Programme // 1st Conference on Research Data Infrastructure
from
Tuesday, September 12, 2023 (10:00 AM)
to
Thursday, September 14, 2023 (5:00 PM)
Monday, September 11, 2023
Tuesday, September 12, 2023
10:00 AM
Registration
Registration
10:00 AM - 11:00 AM
11:00 AM
Welcome & Opening
Welcome & Opening
11:00 AM - 11:30 AM
• Mario Brandenburg (Parlamentarischer Staatssekretär bei der Bundesministerin für Bildung und Forschung) • Kerstin Schill (DFG-Vizepräsidentin) • Ute Gunsenheimer (Secretary General, EOSC) • Kora Kristof (Vizepräsidentin Digitalisierung und Nachhaltigkeit, KIT) • Carole Goble (CoRDI Programme Chair, Univ. of Manchester & ELIXIR-UK), York Sure-Vetter (CoRDI General Chair, NFDI-Direktor & KIT)
11:30 AM
Keynote: Christine Borgman - Knowledge Infrastructures: The Invisible Foundation of Research Data Or, How Infrastructure Connects and Disconnects Research Communities
Keynote: Christine Borgman - Knowledge Infrastructures: The Invisible Foundation of Research Data Or, How Infrastructure Connects and Disconnects Research Communities
11:30 AM - 12:30 PM
Implicit in investments in research data infrastructure is the assumption that data are valuable entities worth preserving, stewarding, sharing, and reusing. This value proposition also implies that research data are useful to others and that others will reuse those data. However, neither outcome is assured. Data practices are local, varying from field to field, individual to individual, and country to country. As the number and variety of research partners expands, so do the difficulties of sharing, reusing, and sustaining access to data. Efforts to develop global research infrastructures are hindered by communities’ lack of agreement on data management practices –or on what constitutes ‘research data.’ This talk argues for a broader focus on knowledge infrastructures, which are robust networks of people, artifacts, and institutions for producing, exchanging, and sustaining knowledge. Technical aspects of infrastructure, from persistent identifiers to compute capacity and storage, are easier to address than are social aspects, such as data stewardship, trust, governance, economics, infrastructure, standards, and science policy. Infrastructures can connect communities when they support local practices, and disconnect communities when they create incompatible silos. Examples are drawn from several decades of empirical research with research communities in environmental sciences, sensor networks, astronomy, biomedicine, social sciences, and digital humanities. Christine L. Borgman is Distinguished Research Professor in Information Studies at the University of California, Los Angeles. She is recognized internationally for her research in information and computer science, data science, communication, digital humanities, privacy, and law. Her current research focuses on knowledge infrastructures, scientific data practices, and open science. Among her publications are three award-winning monographs from MIT Press: Big Data, Little Data, No Data: Scholarship in the Networked World (2015); Scholarship in the Digital Age: Information, Infrastructure, and the Internet (2007); and From Gutenberg to the Global Information Infrastructure: Access to Information in the Networked World (2000). She has held visiting scholar posts at Oxford, Harvard, Lund, Budapest Economic Sciences, Eotvos Lorand, and Loughborough universities, and DANS (Netherlands). Professor Borgman is a Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science and of the Association for Computing Machinery.
12:30 PM
Lunch
Lunch
12:30 PM - 2:00 PM
2:00 PM
DFG Pecha Café I
DFG Pecha Café I
2:00 PM - 3:30 PM
This is a continuous event. Participation in the parts before and after the break is optimal. The event will be held in German.
