Moving from small science to big science: social and organizational impediments to large scale data sharing

This paper discusses some of the issues that arise when small scientific projects make the transition to becoming part of larger scientific collaborations, as seen from a social informatics perspective. The data for the paper is drawn from two cases: a systematic study of a humpback whale research p...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Meyer, E
Format: Book Part
Language:unknown
Published: Taylor and Francis 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.4324/9780203875049
https://ora.ox.ac.uk/objects/uuid:b61b616d-70ff-4318-9813-c10b15eb856a
Description
Summary:This paper discusses some of the issues that arise when small scientific projects make the transition to becoming part of larger scientific collaborations, as seen from a social informatics perspective. The data for the paper is drawn from two cases: a systematic study of a humpback whale research project involving federating data about the population and movements of humpbacks in the Pacific Ocean, and observations based on the author’s personal experiences as part of a psychiatric genetics collaboration that has recently become involved in contributing data to a large, shared data repository. While these two projects are in very different scientific domains, theyshare a number of characteristics including decentralized decision-making, limited data management expertise, and long-term collections of legacy data that have contributed to the difficulties the projects have faced in moving from small science to big science. One of the important issues raised by this paper is the tension between the desire for flexibility and innovation inscientific practice as weighed against the need for compatible data standards in large-scale scientific data infrastructures. This tension must be resolved if e-Science and e-Social Science projects are to succeed in the long term.