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NOTICE: The project that is the subject of this report was approved by the Governing Board of the National Research Council, whose members are drawn from the councils of the National Academy of Sciences, the National Academy of Engineering, and the Institute of Medicine. The members of the committee responsible for the report were chosen for their special competences and with regard for appropriate balance.
This report has been reviewed by a group other than the authors according to procedures approved by a Report Review Committee consisting of members of the National Academy of Sciences, the National Academy of Engineering, and the Institute of Medicine.
Support for this project was provided by the National Science Foundation (under grant no. INT-9507279), the National Library of Medicine (under purchase orders 467-FZ-501994, 467-MZ-60063 1, and 467-FZ-402090), the Defense Technical Information Center (under purchase order no. D-03-94 and award no. SP060096P0470), the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (under purchase order S-73093-Z), the National Institute of Standards and Technology (under contract no. 50SBNB6C9118), the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (under grant nos. NA56EC0622 and 56-DKNA-7-95101), and the Department of Energy (under grant no. DE-FG0296ER30277).
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Bits of power : issues in global access to scientific data / Committee on Issues in the Transborder Flow of Scientific Data, U.S. National Committee for CODATA, Commission on Physical Sciences, Mathematics, and Applications, National Research Council.
p. cm.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN 0-309-05635-7
1. Communication in science. 2. Research—Information services. 3. Database management. 4. Information technology. I. U.S. National Committee for CODATA. Committee on Issues in the Transborder Flow of Scientific Data. Q223.B58 1997 97-4836
Bits of Power: Issues in Global Access to Scientific Data is available from the
National Academy Press,
2101 Constitution Ave., NW, Box 285, Washington, DC 20055 (1-800-824-6242; http://www.nap.edu).
Cover photo courtesy of Peter Arnold, Inc., New York, N.Y.
Copyright 1997 by the National Academy of Sciences. All rights reserved.
Printed in the United States of America
COMMITTEE ON ISSUES IN THE TRANSBORDER FLOW OF SCIENTIFIC DATA
R. STEPHEN BERRY,
University of Chicago,
Chair
SHELTON A. ALEXANDER,
Pennsylvania State University
BETH E. ALLEN,
University of Minnesota
MARION BAUMGARDNER,
Purdue University
ANNE W. BRANSCOMB,
Harvard University
JOLIE A. CIZEWSKI,
Rutgers University
MARTIN W. DUBETZ,
Washington University
GERALD R. FAULHABER,
University of Pennsylvania
JOANNE I. GABRYNOWICZ,
University of North Dakota
PAUL H. GINSPARG,
Los Alamos National Laboratory
WILLIAM E. GORDON,
Rice University
RICHARD E. HALLGREN,
American Meteorological Society
DONALD W. KING,
King Research
MICAH I. KRICHEVSKY,
Bionomics International
THOMAS F. MALONE,
Sigma Xi
JERRY M. MELILLO,
Marine Biological Laboratory (through May 1996)
JEROME H. REICHMAN,
Vanderbilt University
B.K. RICHARD, TRW ETHAN J. SCHREIER,
Space Telescope Science Institute
DIETER SOLL,
Yale University
JACK H. WESTBROOK,
Brookline Technologies
RONALD L. WIGINGTON,
American Chemical Society (retired)
National Research Council Staff
PAUL F. UHLIR, Study Director
JULIE M. ESANU, Program Associate
DAVID BASKIN, Project Assistant
ALEXANDRA C. SPAITH, Project Assistant
U.S. NATIONAL COMMITTEE FOR CODATA
DAVID R. LIDE, JR.,
National Institute of Standards and Technology (retired),
Chair
STANLEY M. BESEN,*
Charles River Associates, Inc.
