Overlay Journal infrastructure for Meteorological Science (OJIMS)

This presentation (the last of the day) by Sam Pepler from a data centre.

The OJIMS project is:

  • Overlay Journal Infrastructure for Meteorological Science
  • JISC and NERC funded
  • Looking specifically at a ‘data journal’ rather than traditional publication
  • Looking to evaluate business models for overlay journals
  • Creating an open access subject based repository for meteorology etc.

The University of Leeds will lead development of a dataset review policy with the Royal Meteorological Socitey (RMetS).

A ‘data journal’ is a journal that links published documents with the data that the publication uses – cf CLADDIER another JISC funded project.

What are the benefits of a data journal?

  • Extend the value of peer-review from papers to data, to provide assurance that data documentation meets the necessary scientific standards
    • Metadata standards
    • Independently understandable
    • Re-useable
    • N.B. about quality of data documentation – not about quality of data set (i.e. “can you use it”, not “is it useful”)
  • Provide an overview of the quality and applications of data, enabling it to be used more easily and appropriately in research and applications
    • adding independent quality statements about usefulness
  • Provide recognition of the work of collecting and describing data
    • High quality, reusable data is not presently a citable resources
    • The writers of papers do not necessarily acknowledge those who collected the data

Why make an overlay journal?

  • Data already in ‘a repository’ – just needs some independent review
  • Because data is bulky, compound and complex – not easy to copy (possibly not as ‘self contained’ as traditional published paper?)

MetRep is a subject based repository for meteorological sciences. This was seen as filling a gap in the market – there is no store for some of the items they want to store. Examples of MetRep items are:

  • Paper from ‘Weather’
  • Set of pictures illustrating cloud forms (e.g. teaching aid)
  • Report documenting a file format for climate models
  • Weather balloon data
  • Recording of a interview with ministers about climate change
  • IPCC reports
  • Logo for a research programme

Although some of these could sit in existing repositories – Institutional Repository, JORUM, websites, etc.

Perhaps MetRep should be an overlay repository? What does it mean to say an item is ‘in the repository’?

So – what is proposed is:

  • Establishing a ‘Overlay document’
    • Metadata about the overlay document
    • Review process information
    • Discovery metadata for the reference document
    • Reference to document (referenceable via a resolvable id in a trusted repository)
  • The ‘review process information’ consists of
    • Version of document in review cycle
      • Submitted
      • In review
      • Published
    • Public comments
    • Description of review process
    • Digital signature?
  • Metadata about the overlay document would contain
    • Author (of overlay no the referenced document)
    • Other DC (Dublin Core) fields
  • Discovery metadata for the referenced document and Reference to document
    • DC metadata harvested from document (not sure if he means from the document, or from the metadata associated with the document?)
    • Resolvable reference to document
    • Other identifiers for document

The overlay repository would have overlay documents pointing to both documents or data

The advantages he sees in this approach:

  • Clear the ‘overlay’ is a document about another document – the two items are distinct self contained
  • Authorship for the referenced and referencing document are allowed to be different – others can submit a document for review
  • The overlay document has the same meaning as a stand alone item – you can take it out of the repository context, and is still meaningful
  • Review mechanisms and repositories do not need adapting to deal with these items
  • You can review a private document/data set – answers the ‘is thing worth buying?’ question

Disadvantages:

  • Authentication issues – might be able to ‘fake’ items?
  • What if the author does not wish for document to be reviewed?

Implementation:

  • Atom XML representation (mention of OAI-ORE here)
  • Already a popular format with many tools
  • Need a tool to create the records
  • Need a web rendering method

Trusting repositories:

  • More than resolvable identifiers – need to believe the object is preserved
  • Need to know what preservation means for complex objects
  • Repositories need to have sound footing – but there are no absolute guarantees

Somewhere along the line I’ve lost the point of what we are trying to achieve with this approach – Sam is now summarising, so hopefully this will help:

  • OJIMS is about widening review processes beyond papers
  • This means storing a wider range of objects – hence MetRep
  • Data is a good e.g. of valued stuff which is not recognised in formal manner – hence ‘data journal’
  • Lots of repositories are already storing the things – hence ‘overlay repository’
  • … didn’t get the last couple of points

Overall seems to be about a way of recording the ‘review process’ alongside the actual object being reviewed.

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