1 / 9

Proposal for FP7 Infrastructures Call 9: PaN-Data Meeting Outcomes in Berlin (Oct 4-5, 2010)

The PaN-Data project meeting, held in Berlin on October 4-5, 2010, focused on the FP7 Infrastructures Call 9, specifically targeting data infrastructures for e-Science. Key discussions included the seamless integration of technology layers, importance of the entire data life cycle, and the deployment of services for enhanced data sharing. Participants engaged in debates over the implementation of innovations, the relevance of a layered architecture, and the balance between technical and non-technical infrastructure elements. The proposals aim to advance data-centric scientific practices and promote collaboration.

china
Télécharger la présentation

Proposal for FP7 Infrastructures Call 9: PaN-Data Meeting Outcomes in Berlin (Oct 4-5, 2010)

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. PaN-data project meetingBerlin, 4–5 October 2010Sketch of proposal forFP7 infrastructures Call 9 Simon Lambert & Juan Bicarregui, STFC

  2. The work programme • Target call: FP7 infrastructures Call 9 • Closes 23 November 2010 • Specifically INFRA-2011-1.2.2 “Data infrastructures for e-Science” PaN-data meeting, Berlin, 4–5 October 2010

  3. The work programme PaN-data meeting, Berlin, 4–5 October 2010

  4. Topic C • (c) Scientific community-driven policy development and service deployment for data generation, provenance, quality assessment, certification, curation, annotation, navigation and management so as to promote the sharing of data and the development of trust. Key issues include standardisation and the harmonisation of metadata, semantics and ontologies, in order to ensure interoperability within and across e- Infrastructures. PaN-data meeting, Berlin, 4–5 October 2010

  5. The work programme Some key phrases from the work programme: • “the seamless integration of underlying e-Infrastructure technology layers and services” • “putting new emphasis on the whole data life cycle, from data curation and preservation to interoperability and open access, and on service deployment and tools.” • “access and interaction with a continuum of information, from raw observational and experimental data to publications.” • “The term "infrastructure" includes technical elements, such as servers, software, protocols and standards, content, as well as the legal, financial and regulatory framework, and also social and cultural practices.” PaN-data meeting, Berlin, 4–5 October 2010

  6. Proposal motivation • Basic motivation: take the “next steps” beyond the current PaN-data project • Deployment, innovation, networking/ coordination PaN-data meeting, Berlin, 4–5 October 2010

  7. Next steps beyond current activity

  8. Possible WP structure PaN-data meeting, Berlin, 4–5 October 2010

  9. Questions for debate • How much should be carried over from the EDNP proposal? Does the layered architecture and block diagram still apply? • Where is the innovation justifying the Joint Research Activities? • How much attention do we need to give to the non-technical elements of infrastructure? Will the present CSA have taken care of them as far as is needed? • How serious are we about “progress towards the vision of open and participatory data-intensive science”? PaN-data meeting, Berlin, 4–5 October 2010

More Related