LOIS BLAINE,
American Type Culture Collection
WILLIAM BONNER,
University Corporation for Atmospheric Research
EVAN BUCK,
Union Carbide Corporation
NAHUM D. GERSHON,
MITRE Corporation
ALI GHOVANLOU,
Department of Energy
BRUCE GRITTON,
Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute
JULIAN HUMPHRIES,
Cornell University
MICAH I. KRICHEVSKY,
Bionomics International
DAVID MARK,
State University of New York at Buffalo
GOETZ OERTEL,
Association of Universities for Research in Astronomy
STANLEY RUTTENBERG,*
National Center for Atmospheric Research (retired)
PAMELA SAMUELSON,*
University of California at Berkeley
National Research Council Staff
PAUL F. UHLIR, Director
JULIE M. ESANU, Program Associate
DAVID BASKIN, Project Assistant
ALEXANDRA C. SPAITH, Project Assistant
COMMISSION ON PHYSICAL SCIENCES, MATHEMATICS, AND APPLICATIONS
ROBERT J. HERMANN,
United Technologies Corporation,
Co-Chair
W. CARL LINEBERGER,
University of Colorado,
Co-Chair
PETER M. BANKS,
Environmental Research Institute of Michigan
LAWRENCE D. BROWN,
University of Pennsylvania
RONALD G. DOUGLAS,
Texas A&M University
JOHN E. ESTES,
University of California at Santa Barbara
L. LOUIS HEGEDUS,
Elf Atochem North America, Inc.
JOHN E. HOPCROFT,
Cornell University
RHONDA J. HUGHES,
Bryn Mawr College
SHIRLEY A. JACKSON, U.S.
Nuclear Regulatory Commission
KENNETH H. KELLER,
University of Minnesota
KENNETH I. KELLERMANN,
National Radio Astronomy Observatory
MARGARET G. KIVELSON,
University of California at Los Angeles
DANIEL KLEPPNER,
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
JOHN KREICK,
Sanders, a Lockheed Martin Company
MARSHA I. LESTER,
University of Pennsylvania
THOMAS A. PRINCE,
California Institute of Technology
NICHOLAS P. SAMIOS,
Brookhaven National Laboratory
L.E. SCRIVEN,
University of Minnesota
SHMUEL WINOGRAD,
IBM T.J. Watson Research Center
CHARLES A. ZRAKET,
MITRE Corporation (retired)
NORMAN METZGER, Executive Director
PAUL F. UHLIR, Associate Executive Director
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Preface
Science is perhaps the most truly international of human enterprises, not because it is based on cooperation among nations but rather because its practitioners collaborate and compete in an endeavor in which nationality tends to be irrelevant. Since Galileo corresponded with Kepler and Leeuwenhoek sent his observations to the Royal Society in London, the internationalization of science has grown steadily, with post-World War II travel and fellowship support, growing numbers of opportunities for academic exchanges, and, most recently, electronic information exchange and the end of the Cold War. Financial support for science, especially by governments, has been crucial in enabling this international interchange.
At the same time, such support has made possible a manifold expansion of science, in numbers of scientists, institutions, and publications. The amount of scientific data has grown both because there are more scientists and because with technological advances, each of them can produce more data than ever before.
But as new technologies and working styles rapidly supersede older ones, altogether new problems are appearing that affect how data are handled and used. Some of these are technical; others are directly related to the substance of the science itself. Still others involve legal, economic, and social dilemmas that arise when the work of scientists is integrated into the daily life of the larger society. One such issue that is particularly important for science concerns the exchange of scientific data, especially exchange across national boundaries. Factors affecting exchange of data in the natural sciences, and the significance of important changes affecting access to data, are the central topic of this report.
In 1994 the U.S. National Committee for the Committee on Data for Science
and Technology (CODATA),1 organized under the Commission on Physical Sciences, Mathematics, and Applications of the National Research Council, established the Committee on Issues in the Transborder Flow of Scientific Data to investigate the changing environment for the international exchange of scientific data in the natural sciences. The results of the study committee's deliberations constitute the substance of this report. Its aim is to examine the current state of global access to scientific data, to identify strengths, problems, and challenges that exist today or appear likely to arise in the next few years, and to recommend actions to build on those strengths and ameliorate or avoid those problems. The focus is on data in the natural sciences, because that is the primary subject-matter purview of CODATA, but this should not be interpreted as implying that the committee considers engineering or social science data to be less important. Although many of the issues identified in this study pertain to those other discipline domains as well, they involve different contexts and problems that require additional study.
The committee included practicing scientists who both contribute to and use the data resources needed in international scientific efforts, computer scientists and engineers who create and maintain the means for such exchange, economists who interpret how the scientific enterprise sustains itself in the larger society, and lawyers who specialize in scientific data problems. Learning to talk with each other and to understand different perspectives was a necessary step toward reaching some agreement on important issues and crafting recommendations to address them. In all of these efforts, the focus was on understanding how to ensure global access to the data required to conduct basic research in the natural sciences. The committee's specific recommendations are presented in the relevant sections of the main text and are listed together in the summary that begins this report.
