Japan Geoscience Union Meeting 2024

Presentation information

[E] Oral

M (Multidisciplinary and Interdisciplinary) » M-GI General Geosciences, Information Geosciences & Simulations

[M-GI27] Open and FAIR Science: strategies, concepts, infrastructures and opportunities

Tue. May 28, 2024 9:00 AM - 10:15 AM 103 (International Conference Hall, Makuhari Messe)

convener:Baptiste Cecconi(LESIA, Observatoire de Paris, CNRS, PSL Research University), Yasuhiro Murayama(NICT Knowldge Hub, National Institute of Information and Communications Technology), Yasuhisa Kondo(Research Institute for Humanity and Nature), Shelley Stall(American Geophysical Union), Chairperson:Baptiste Cecconi(LESIA, Observatoire de Paris, CNRS, PSL Research University)

9:00 AM - 9:15 AM

[MGI27-05] Collaboration for open science: a global perspective on disciplinary challenges in the Earth, space, and environmental sciences

*Shelley Stall1, Kristina Vrouwenvelder1 (1.American Geophysical Union)

Keywords:Open Science, FAIR Data, Global Collaboration

Open Science is a paradigm shift for science; open practices can remove barriers to sharing science and increase its reproducibility and transparency. As society faces global, interdisciplinary challenges like climate change and natural hazards, open scientific research – including open data, workflows, physical samples – is more important than ever. AI and ML methods are increasingly used in the Earth, space, and environmental sciences to investigate these large challenges, and analysis-ready data for use in these methods is predicated on open, FAIR principles for data sharing. However, maximizing FAIR-ness and ensuring research is ‘as open as possible’ across the many Earth, space, and environmental science disciplines encompasses a range of challenges, including lacking infrastructure, incentives, resources, and guidance for all participants in the research ecosystem. We believe that societies, including JpGU, EGU, AGU, communities like ESIP, and beyond, have a significant role to play in catalyzing collaboration to overcome this range of challenges. Here, we share progress on collaborative efforts involving AGU, partners, and the broader community to solve these challenges, including developing discipline-specific guidance for researchers on data and software sharing, training for researchers in leading open science practices, and guidance and partnerships for publishers interested in implementing FAIR and CARE in the publishing workflow. We look forward to partnering on global collaborations to advocate for our researchers and the open future of science.