Global Community Guidelines for Documenting, Sharing, and Reusing Quality Information of Individual Digital Datasets

Open-source science builds on open and free resources that include data, metadata, software, and workflows. Informed decisions on whether and how to (re)use digital datasets are dependent on an understanding about the quality of the underpinning data and relevant information. However, quality inform...

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Main Authors: Peng, G., Lacagnina, C., Downs, R.R., Ganske, A., Ramapriyan, H.K., Ivanova, Ivana, Wyborn, L., Jones, D., Bastin, L., Shie, C.L., Moroni, D.F.
Format: Journal Article
Published: 2022
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/90688
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author Peng, G.
Lacagnina, C.
Downs, R.R.
Ganske, A.
Ramapriyan, H.K.
Ivanova, Ivana
Wyborn, L.
Jones, D.
Bastin, L.
Shie, C.L.
Moroni, D.F.
author_facet Peng, G.
Lacagnina, C.
Downs, R.R.
Ganske, A.
Ramapriyan, H.K.
Ivanova, Ivana
Wyborn, L.
Jones, D.
Bastin, L.
Shie, C.L.
Moroni, D.F.
author_sort Peng, G.
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Open-source science builds on open and free resources that include data, metadata, software, and workflows. Informed decisions on whether and how to (re)use digital datasets are dependent on an understanding about the quality of the underpinning data and relevant information. However, quality information, being difficult to curate and often context specific, is currently not readily available for sharing within and across disciplines. To help address this challenge and promote the creation and (re) use of freely and openly shared information about the quality of individual datasets, members of several groups around the world have undertaken an effort to develop international community guidelines with practical recommendations for the Earth science community, collaborating with international domain experts. The guidelines were inspired by the guiding principles of being findable, accessible, interoperable, and reusable (FAIR). Use of the FAIR dataset quality information guidelines is intended to help stakeholders, such as scientific data centers, digital data repositories, and producers, publishers, stewards and managers of data, to: i) capture, describe, and represent quality information of their datasets in a manner that is consistent with the FAIR Guiding Principles; ii) allow for the maximum discovery, trust, sharing, and reuse of their datasets; and iii) enable international access to and integration of dataset quality information. This article describes the processes that developed the guidelines that are aligned with the FAIR principles, presents a generic quality assessment workflow, describes the guidelines for preparing and disseminating dataset quality information, and outlines a path forward to improve their disciplinary diversity.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-906882023-04-03T00:20:27Z Global Community Guidelines for Documenting, Sharing, and Reusing Quality Information of Individual Digital Datasets Peng, G. Lacagnina, C. Downs, R.R. Ganske, A. Ramapriyan, H.K. Ivanova, Ivana Wyborn, L. Jones, D. Bastin, L. Shie, C.L. Moroni, D.F. Open-source science builds on open and free resources that include data, metadata, software, and workflows. Informed decisions on whether and how to (re)use digital datasets are dependent on an understanding about the quality of the underpinning data and relevant information. However, quality information, being difficult to curate and often context specific, is currently not readily available for sharing within and across disciplines. To help address this challenge and promote the creation and (re) use of freely and openly shared information about the quality of individual datasets, members of several groups around the world have undertaken an effort to develop international community guidelines with practical recommendations for the Earth science community, collaborating with international domain experts. The guidelines were inspired by the guiding principles of being findable, accessible, interoperable, and reusable (FAIR). Use of the FAIR dataset quality information guidelines is intended to help stakeholders, such as scientific data centers, digital data repositories, and producers, publishers, stewards and managers of data, to: i) capture, describe, and represent quality information of their datasets in a manner that is consistent with the FAIR Guiding Principles; ii) allow for the maximum discovery, trust, sharing, and reuse of their datasets; and iii) enable international access to and integration of dataset quality information. This article describes the processes that developed the guidelines that are aligned with the FAIR principles, presents a generic quality assessment workflow, describes the guidelines for preparing and disseminating dataset quality information, and outlines a path forward to improve their disciplinary diversity. 2022 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/90688 10.5334/dsj-2022-008 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0 fulltext
spellingShingle Peng, G.
Lacagnina, C.
Downs, R.R.
Ganske, A.
Ramapriyan, H.K.
Ivanova, Ivana
Wyborn, L.
Jones, D.
Bastin, L.
Shie, C.L.
Moroni, D.F.
Global Community Guidelines for Documenting, Sharing, and Reusing Quality Information of Individual Digital Datasets
title Global Community Guidelines for Documenting, Sharing, and Reusing Quality Information of Individual Digital Datasets
title_full Global Community Guidelines for Documenting, Sharing, and Reusing Quality Information of Individual Digital Datasets
title_fullStr Global Community Guidelines for Documenting, Sharing, and Reusing Quality Information of Individual Digital Datasets
title_full_unstemmed Global Community Guidelines for Documenting, Sharing, and Reusing Quality Information of Individual Digital Datasets
title_short Global Community Guidelines for Documenting, Sharing, and Reusing Quality Information of Individual Digital Datasets
title_sort global community guidelines for documenting, sharing, and reusing quality information of individual digital datasets
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/90688