| March
18, 2004
International Finding On Access
To Scientific Data
Outlines Critical Need For Open, Systematic Approach
By Barry Jagoda
Open access to
publicly funded scientific data will benefit society in many
ways and is a policy issue that must be systematically addressed
in an international forum according to findings presented by
an international group of scientists and policy-makers to the
Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD)
and reported in the current issue of the journal Science.
“Facilitating
access to publicly funded data is a very cost-effective way
to improve our global economic, environmental, health and general
scientific research,” said Peter Arzberger, Director of
Life Sciences Initiatives at the University of California, San
Diego, one of the Science authors.
At recent meeting
at the ministerial level of the OECD Committee for Scientific
and Technological Policy, science ministers endorsed a declaration
calling for the open access to publicly funded data, and invited
the Organization to develop a set of guidelines to “facilitate
cost-effective access to digital research data.”
Arzberger, also chair
of the OCED Follow-up Group on Issues of Access to Publicly
Funded Research Data, which consisted of representatives from
ten countries, explained the significance of the international
body’s action, “OECD is an international forum to
discuss, develop and refine economic and social policies and
consists of 30 member countries around the globe including the
United States. This declaration for access to data is an important
breakthrough because it highlights the need for a systematic
international policy approach to obtain the enhanced benefits
to science, economy, and society.”
The work of this Committee
represents a microcosm of expertise and background from the
whole vast world of science and science policy. “As more
and more scientific discovery becomes represented in the form
of diverse digital information it is increasingly critical that
researchers in various fields have access to data bases that
become the building blocks for new knowledge,” said Geoffrey
Bowker, a specialist in scientific cyberinfrastructure, who
is professor of communication at UCSD and another author of
the Science report.
The report highlighted
a number of areas requiring incentives for providing access
and suggested that international action would be necessary to
overcome many of the existing barriers. It is the hope of the
OCED working group that open access will become the normal policy
in scientific research rather than researchers often having
to struggle to get vital information.
Media Contact: Barry
Jagoda, (858) 534-8567
Comment: Peter Arzberger, (858) 822 1079
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