R. Stephen Berry, Chair
Committee on Issues in the Transborder Flow of Scientific Data
Paul F. Uhlir, Study Director
1 | CODATA is an interdisciplinary committee of the International Council of Scientific Unions. CODATA is concerned with all types of quantitative and qualitative data resulting from experimental measurements or observations in the physical, biological, geological, and astronomical sciences. Particular emphasis is given to data management problems common to different scientific disciplines and to data used outside the field in which they were generated. The general objectives are the improvement of the quality and accessibility of data, as well as the methods by which data are acquired, managed, and analyzed; the facilitation of international cooperation among those collecting, organizing, and using data; and the promotion of an increased awareness in the scientific and technical community of the importance of these activities. Additional information about CODATA is available on-line at <http://www.cisti.nrc.ca/programs/codata/welcome.html> or from the CODATA Secretariat, 51 Boulevard de Montmorency, 75016 Paris, France. |
Acknowledgments
The study committee is very grateful to the many individuals who played a significant role in the completion of this study. The committee held its first meeting on January 20-22, 1995, and extends its thanks to the following individuals who provided briefings and other information from the study's sponsoring agencies: Gerald Barton and Christopher Miller of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration; William Blanpied of the National Science Foundation; Joseph Bredekamp of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration; Kurt Molholm of the Defense Technical Information Center; John Rumble of the National Institute of Standards and Technology; and Elliot Siegel of the National Library of Medicine. At this meeting, the committee also received background briefings from other federal agency representatives, including Gesina C. (Cynthia) Carter, Wanda Farrell, and Jay Snoddy of the Department of Energy; Paul Kanciruk of the Oak Ridge National Laboratory; and Dorothy Bergamaschi of the Department of State.
The committee also extends its thanks to the issue area experts who briefed the committee at its September 22-24, 1995, meeting: Gershon Sher of the National Science Foundation, Gregory van der Vink of the Incorporated Research Institutions for Seismology, Carlos Gamboa of the Pan American Health Organization, Amy Gimble of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, and Lane Smith of the U.S. Agency for International Development participated in a roundtable discussion of data access issues in less developed countries; Hal Varian of the University of California at Berkeley discussed economic aspects of data transfer on the Internet; John Baumgarten of Proskauer, Rose, Goetz, and Mendelsohn, Mary Levering of the Library of Congress, Ed-
ward Malloy of the State Department, Pamela Samuelson of the University of California at Berkeley, and Peter Weiss of the Office of Management and Budget participated in a discussion concerning intellectual property issues; and Richard Greenfield of the National Science Foundation provided an update of the World Meteorological Organization's data exchange policy.
The committee is very appreciative, as well, of the contributions of the more than 200 individuals who responded to the committee's "Inquiry to Interested Parties" (see Appendix D of this report)1 and of the many data experts who responded to specific requests for information used in the body of the report. In addition, the committee would like to express its gratitude to the members of the U.S. National Committee for CODATA, who provided oversight of this study, and the following ex officio members, who provided liaison with other relevant activities: David R. Lide, Jr., consultant and chair of the U.S. National Committee for CODATA; Francis Bretherton, of the University of Wisconsin, chair of the National Research Council's Committee on Geophysical and Environmental Data; and Ferris Webster, of the University of Delaware, chair of the CODATA Working Group on Data Access. The committee also wishes to acknowledge the assistance of Anne Linn, director of the Committee on Geophysical and Environmental Data, and Wendy White, director of the Committee on International Organizations and Programs.
Finally, the committee would like to recognize the invaluable contributions of the National Research Council staff without whom this report could not have been completed: Paul F. Uhlir, associate executive director of the Commission on Physical Sciences, Mathematics, and Applications, who served as study director; Julie M. Esanu, for the program and research assistance provided to the committee; David Baskin and Alexandra Spaith for the staff support to the committee; and editorial consultant Roseanne Price, who edited the final manuscript.
1 | An edited compilation of the responses to the committee's "Inquiry to Interested Parties" is available on the U.S. National Committee for CODATA's World Wide Web site at <http://www.nas.edu/cpsma/codata.htm>. |