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Thank	
  you	
  for	
  this	
  invitation	
  to	
  contribute	
  to	
  the	
  formation	
  of	
  policy	
  on	
  this	
  topic.	
  

Let me begin by quoting two scientists.

The first is the	
  Spanish	
  Nobel	
  Prize	
  winner	
  	
  
                                                                                                   Santiago	
  Ramón	
  y	
  Cajal	
  
	
  
He	
  wrote:	
  
        “A	
  scholar’s	
  positive	
  contribution	
  is	
  measured	
  by	
  the	
  sum	
  of	
  the	
  
        original	
  data	
  that	
  he	
  contributes.	
  Hypotheses	
  come	
  and	
  go	
  but	
  
        data	
  remain.”	
  
                                                                                                                                      	
  
He	
  said	
  that	
  in	
  1897	
  in	
  his	
  work:	
   Advice	
  to	
  a	
  Young	
  Investigator.	
  
	
  
The	
  21st	
  Century	
  data	
  scientist	
  Mark	
  Parsons,	
  advises	
  us:	
  	
  
	
  
            “You	
  are	
  not	
  finished	
  until	
  you	
  have	
  done	
  the	
  research,	
  published	
  
            the	
  results,	
  and	
  published	
  the	
  data,	
  receiving	
  formal	
  credit	
  for	
  
            everything.”	
  
            	
  
This	
  highlights	
  two	
  key	
  concepts	
  for	
  preservation	
  of	
  scientific	
  data:	
  
	
  
Making	
  data	
  public	
  	
   and	
  	
   	
                gaining	
  recognition	
  	
  
	
  
            <<As	
  Aside:	
  On	
  the	
  matter	
  of	
  publishing	
  data,	
  my	
  lawyers	
  tell	
  me	
  
            to	
  use	
  the	
  phrase	
  ‘to	
  make	
  data	
  available’	
  	
  	
  in	
  order	
  not	
  to	
  imply	
  
            a	
  new	
  role	
  for	
  the	
  present	
  day	
  publishers.>>	
  
	
  
Two	
  key	
  challenges	
  are	
  therefore	
  
	
  
     • how	
  to	
  make	
  data	
  available	
  into	
  the	
  future,	
  and	
  for	
  the	
  future	
  
	
  
<<	
  data	
  need	
  not	
  be	
  digital;	
  all	
  that	
  is	
  digital	
  are	
  not	
  always	
  data	
  –	
  but	
  
they	
  might	
  become	
  so.	
  >>	
  
	
  
and	
  	
  
	
  
     • how	
  to	
  provide	
  the	
  reward	
  of	
  recognition,	
  to	
  add	
  motivation	
  by	
  
            carrot,	
  not	
  just	
  the	
  stick	
  of	
  compliance.	
  	
  
	
  
	
  



	
                                                                        1	
  
 I	
  would	
  like	
  to	
  make	
  three	
  recommendations:	
  
	
  	
  
1.	
  First,	
  in	
  seeking	
  to	
  preserve	
  the	
  record	
  of	
  science	
  for	
  the	
  future,	
  we	
  
should	
  include	
  research	
  literature	
  as	
  an	
  important	
  part	
  of	
  the	
  
record	
  of	
  science.	
  Both	
  have	
  evidential	
  value	
  for	
  research,	
  and	
  the	
  
relationship	
  between	
  the	
  two	
  is	
  also	
  important.	
  	
  
	
  
**	
  In	
  order	
  to	
  keep	
  to	
  time,	
  I	
  would	
  like	
  to	
  submit	
  separate	
  written	
  note	
  
on	
  the	
  relationship	
  between	
  research	
  literature	
  and	
  research	
  data,	
  in	
  
which	
  I	
  contrast	
  three	
  types	
  of	
  data	
  [reversing	
  the	
  labels	
  I	
  have	
  used	
  
elsewhere	
  to	
  give	
  prominence	
  to	
  the	
  data	
  originating	
  close	
  to	
  the	
  
instrument	
  by	
  which	
  the	
  data	
  were	
  generated]:	
  	