Humanities & Social Sciences I
Humanities & Social Sciences I
2:00 PM - 3:30 PM
• P. Kamocki; E. Hinrichs; S. Springer; P. Leinen; A. Witt; D. Zechmann Open Science and Language Data: Expectations vs. Reality: The Role of Research Data Infrastructures • F. Thiery; A. Mees; B. Weisser; F. Schäfer; S. Baars; S. Nolte; H. Senst; P. von Rummel Object-related Research Data Workflows within NFDI4Objects and beyond • M. Fichtner; R. Nasarek; T. Wiesing WissKI: A Virtual Research Environment based on Drupal • S. Lieber; A. Van Camp; D. De Witte; E. Coudyzer; E. Buelinckx; E. Angenon; H. Lowagie; J. Birkholz; K. Lasaracina MetaBelgica Project: A Linked Data Infrastructure Between Federal Scientific Institutes in Belgium
Life Sciences
Life Sciences
2:00 PM - 3:30 PM
• J. Fluck; M. Golebiewski; J. Darms Data publication for personalised health data: A new publication standard introduced by NFDI4Health • I. Pigeot; J. Fluck; J. Darms; C. Schmidt The NFDI4Health – Task Force COVID-19 • B. Ebert; J. Engel; I. Kostadinov; A. Güntsch; F. Glöckner Connecting National and International Data Infrastructures in Biodiversity Research • C. Goble; F. Bacall; S. Soiland-Reyes; S. Owen; I. Eguinoa; B. Droesbeke; H. Ménager; L. Rodriguez-Navas; J. Fernández; B. Grüning; S. Leo; L. Pireddu; M. Crusoe; J. Gustafsson; S. Capella-Gutierrez; F. Coppens The EOSC-Life Workflow Collaboratory for the Life Sciences
Natural Science I
Natural Science I
2:00 PM - 3:30 PM
• O. Koepler; C. Steinbeck; F. Bach; S. Herres-Pawlis; N. Jung; J. Liermann; S. Neumann; M. Razum Digitalizing the Chemical Landscape: A Comprehensive Overview and Progress Report of NFDI4Chem • L. Amelung; A. Barty; B. Murphy; C. Schneide; A. Schneidewind; T. Schoerner The DAPHNE4NFDI and PUNCH4NFDI Consortia in the NFDI • H. Weber; S. Brockhauser; C. Koch; L. Rettig; M. Aeschlimann; W. Hetaba; M. Grundmann; M. Kühbach; M. Krieger Research Data Management for Experiments in Solid-State Physics: Concepts • J. Bode; P. Jaeger; S. Schneidewind Integrating Data Literacy into University Curricula: Student Centred Learning in Undergraduate Physics Lab Courses
3:30 PM
Coffee break
Coffee break
3:30 PM - 4:00 PM
4:00 PM
DFG Pecha Café II
DFG Pecha Café II
4:00 PM - 5:30 PM
This is a continuous event. Participation in the parts before and after the break is optimal. The event will be held in German.
Engineering Sciences
Engineering Sciences
4:00 PM - 5:30 PM
• R. Chacko; H. Goßler; J. Riedel; S. Schunk; O. Deutschmann Digitalization in Catalysis and Reaction Engineering: Automatizing Work Flow • P. Ost; Y. Shakeel; P. Tögel Data Collections Explorer: An easy-to-use tool for sharing and discovering research data • R. El-Athman; J. Rädler; O.Löhmann; A. Ariza; T. Muth The BAM Data Store: Piloting an openBIS-Based Research Data Infrastructure in Materials Science • O. Werth; S. Ferenz; A. Niesse; R. German; L. Huelk; C. Weinhardt; B. Vogel Current Insights from Task Area 1 in NFDI4Energy: Building and Serving the Energy Research Community
Humanities & Social Sciences II
Humanities & Social Sciences II
4:00 PM - 5:30 PM
• S. Schneider; L. Palm Sociodemographic variables in surveys: increasing research potential through output harmonization • S. Netscher; A. Meyermann; J. Künstler-Sment; L. Pegelow Stamp – Standardized Data Management Plan for Educational Research: An Approach to Improve Cross-Disciplinary Harmonization of Research Data Management • P. Siegers; A. May; C. Saalbach; J. Nebelin; D. Kern; A. Daniel; B. Zapilko; F. Momeni; K. Wenzig; J. Goebel Linked Open Research Data for Social Science: A concept registry for granular data documentation • T. Emery; K. Karpinska; A. Maineri; L. van der Meer The Open Data Infrastructure for Social Science and Economic Innovations (ODISSEI): Better Infrastructure, Better Science, Better Society
Natural Sciences II
