Open science and information systems for research

Fecha de la noticia: 22-11-2023

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The European Open Science Cloud (EOSC) is a European Union initiative that aims to promote open science through the creation of an open, collaborative and sustainabledigital research infrastructure. EOSC's main objective is to provide European researchers with easier access to the data, tools and resources they need to conduct quality research.

EOSC on the European Research and Data Agenda

EOSC is part of the 20 actions of the European Research Area (ERA) agenda 2022-2024 and is recognised as the European data space for science, research and innovation, to be integrated with other sectoral data spaces defined in the European data strategy. Among the expected benefits of the platform are the following:

  • An improvement in the confidence, quality and productivity of European science.
  • The development of new  innovative products and services.
  •  Improving the impact of research in tackling major societal challenges.

The EOSC platform

EOSC is in fact an ongoing process that sets out a roadmap in which all European states participate, based on the central idea that research data is a public good that should be available to all researchers, regardless of their location or affiliation. This model aims to ensure that scientific results comply with the FAIR (Findable, Accessible, Interoperable, Reusable) Principles to facilitate reuse, as in any other data space.

However, the most visible part of EOSC is its platform that gives access to millions of resources contributed by hundreds of content providers. This platform is designed to facilitate the search, discovery and interoperability of data and other content such as training resources, security, analysis, tools, etc. To this end, the key elements of the architecture envisaged in EOSC include two main components:

  • EOSC Core: which provides all the basic elements needed to discover, share, access and reuse resources - authentication, metadata management, metrics, persistent identifiers, etc.
  • EOSC Exchange: to ensure that common and thematic services for data management and exploitation are available to the scientific community.

In addition, the ESOC Interoperability Framework (EOSC-IF)is a set of policies and guidelines that enable interoperability between different resources and services and facilitate their subsequent combination.

The platform is currently available in 24 languages and is continuously updated to add new data and services. Over the next seven years, a joint investment by the EU partners of at least EUR 1 billion is foreseen for its further development.

Participation in EOSC

The evolution of EOSC is being guided by a tripartite coordinating body consisting of the European Commission itself, the participating countries represented on the EOSC Steering Board and the research community represented through the EOSC Association. In addition, in order to be part of the ESCO community, you only have to follow a series of minimum rules of participation:

  1. The whole EOSC concept is based on the general principle of openness.
  2. Existing EOSC resources must comply with the FAIR principles.
  3. Services must comply with the EOSC architecture and interoperability guidelines.
  4. EOSC follows the principles of ethical behaviour and integrity in research.
  5. EOSC users are also expected to contribute to EOSC.
  6. Users must comply with the terms and conditions associated with the data they use.
  7. EOSC users always cite the sources of the resources they use in their work.
  8. Participation in EOSC is subject to applicable policies and legislation.

EOSC in Spain

The Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas (CSIC) of Spain was one of the 4 founding members of the association and is currently a commissioned member of the association, in charge of coordination at national level.

CSIC has been working for years on its open access repository DIGITAL.CSIC as a step towards its future integration into EOSC. Within its work in open science we can highlight for example the adoption of the Current Research Information System (CRIS), information systems designed to help research institutions to collect, organise and manage data on their research activity: researchers, projects, publications, patents, collaborations, funding, etc.

CRIS are already important tools in helping institutions track and manage their scientific output, promoting transparency and open access to research. But they can also play an important role as sources of information feeding into the EOSC, as data collected in CRIS can also be easily shared and used through the EOSC.

The road to open science

Collaboration between CRIS and ESCO has the potential to significantly improve the accessibility and re-use of research data, but there are also other transitional actions that can be taken on the road to producing increasingly open science:

  1. Ensure the quality of metadata to facilitate open data exchange.
  2. Disseminate the FAIR principles among the research community.
  3. Promote and develop common standards to facilitate interoperability.
  4. Encourage the use of open repositories.
  5. Contribute by sharing resources with the rest of the community.

This will help to boost open science, increasing the efficiency, transparency and replicability of research.

Content prepared by Carlos Iglesias, Open data Researcher and consultant, World Wide Web Foundation.

The contents and points of view reflected in this publication are the sole responsibility of its author.