  
	
  
                            A. the	
  source	
  &	
  reference	
  databases	
  that	
  are	
  curated	
  in	
  data	
  
                               centres	
  and	
  large-­‐scale	
  research	
  ‘data	
  factories’	
  –	
  from	
  
                               which	
  datasets	
  are	
  often	
  extracted	
  and	
  analysed	
  by	
  
                               researchers	
  	
  
                               	
  
                            B. the	
  datasets	
  upon	
  which	
  the	
  conclusions	
  published	
  in	
  
                               literature	
  are	
  based	
  
	
  
                            C. the	
  supplementary	
  data	
  files	
  that	
  increasingly	
  accompany	
  
                               enhanced	
  e-­‐publication	
  in	
  research	
  literature.	
  	
  
                     	
  
Responsibilities	
  for	
  these	
  different	
  types	
  of	
  data	
  differ.	
  
	
  
2.	
  My	
  second	
  recommendation	
  is	
  that	
  ‘future-­proofing’	
  requires	
  we	
  
make	
  data	
  available	
  	
  	
  	
  -­	
  	
  as	
  though	
  for	
  researchers	
  beyond	
  our	
  
immediate	
  peer	
  group	
  and	
  	
  	
  for	
  the	
  machine-­as-­user	
  
       	
  
	
  -­‐	
  thereby	
  to	
  ensure	
  that	
  future	
  researchers	
  can	
  use	
  their	
  software	
  on	
  
these	
  data	
  for	
  what	
  can	
  only	
  be	
  called	
  	
  	
  	
  ‘unimaginable	
  purposes’.	
  
	
            	
  
This	
  means	
  opening	
  up	
  the	
  knowledge	
  now	
  locked	
  in	
  document	
  formats	
  
like	
  pdf	
  so	
  that	
  the	
  scientific	
  literature	
  becomes	
  scientific	
  data.	
  	
  
	
  
3.	
  Third,	
  when	
  the	
  Commission	
  re-­‐visits	
  the	
  grand	
  societal	
  challenges	
  to	
  
which	
  research	
  can	
  and	
  should	
  address,	
  it	
  should	
  regard	
  ‘assured	
  and	
  
continuing	
  access	
  to	
  digital	
  content’	
  itself	
  as	
  a	
  grand	
  societal	
  
challenge	
  -­‐	
  one	
  to	
  which	
  Europe’s	
  scientific	
  and	
  scholarly	
  community	
  
can	
  and	
  are	
  making	
  globally	
  significant	
  and	
  lead	
  contribution.	
  	
  	
  
	
  
It	
  follows	
  that	
  we	
  should	
  not	
  have	
  a	
  narrow	
  view	
  of	
  science	
  and	
  
scientific	
  data.	
  


	
                                                                  2	
  
 What	
  then	
  of	
  preservation	
  of	
  research	
  literature?	
  	
  	
  
	
  
In	
  days	
  of	
  print	
  no	
  one	
  expected	
  the	
  publishers	
  to	
  have	
  the	
  last	
  copy;	
  it	
  
was	
  for	
  the	
  libraries	
  to	
  exercise	
  stewardship	
  on	
  behalf	
  of	
  future	
  
researchers.	
  	
  
	
  
But	
  with	
  digital	
  anytime/anyplace	
  access,	
  libraries	
  do	
  not	
  easily	
  have	
  
that	
  opportunity	
  –	
  and	
  it	
  is	
  not	
  necessary	
  that	
  every	
  library	
  has	
  to	
  have	
  
every	
  copy	
  on	
  its	
  digital	
  shelf.	
  	
  There	
  are	
  better	
  ways	
  of	
  behaving.	
  
	
  
Fortunately	
  several	
  organisations	
  are	
  stepping	
  forward	
  to	
  be	
  active	
  as	
  
archiving	
  agencies	
  –	
  LOCKSS,	
  CLOCKSS,	
  Portico	
  and	
  national	
  libraries	
  
such	
  as	
  the	
  BL	
  and	
  the	
  Dutch	
  KB	
  are	
  all	
  working	
  with	
  publishers	
  to	
  take	
  
stewardship	
  of	
  e-­‐journal	
  and	
  other	
  digital	
  content.	
  	