Natural Sciences II
4:00 PM - 5:30 PM
• R. Danabalan; M. Hintermüller; T. Koprucki; K. Tabelow MaRDI: Building Research Data Infrastructures for Mathematics and the Mathematical Science • P. Veluvali; J. Heiland; P. Benner MaRDIFlow: A Workflow Framework for Documentation and Integration of FAIR Computation • O. Knodel; T. Gruber; J. Kelling; M. Lokamani; S. Müller; D. Pape; M. Voigt; G. Juckeland Overarching Data Management Ecosystem at HZDR: From Small Experiments to Large-Scale Research Facilities • T. Gruber; H.-P. Schlenvoigt; O. Knodel; K. Tippey; G. Juckeland Two-Step Approach in Metadata Management for Data Publications at Research Centers
5:30 PM
Poster session I
Poster session I
5:30 PM - 7:00 PM
7:00 PM
Break
Break
7:00 PM - 7:30 PM
7:30 PM
Public Keynote: Julia Janssen - Behind the Click
Public Keynote: Julia Janssen - Behind the Click
7:30 PM - 9:00 PM
We would like to invite you to look behind the surface of the online world with us. Under the title “Behind the Click”, Dutch artist and researcher Julia Janssen will visually explore topics such as Artificial Intelligence, the bias of algorithms and data profiling. About „Behind the Click“ Julia Janssen is an artist who researches the influence of digitalisation on our society. She makes the challenges we face with data, AI and technology tangible in interactive and performative installations. She covers topics like data profiling, bias in algorithms, informed consent and digital civic rights. How do we deal with fairness, equality, autonomy, freedom and democracy in a data-driven society? In this talk, Janssen takes you on a journey behind the surface of the internet. A visual presentation on her research and ideas to discover what happens behind the click. About Julia Janssen Julia Janssen is an artist, designer, researcher and speaker. In her work she creates awareness about the impact of technology and digitization on society. In 2016 she graduated from the ArtEZ School of the Arts in Graphic Design. With her graduation work, she won the Crypto Design Award. Julia translates scientific insights into accessible design giving her audience a peek behind the internet’s surface. By making the complexity of information technology understandable, she builds a movement that strives for data sovereignty.
Wednesday, September 13, 2023
8:00 AM
Registration
Registration
8:00 AM - 9:00 AM
9:00 AM
Poster Session II
Poster Session II
9:00 AM - 10:30 AM
10:30 AM
Coffee Break
Coffee Break
10:30 AM - 11:00 AM
11:00 AM
Connecting RDM I
Connecting RDM I
11:00 AM - 12:30 PM
• L. Gadelha; J. Eufinger The German Human Genome-Phenome Archive in an International Context: Toward a Federated Infrastructure for Managing and Analyzing Genomics and Health Data • D. Müller; M. Umkehrer International Data Access Network (IDAN) for sensitive microdata in Humanities & Social Sciences • J. Bicarregui; S. Coles; B. Matthews; J. Frey; B. Montanari; V. Bunakov; N. Knight Connecting Infrastructures: The Physical Sciences Data Infrastructure (PSDI) in the UK • N. Weisweiler; R. Bertelmann; S. Genderjahn; H. Pampel Connecting the Dots: The Helmholtz Research Data Ecosystem and its links to the NFDI
Enabling RDM I
Enabling RDM I
11:00 AM - 12:30 PM
• M Politze; I. Lang coscine.nrw Landesweite Basisversorgung zur Verwaltung von Forschungsdaten im Open Source Modell • F. Meineke; M. Golebiewski; X. Hu; T. Kirsten; M. Löbe; S. Klammt; U. Sax; W. Müller NFDI4Health Local Data Hubs for Finding and Accessing Health Data: Making Distributed Data Accessible through a SEEK-Based Platform • N. Fatima; P.Alper; F. Bianchini; K. Bösl; U. Wittig; C. Goble; F. Coppens RDMkit: The Research Data Management Toolkit for Life Sciences • E. Borisova; R. Abu Ahmad; G. Rehm Open Science Best Practices in Data Science and Artificial Intelligence
Harmonizing RDM I
