Knowledge sharing and discovery across heterogeneous research infrastructures.

Journal: Open research Europe
Published Date:

Abstract

Research infrastructures play an increasingly essential role in scientific research. They provide rich data sources for scientists, such as services and software packages, via catalog and virtual research environments. However, such research infrastructures are typically domain-specific and often not connected. Accordingly, researchers and practitioners face fundamental challenges introduced by fragmented knowledge from heterogeneous, autonomous sources with complicated and uncertain relations in particular research domains. Additionally, the exponential growth rate of knowledge in a specific domain surpasses human experts' ability to formalize and capture tacit and explicit knowledge efficiently. Thus, a knowledge management system is required to discover knowledge effectively, automate the knowledge acquisition based on artificial intelligence approaches, integrate the captured knowledge, and deliver consistent knowledge to agents, research communities, and end-users. In this study, we present the development process of a knowledge management system for ENVironmental Research Infrastructures, which are crucial pillars for environmental scientists in their quest for understanding and interpreting the complex Earth System. Furthermore, we report the challenges we have faced and discuss the lessons learned during the development process.

Authors

  • Siamak Farshidi
    Department of Information and Computer Science, Utrecht University, Utrecht, The Netherlands.
  • Xiaofeng Liao
    MultiScale Networked Systems (MNS), University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, Netherlands, 1098 XK, The Netherlands.
  • Na Li
    School of Nursing, Fujian University of Traditional Chinese Medicine, Fuzhou, China.
  • Doron Goldfarb
    Environment Agency Austria, Vienna, Austria.
  • Barbara Magagna
    Environment Agency Austria, Vienna, Austria.
  • Markus Stocker
    TIB - Leibniz Information Centre for Science and Technology, Hannover, Germany.
  • Keith Jeffery
    British Geological Survey, London, UK.
  • Peter Thijsse
    MARiene Informatie Service, Nootdorp, The Netherlands.
  • Christian Pichot
    French National Institute for Agriculture, Food, and Environment, Paris, France.
  • Andreas Petzold
    Forschungszentrum Juelich GmbH, Jülich, Germany.
  • Zhiming Zhao
    MultiScale Networked Systems (MNS), University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, Netherlands, 1098 XK, The Netherlands.

Keywords

No keywords available for this article.