  	
  
	
  
I’m	
  pleased	
  to	
  report	
  that	
  the	
  ISSN	
  International	
  Centre	
  in	
  Paris	
  and	
  
EDINA	
  have	
  been	
  working	
  with	
  those	
  leading	
  agencies	
  in	
  a	
  JISC-­‐funded	
  
project	
  to	
  create	
  an	
  online	
  facility,	
  peprs.org	
  to	
  act	
  as	
  a	
  monitor	
  to	
  
establish	
  who	
  is	
  looking	
  after	
  what	
  e-­journal,	
  how,	
  and	
  with	
  what	
  
terms	
  of	
  access.	
  	
  	
  	
  
	
  
peprs.org	
  is	
  available	
  now	
  as	
  an	
  online	
  source	
  about	
  the	
  ‘keepers’	
  –	
  in	
  
Beta	
  form	
  -­‐	
  	
  and	
  we	
  are	
  seeking	
  help	
  on	
  establishing	
  how	
  it	
  should	
  be	
  
governed.	
  
	
  
Research	
  literature	
  is	
  of	
  international	
  concern.	
  It	
  requires	
  international	
  
action.	
  Our	
  experience	
  is	
  that	
  relying	
  upon	
  legal	
  deposit	
  legislation	
  is	
  not	
  
enough.	
  	
  	
  
	
  
For	
  example,	
  as	
  one	
  of	
  12	
  steward	
  libraries,	
  the	
  University	
  of	
  Edinburgh	
  
is	
  one	
  of	
  three	
  secure	
  Archive	
  Nodes	
  in	
  Europe	
  (*)	
  on	
  behalf	
  of	
  CLOCKSS	
  
which	
  has	
  reached	
  direct	
  and	
  international	
  agreement	
  with	
  publishers.	
  	
  
	
  
The	
  EU	
  and	
  the	
  Commission	
  have	
  an	
  important	
  part	
  to	
  play	
  in	
  ensuring	
  
that	
  Europe	
  has	
  a	
  lead	
  role.	
  	
  	
  	
  
	
  
	
  
*	
  the	
  other	
  two	
  are	
  Humboldt	
  University	
  (Berlin,	
  Germany)	
  and	
  Università	
  Cattolica	
  
del	
  Sacro	
  Cuore	
  	
  (Milan,	
  Italy)




	
                                                         3	
  
In	
  closing	
  I	
  would	
  like	
  to	
  say	
  a	
  few	
  words	
  about	
  the	
  ways	
  in	
  which	
  the	
  
University	
  of	
  Edinburgh	
  has	
  been	
  involved	
  and	
  the	
  contribution	
  we	
  have	
  
been	
  attempting	
  to	
  make,	
  over	
  the	
  long	
  and	
  for	
  the	
  long.	
  
	
  
The	
  University	
  is	
  a	
  research-­‐led	
  seat	
  of	
  learning,	
  set	
  in	
  Scotland’s	
  
Capital,	
  renown	
  for	
  the	
  flourishing	
  of	
  the	
  Scottish	
  Enlightenment,	
  and	
  
now	
  contributing	
  internationally	
  to	
  the	
  UK	
  and	
  European	
  research	
  base.	
  
Its	
  commitment	
  to	
  stewardship	
  for	
  research	
  content	
  was	
  signaled	
  
from	
  the	
  start,	
  as	
  the	
  Library	
  came	
  first,	
  three	
  years	
  ahead	
  of	
  the	
  
start	
  of	
  what	
  became	
  the	
  first	
  civic	
  university	
  in	
  1583.	
  	
  
	
  
What	
  now	
  of	
  its	
  digital	
  stewardship?	
  	
  
	
  
In	
  1983,	
  Edinburgh	
  decided	
  to	
  set	
  up	
  the	
  first	
  University	
  Data	
  Library	
  in	
  
the	
  UK,	
  having	
  studied	
  the	
  growth	
  of	
  national	
  social	
  science	
  data	
  
archives	
  in	
  Europe	
  and	
  institutional	
  data	
  libraries	
  in	
  North	
  America.	
  	
