and Guidelines. The Declaration will be an important step towards further international
scientific co-operation.
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Peter Shröder is co-ordinator for Information Policy at the Ministry of Education and Science in The Netherlands. He was co-chair of the OECD/CSTP Working Group led by Peter Arzberger that published the report "Promoting Promoting Access to Public Research Data for Scientific, Economic and Social Development" (2003).