領域外・複数領域(M)
セッション小記号地球科学一般・情報地球科学(GI)
セッションIDM-GI38
タイトル和文Toward Open and FAIR Physical Samples and Collections in the Earth and Planetary Sciences
英文Toward Open and FAIR Physical Samples and Collections in the Earth and Planetary Sciences
タイトル短縮名和文Open & FAIR Physical Samples
英文Open & FAIR Physical Samples
代表コンビーナ氏名和文Jens F Klump
英文Jens F Klump
所属和文CSIRO Mineral Resources
英文CSIRO Mineral Resources
共同コンビーナ 1氏名和文Toczko Sean
英文Sean Toczko
所属和文Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology
英文Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology
共同コンビーナ 2氏名和文富山 隆將
英文Takayuki Tomiyama
所属和文海洋研究開発機構
英文Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology
共同コンビーナ 3氏名和文村山 泰啓
英文Yasuhiro Murayama
所属和文国立研究開発法人情報通信研究機構 戦略的プログラムオフィス
英文Strategic Program Produce Office, National Institute of Information and Communications Technology
発表言語E
スコープ和文Physical samples play a central role in a wide range of earth, environmental, and planetary sciences even in the digital age. Research funders invest substantial resources into local, national, and international projects and programs to collect samples, often in remote locations, during expensive and laborious field programs, on land and at sea.

These samples are described and analyzed in laboratories, offices, and teaching efforts. Much attention is currently afforded by the international research community to ensure that the results from these studies, including any data that were generated on samples, are persistently findable, accessible, interoperable, reusable (FAIR), but the underlying samples often remain unfindable, inaccessible, and unusable, and are most likely to be destroyed or abandoned.

Best practices and guidelines for FAIR data and software are well advanced, less so for physical samples and collections. There is an urgent need to establish criteria for FAIR samples that can inform policies of funders and publishers regarding access and curation of samples. Researchers and academic institutions need guidance to plan for and implement the proper naming, description, and storage of samples. Registration of samples with globally unique and persistent identifiers and deposition of sample metadata in trustworthy digital catalogs should follow policies and procedures that have already been implemented for digital data.

This session focuses on efforts responding to national and organizational policies that: increase sample visibility, sample use and tracking; promote recommended practices in sample management; and measure and demonstrate the value of physical samples to science and society.
英文Physical samples play a central role in a wide range of earth, environmental, and planetary sciences even in the digital age. Research funders invest substantial resources into local, national, and international projects and programs to collect samples, often in remote locations, during expensive and laborious field programs, on land and at sea.

These samples are described and analyzed in laboratories, offices, and teaching efforts. Much attention is currently afforded by the international research community to ensure that the results from these studies, including any data that were generated on samples, are persistently findable, accessible, interoperable, reusable (FAIR), but the underlying samples often remain unfindable, inaccessible, and unusable, and are most likely to be destroyed or abandoned.

Best practices and guidelines for FAIR data and software are well advanced, less so for physical samples and collections. There is an urgent need to establish criteria for FAIR samples that can inform policies of funders and publishers regarding access and curation of samples. Researchers and academic institutions need guidance to plan for and implement the proper naming, description, and storage of samples. Registration of samples with globally unique and persistent identifiers and deposition of sample metadata in trustworthy digital catalogs should follow policies and procedures that have already been implemented for digital data.

This session focuses on efforts responding to national and organizational policies that: increase sample visibility, sample use and tracking; promote recommended practices in sample management; and measure and demonstrate the value of physical samples to science and society.
発表方法口頭および(または)ポスターセッション