  
	
  
          I	
  was	
  at	
  the	
  University	
  at	
  the	
  time	
  as	
  a	
  research	
  statistician,	
  
          designing	
  and	
  supervising	
  sample	
  surveys	
  in	
  a	
  research	
  centre	
  
          that	
  had	
  begun	
  to	
  make	
  its	
  data	
  available	
  for	
  others	
  to	
  use,	
  
          engaging	
  with	
  practitioners.	
  	
  
          	
  
          I	
  was	
  recruited	
  to	
  take	
  charge	
  of	
  this	
  new	
  Data	
  Library.	
  	
  What	
  I	
  
          learnt	
  was	
  much	
  about	
  data	
  archiving	
  but	
  a	
  great	
  deal	
  more	
  about	
  
          how	
  to	
  assist	
  researchers	
  and	
  students	
  discover	
  and	
  obtain	
  
          access	
  to	
  data	
  produced	
  by	
  others.	
  	
  
          	
  
          I	
  learnt	
  how	
  to	
  be	
  demand-­focussed.	
  
	
  
          That	
  has	
  helped	
  when	
  realising	
  the	
  plans	
  of	
  policy	
  agencies	
  like	
  
          JISC	
  working	
  to	
  serve	
  research	
  needs	
  across	
  the	
  UK	
  	
  
          –	
  done	
  via	
  a	
  range	
  of	
  content	
  and	
  infrastructure	
  services	
  deployed	
  
          by	
  EDINA	
  as	
  national	
  academic	
  data	
  centre,	
  and	
  the	
  Digital	
  
          Curation	
  Centre	
  taking	
  the	
  lead	
  internationally	
  in	
  combining	
  the	
  
          two	
  approaches	
  of	
  value-­‐added	
  data	
  curation	
  and	
  long	
  term	
  digital	
  
          preservation.	
  	
  	
  	
  
[David	
  and	
  I	
  worked	
  together	
  during	
  that	
  set-­‐up	
  phase	
  for	
  the	
  DCC.]	
  
	
  
Edinburgh	
  is	
  the	
  venue	
  for	
  the	
  INSPIRE	
  Conference	
  next	
  month	
  to	
  which	
  
my	
  colleagues	
  are	
  contributing	
  5	
  papers,	
  including	
  one	
  on	
  ‘continuing	
  
access’	
  for	
  these	
  spatially-­‐reference	
  data	
  produces	
  by	
  public	
  sector	
  
bodies	
  across	
  Europe.


	
                                                        4	
  
David	
  spoke	
  of	
  mandates.	
  I	
  am	
  delighted	
  to	
  be	
  able	
  to	
  announce	
  that	
  
earlier	
  this	
  month,	
  the	
  University	
  now	
  has	
  claim	
  to	
  be	
  among	
  the	
  first	
  to	
  
approve	
  an	
  institutional	
  policy	
  to	
  guide	
  researchers	
  and	
  support	
  staff	
  in	
  
their	
  management	
  of	
  digital	
  research	
  data.	
  	
  
	
  
http://www.ed.ac.uk/schools-­‐departments/information-­‐services/about/news/research-­‐policy-­‐news	
  	
  
	
  
Three	
  of	
  the	
  policy	
  measures	
  are	
  as	
  follows:	
  
	
  
·	
  	
  Research	
  data	
  of	
  future	
  historical	
  interest,	
  and	
  all	
  research	
  data	
  
that	
  represent	
  records	
  of	
  the	
  University,	
  including	
  data	
  that	
  
substantiate	
  research	
  findings,	
  will	
  be	
  offered	
  and	
  assessed	
  for	
  
deposit	
  and	
  retention	
  in	
  an	
  appropriate	
  national	
  or	
  international	
  
data	
  service	
  or	
  domain	
  repository,	
  or	
  a	
  University	
  repository.	
  
