The global landscape in the management and use of geospatial data is changing rapidly reconfiguring the traditional lines of demand and supply, and the actors involved. In the Big Data era, the opportunities are many but so are the challenges at the different levels. In this chapter, we situate the Big Data discussion in the context of the scientific method in a world of contested politics, in which science can no longer be seen as "neutral". We argue for a more open and participative science. Science reproducibility is not just about experiment repeatability but also about the transparency of the process leading to a shared outcome. Opening up science will need a major paradigm shift, including also an underpinning information infrastructure geared towards sharing data, information and knowledge across disciplinary boundaries. The Global Earth Observation System of System (GEOSS) was used as a case study. As we show, there is an increasing gap between the rapidity of technological progress and the slow pace of the organisational and cultural change needed to address interoperability, reproducibility and legitimacy challenges effectively.

Mind the Gap: Big Data vs. Interoperability and Reproducibility of Science

Stefano Nativi
2018

Abstract

The global landscape in the management and use of geospatial data is changing rapidly reconfiguring the traditional lines of demand and supply, and the actors involved. In the Big Data era, the opportunities are many but so are the challenges at the different levels. In this chapter, we situate the Big Data discussion in the context of the scientific method in a world of contested politics, in which science can no longer be seen as "neutral". We argue for a more open and participative science. Science reproducibility is not just about experiment repeatability but also about the transparency of the process leading to a shared outcome. Opening up science will need a major paradigm shift, including also an underpinning information infrastructure geared towards sharing data, information and knowledge across disciplinary boundaries. The Global Earth Observation System of System (GEOSS) was used as a case study. As we show, there is an increasing gap between the rapidity of technological progress and the slow pace of the organisational and cultural change needed to address interoperability, reproducibility and legitimacy challenges effectively.
2018
Istituto sull'Inquinamento Atmosferico - IIA
Inglese
Mathieu PP., Aubrecht C.
Earth Observation Open Science and Innovation
978-3-319-65632-8
https://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/978-3-319-65633-5_6
Springer
Cham, Heidelberg, New York, Dordrecht, London
SVIZZERA
Sì, ma tipo non specificato
Big Data
GEOSS
Open Data
Open Science
2
02 Contributo in Volume::02.01 Contributo in volume (Capitolo o Saggio)
268
none
Craglia, Max; Nativi, Stefano
info:eu-repo/semantics/bookPart
   European NEtwork for Redistributing Geospatial Information to user Communities - Open Data
   ENERGIC OD
   FP7
   620400

   ECOPOTENTIAL: IMPROVING FUTURE ECOSYSTEM BENEFITS THROUGH EARTH OBSERVATIONS
   ECOPOTENTIAL
   H2020
   641762
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14243/373036
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