Harmonizing RDM I
11:00 AM - 12:30 PM
• B. Schembera; F. Wübbeling; T. Koprucki; C. Biedinger; M. Reidelbach; B. Schmidt; D. Göddeke; J. Fiedler Building Ontologies and Knowledge Graphs for Mathematics and its Applications • D. Iglezakis; D. Terzijska; S. Arndt; S. Leimer; J. Hickmann; M. Fuhrmans; G. Lanza Modelling Scientific Processes with the m4i Ontology • L. Castro; J. Fluck; D. Arend; M. Lange; D. Martini; S. Neumann; S. Schimmler; D. Rebholz-Schuhmann Schema.org as a Lightweight Harmonization Approach for NFDI • A. Behr; H. Borgelt; T. Petrenko; M. Dörr; N. Kockmann Investigating the Landscape of Ontologies for Catalysis Research Data Management
Securing RDM
Securing RDM
11:00 AM - 12:30 PM
• E. Apondo; A. Züger; A. Bruns; K. Mehlis; C. Schickhardt; E. Winkler Establishing Adaptive Governance in NFDI Consortia • A. Bruns; S. Parker; F. Molnár-Gábor; E. Winkler Developing Consent Tools for the Research Community at the German Human Genome-Phenome Archive (GHGA) • Yongli Mou; Feifei Li; Sven Weber; Sabith Haneef; Hans Meine; Liliana Caldeira; Mehrshad Jaberansary; Sascha Welten; Yeliz Yediel Ucer; Guido Prause; Stefan Decker; Oya Beyan; Toralf Kirsten Distributed Privacy-Preserving Data Analysis in NFDI4Health with the Personal Health Train • F. Boehm; U. Sax; O. Vettermann; P. Kamocki; V. Stoilova „Hello ELSA, how are you?“
12:30 PM
Lunch & Market of the consortia
Lunch & Market of the consortia
12:30 PM - 2:00 PM
2:00 PM
Connecting RDM II
Connecting RDM II
2:00 PM - 3:30 PM
• P. Wittenburg; U. Schwardmann; C. Blanchi; C. Weiland FDOs to enable Cross-Silo Work • M. Politze; Y. Shakeel; S. Hunke; P. Ost; R. Aversa; B. Heinrichs; I. Lang Long Term Interoperability of Distributed Research Data Infrastructures • O. Brand; V. Broda; M. Cyra; M. Fingerhuth; R. Gerlach; L. Gertis; B. Jacob; R. Müller-Pfefferkorn; H. Neuroth; S. Rehwald; J. Straka; B. Weiner The Federal State Initiatives for RDM as intermediaries in a dynamic landscape of RDM infrastructures and services • D. Fuß; M.-C. Laible Data Trustees – They Do Work! The Example of Research Data Centres
Enabling RDM II
Enabling RDM II
2:00 PM - 3:30 PM
• C. Beilschmidt; D. Brandenstein; J. Drönner; N. Glombiewski; M. Mattig; B. Seeger On the Design and Implementation of Easy Access to External Spatiotemporal Datasets in NFDI • M. Dieckmann; S. Beyvers; J. Hochmuth; A. Rehm; F. Förster; A. Goesmann The Aruna Object Storage: A distributed multi cloud object storage system for scientific data management • R. Macneil; T. Russell RSpace + iRODS: A scalable, flexible and versatile solution that facilitates data and metadata interoperability and is suitable for deployment in conjunction with a wide range of e-infrastructures and Research Commons • T. Zastrow; N. Fabas Research Data Publication at Large Scale
Harmonizing RDM II
Harmonizing RDM II
2:00 PM - 3:30 PM
• U. Sax; C. Henke; C. Draeger; T. Bender; A. Kuntz; M. Golebiewski; H. Ulrich; M. Löbe The Provenance Core Data Set: A Minimal Information Model for Data Provenance in Biomedical Research • A. Wein; J. Reinkensmeier; A. Weidlich; J. Lilliestam; V. Hagenmeyer; M. Richter; S. Auer; A. Nieße; S. Lehnhoff FAIR Data for Energy System Research: An Overview of NFDI4Energy Task Area 4 • G. Lanza; M. Koval; J.-L. Hippolyte; M. Iturrate-Garcia; O. Pellegrino; A.-S. Piette; F. Toro Towards FAIR Research Data in Metrology • M. Scheidgen; S. Brückner; S. Brockhauser; L. Ghiringhelli; F. Dietrich; A. Mansour; M. Albrecht; H. Weber; S. Botti; M. Aeschlimann; C. Draxl FAIR research data with NOMAD: FAIRmat’s distributed, schema-based research-data infrastructure to harmonize RDM in materials science
Research Software Engineers birds-of-a-feather networking meeting (organised with de-RSE e.V.)
Research Software Engineers birds-of-a-feather networking meeting (organised with de-RSE e.V.)