	
  
·	
  	
  Any	
  data	
  which	
  is	
  retained	
  elsewhere,	
  for	
  example	
  in	
  an	
  
international	
  data	
  service	
  or	
  domain	
  repository	
  should	
  be	
  registered	
  
with	
  the	
  University.	
  
	
  
·	
  	
  Exclusive	
  rights	
  to	
  reuse	
  or	
  publish	
  research	
  data	
  should	
  not	
  be	
  
handed	
  over	
  to	
  commercial	
  publishers	
  or	
  agents	
  without	
  retaining	
  the	
  
rights	
  to	
  make	
  the	
  data	
  openly	
  available	
  for	
  re-­use,	
  unless	
  this	
  is	
  a	
  
condition	
  of	
  funding.	
  
	
  
This	
  policy	
  recognizes	
  that	
  archival	
  responsibility	
  and	
  digital	
  
preservation	
  are	
  not	
  just	
  something	
  to	
  think	
  about	
  at	
  the	
  end	
  of	
  a	
  
project,	
  but	
  at	
  the	
  outset.	
  	
  
	
  
It	
  sets	
  standards	
  and	
  defines	
  the	
  different	
  responsibilities	
  for	
  the	
  
institution	
  and	
  the	
  researcher	
  -­‐	
  for	
  the	
  all	
  important	
  PIs.	
  	
  It	
  is	
  being	
  
followed	
  through	
  with	
  implementation	
  via	
  the	
  training	
  and	
  services	
  
that	
  many	
  researchers	
  will	
  need	
  including	
  provision	
  of	
  a	
  central	
  
resilient	
  data	
  storage	
  service.	
  	
  
                                                      ***********	
  
To	
  re-­state	
  those	
  three	
  recommendations:	
  
	
  	
  
          • include	
  research	
  literature	
  as	
  part	
  of	
  the	
  record	
  of	
  science	
  	
  
	
  
          • make	
  data	
  available	
  for	
  the	
  machine-­as-­user	
  
	
  
          • propose	
  ‘assured	
  and	
  continuing	
  access	
  to	
  digital	
  content’	
  as	
  
             the	
  next	
  grand	
  societal	
  challenge	
  


	
                                                        5	
  

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Digimap Update - Geoforum 2016 - Guy McGarva
 

Recommendation to the EU Hearing on Access to and Preservation of Scientific Information

  • 1. Thank  you  for  this  invitation  to  contribute  to  the  formation  of  policy  on  this  topic.   Let me begin by quoting two scientists. The first is the  Spanish  Nobel  Prize  winner     Santiago  Ramón  y  Cajal     He  wrote:   “A  scholar’s  positive  contribution  is  measured  by  the  sum  of  the   original  data  that  he  contributes.  Hypotheses  come  and  go  but   data  remain.”     He  said  that  in  1897  in  his  work:   Advice  to  a  Young  Investigator.     The  21st  Century  data  scientist  Mark  Parsons,  advises  us:       “You  are  not  finished  until  you  have  done  the  research,  published   the  results,  and  published  the  data,  receiving  formal  credit  for   everything.”     This  highlights  two  key  concepts  for  preservation  of  scientific  data:     Making  data  public     and       gaining  recognition       <<As  Aside:  On  the  matter  of  publishing  data,  my  lawyers  tell  me   to  use  the  phrase  ‘to  make  data  available’      in  order  not  to  imply   a  new  role  for  the  present  day  publishers.>>     Two  key  challenges  are  therefore     • how  to  make  data  available  into  the  future,  and  for  the  future     <<  data  need  not  be  digital;  all  that  is  digital  are  not  always  data  –  but   they  might  become  so.  >>     and       • how  to  provide  the  reward  of  recognition,  to  add  motivation  by   carrot,  not  just  the  stick  of  compliance.           1  
  • 2.  I  would  like  to  make  three  recommendations:       1.  First,  in  seeking  to  preserve  the  record  of  science  for  the  future,  we   should  include  research  literature  as  an  important  part  of  the   record  of  science.  Both  have  evidential  value  for  research,  and  the   relationship  between  the  two  is  also  important.       **  In  order  to  keep  to  time,  I  would  like  to  submit  separate  written  note   on  the  relationship  between  research  literature  and  research  data,  in   which  I  contrast  three  types  of  data  [reversing  the  labels  I  have  used   elsewhere  to  give  prominence  to  the  data  originating  close  to  the   instrument  by  which  the  data  were  generated]:       A. the  source  &  reference  databases  that  are  curated  in  data   centres  and  large-­‐scale  research  ‘data  factories’  –  from   which  datasets  are  often  extracted  and  analysed  by   researchers       B. the  datasets  upon  which  the  conclusions  published  in   literature  are  based     C. the  supplementary  data  files  that  increasingly  accompany   enhanced  e-­‐publication  in  research  literature.       Responsibilities  for  these  different  types  of  data  differ.     2.  My  second  recommendation  is  that  ‘future-­proofing’  requires  we   make  data  available        -­    as  though  for  researchers  beyond  our   immediate  peer  group  and      for  the  machine-­as-­user      -­‐  thereby  to  ensure  that  future  researchers  can  use  their  software  on   these  data  for  what  can  only  be  called        ‘unimaginable  purposes’.       This  means  opening  up  the  knowledge  now  locked  in  document  formats   like  pdf  so  that  the  scientific  literature  becomes  scientific  data.       3.  Third,  when  the  Commission  re-­‐visits  the  grand  societal  challenges  to   which  research  can  and  should  address,  it  should  regard  ‘assured  and   continuing  access  to  digital  content’  itself  as  a  grand  societal   challenge  -­‐  one  to  which  Europe’s  scientific  and  scholarly  community   can  and  are  making  globally  significant  and  lead  contribution.         It  follows  that  we  should  not  have  a  narrow  view  of  science  and   scientific  data.     2  
  • 3.  What  then  of  preservation  of  research  literature?         In  days  of  print  no  one  expected  the  publishers  to  have  the  last  copy;  it   was  for  the  libraries  to  exercise  stewardship  on  behalf  of  future   researchers.       But  with  digital  anytime/anyplace  access,  libraries  do  not  easily  have   that  opportunity  –  and  it  is  not  necessary  that  every  library  has  to  have   every  copy  on  its  digital  shelf.    There  are  better  ways  of  behaving.     Fortunately  several  organisations  are  stepping  forward  to  be  active  as   archiving  agencies  –  LOCKSS,  CLOCKSS,  Portico  and  national  libraries   such  as  the  BL  and  the  Dutch  KB  are  all  working  with  publishers  to  take   stewardship  of  e-­‐journal  and  other  digital  content.         I’m  pleased  to  report  that  the  ISSN  International  Centre  in  Paris  and   EDINA  have  been  working  with  those  leading  agencies  in  a  JISC-­‐funded   project  to  create  an  online  facility,  peprs.org  to  act  as  a  monitor  to   establish  who  is  looking  after  what  e-­journal,  how,  and  with  what   terms  of  access.           peprs.org  is  available  now  as  an  online  source  about  the  ‘keepers’  –  in   Beta  form  -­‐    and  we  are  seeking  help  on  establishing  how  it  should  be   governed.     Research  literature  is  of  international  concern.  It  requires  international   action.  Our  experience  is  that  relying  upon  legal  deposit  legislation  is  not   enough.         For  example,  as  one  of  12  steward  libraries,  the  University  of  Edinburgh   is  one  of  three  secure  Archive  Nodes  in  Europe  (*)  on  behalf  of  CLOCKSS   which  has  reached  direct  and  international  agreement  with  publishers.       The  EU  and  the  Commission  have  an  important  part  to  play  in  ensuring   that  Europe  has  a  lead  role.             *  the  other  two  are  Humboldt  University  (Berlin,  Germany)  and  Università  Cattolica   del  Sacro  Cuore    (Milan,  Italy)   3  
  • 4. In  closing  I  would  like  to  say  a  few  words  about  the  ways  in  which  the   University  of  Edinburgh  has  been  involved  and  the  contribution  we  have   been  attempting  to  make,  over  the  long  and  for  the  long.     The  University  is  a  research-­‐led  seat  of  learning,  set  in  Scotland’s   Capital,  renown  for  the  flourishing  of  the  Scottish  Enlightenment,  and   now  contributing  internationally  to  the  UK  and  European  research  base.   Its  commitment  to  stewardship  for  research  content  was  signaled   from  the  start,  as  the  Library  came  first,  three  years  ahead  of  the   start  of  what  became  the  first  civic  university  in  1583.       What  now  of  its  digital  stewardship?       In  1983,  Edinburgh  decided  to  set  up  the  first  University  Data  Library  in   the  UK,  having  studied  the  growth  of  national  social  science  data   archives  in  Europe  and  institutional  data  libraries  in  North  America.       I  was  at  the  University  at  the  time  as  a  research  statistician,   designing  and  supervising  sample  surveys  in  a  research  centre   that  had  begun  to  make  its  data  available  for  others  to  use,   engaging  with  practitioners.       I  was  recruited  to  take  charge  of  this  new  Data  Library.    What  I   learnt  was  much  about  data  archiving  but  a  great  deal  more  about   how  to  assist  researchers  and  students  discover  and  obtain   access  to  data  produced  by  others.       I  learnt  how  to  be  demand-­focussed.     That  has  helped  when  realising  the  plans  of  policy  agencies  like   JISC  working  to  serve  research  needs  across  the  UK     –  done  via  a  range  of  content  and  infrastructure  services  deployed   by  EDINA  as  national  academic  data  centre,  and  the  Digital   Curation  Centre  taking  the  lead  internationally  in  combining  the   two  approaches  of  value-­‐added  data  curation  and  long  term  digital   preservation.         [David  and  I  worked  together  during  that  set-­‐up  phase  for  the  DCC.]     Edinburgh  is  the  venue  for  the  INSPIRE  Conference  next  month  to  which   my  colleagues  are  contributing  5  papers,  including  one  on  ‘continuing   access’  for  these  spatially-­‐reference  data  produces  by  public  sector   bodies  across  Europe.   4  
  • 5. David  spoke  of  mandates.  I  am  delighted  to  be  able  to  announce  that   earlier  this  month,  the  University  now  has  claim  to  be  among  the  first  to   approve  an  institutional  policy  to  guide  researchers  and  support  staff  in   their  management  of  digital  research  data.       http://www.ed.ac.uk/schools-­‐departments/information-­‐services/about/news/research-­‐policy-­‐news       Three  of  the  policy  measures  are  as  follows:     ·    Research  data  of  future  historical  interest,  and  all  research  data   that  represent  records  of  the  University,  including  data  that   substantiate  research  findings,  will  be  offered  and  assessed  for   deposit  and  retention  in  an  appropriate  national  or  international   data  service  or  domain  repository,  or  a  University  repository.     ·    Any  data  which  is  retained  elsewhere,  for  example  in  an   international  data  service  or  domain  repository  should  be  registered   with  the  University.     ·    Exclusive  rights  to  reuse  or  publish  research  data  should  not  be   handed  over  to  commercial  publishers  or  agents  without  retaining  the   rights  to  make  the  data  openly  available  for  re-­use,  unless  this  is  a   condition  of  funding.     This  policy  recognizes  that  archival  responsibility  and  digital   preservation  are  not  just  something  to  think  about  at  the  end  of  a   project,  but  at  the  outset.       It  sets  standards  and  defines  the  different  responsibilities  for  the   institution  and  the  researcher  -­‐  for  the  all  important  PIs.    It  is  being   followed  through  with  implementation  via  the  training  and  services   that  many  researchers  will  need  including  provision  of  a  central   resilient  data  storage  service.     ***********   To  re-­state  those  three  recommendations:       • include  research  literature  as  part  of  the  record  of  science       • make  data  available  for  the  machine-­as-­user     • propose  ‘assured  and  continuing  access  to  digital  content’  as   the  next  grand  societal  challenge     5