2:00 PM - 3:30 PM
3:30 PM
Coffee break & Market of the consortia
Coffee break & Market of the consortia
3:30 PM - 4:00 PM
4:00 PM
DFG: Panel discussion – Future of research data ecosystems
DFG: Panel discussion – Future of research data ecosystems
4:00 PM - 5:30 PM
„Die mit den Daten tanzen!“ Über die Zukunft des Datenökosystems - Research: Kora Kristof (Vizepräsidentin Digitalisierung und Nachhaltigkeit, KIT) - Public Sector: Hanna Brenzel (Leiterin Referat „Methoden der Datenanalyse“, Statistisches Bundesamt) - Industry: Paul Heinz (Head of R&D Digital Processes, Covestro) - Politics: Marion Steinberger (Leiterin Referat 421 Forschungsdaten, NFDI, Bundesministerium für Bildung und Forschung) - Moderation: Carmen Hentschel
5:30 PM
Break
Break
5:30 PM - 6:00 PM
6:00 PM
Conference Dinner
Conference Dinner
6:00 PM - 9:00 PM
Excursion to KIT Campus North
Excursion to KIT Campus North
6:00 PM - 9:00 PM
Visit to the Schlosslichtspiele ("Castle Light Festival")
Visit to the Schlosslichtspiele ("Castle Light Festival")
6:00 PM - 9:00 PM
Thursday, September 14, 2023
8:00 AM
Registration
Registration
8:00 AM - 9:00 AM
9:00 AM
Keynote: Mark Wilkinson - A Series of FAIR Vignettes
Keynote: Mark Wilkinson - A Series of FAIR Vignettes
9:00 AM - 10:00 AM
The activities required to achieve „FAIRness“ span a wide range of very distinct expert domains, including library sciences, data and knowledge representation, semantics, Web communication, software development, standards and protocols, licensing, ethics/privacy/consent, and agent-based negotiation. In this presentation, Mark D Wilkinson will try to appeal to the various communities in the CoRDI audience by telling a series of stories that focus on different pieces of the larger FAIR puzzle. These will include some thoughts – and second-thoughts! – about the Principles themselves, as well as observations of the benefits of FAIR in-practice. Conversely, he will also provide examples of FAIRness challenges which continue to evade robust solutions despite the best efforts of FAIR practitioners, and drill-down into the technologies and/or behaviors that are creating these barriers. Mark D Wilkinson has a B.Sc.(Hons) in Genetics from the University of Alberta, and a Ph.D. in Botany from the University of British Columbia. He spent four years at the Max Planck Institut für Züchtungsforschung in Köln, Germany, pursuing studies in a mix of plant molecular and developmental biology and bioinformatics. He then did a research associateship at the Plant Biotechnology Institute of the National Research Council Canada, focusing on the problem of biological data representation and integration for the purposes of automated data mining. In the subsequent 20+ years, his laboratory has focused on designing biomedical data/tool representation, discovery, and automated reuse infrastructures – what are now called „FAIR Data“ infrastructures. He is the lead author of the primary FAIR Data Principles paper, and lead author on the first paper describing a complete implementation of those principles over legacy data. He is a founding member of the FAIR Metrics working group, tasked with defining the precise, measurable behaviors that FAIR resources should exhibit, and the author of the first software application capable of a fully-automated and objective evaluation of “FAIRness”. He is co-Chair of the EOSC Task Force on FAIR Metrics and Data Quality, and is founder of a spin-off company, FAIR Data Systems S.L., that provides consulting, training, and customized software solutions that help clients become FAIR.
10:00 AM
Coffee break
Coffee break
10:00 AM - 10:30 AM
10:30 AM
Enabling RDM III
Enabling RDM III
10:30 AM - 12:00 PM
• L. Kulla; J. Bröder; C. Curdt; M. Kubin; H. Kollai; C. Lemster; M. Nolden; K.Schmieder; A. Strupp; K.-U. Stucky; E. Söding; K. Pascal Walter; A. Witold The HMC Information Portal for enhanced metadata collaboration in the Helmholtz FAIR data space • F. Henninger Born-fair data projects using cookiecutter templates • S. Schimmler; R. Altenhöner; L. Bernard; J. Fluck; A. Klinger; S. Lorenz; B. Mathiak; B. Miller; R. Ritz; T. Schörner-Sadenius; A. Sczyrba; R. Stein Base4NFDI – Basic Services for NFDI: Creating NFDI-wide basic services in a world of specific domains • M. Diepenbroek; I. Kostadinov; B. Seeger; F. Glöckner; M. Dieckmann; A. Goesmann; B. Ebert; S. Schimmler; Y. Sure-Vetter Towards a Research Data Commons in the German National Research Data Infrastructure NFDI: Vision, Governance, Architecture
Harmonizing RDM III
Harmonizing RDM III
10:30 AM - 12:00 PM
• S. Hagemann-Wilholt; A. Schrader; A. Czerniak Isn’t a number and a URL enough? Why PIDs matter and technical solutions alone are not sufficient. • R. Baum; O. Koepler Leveraging Terminology Services for FAIR Semantic Data Integration • R. Huber; N. Karam; O. Koepler; P. Strömert Finding a Common Ground for NFDI Terminologies: Proposing I-ADOPT as a NFDI Wide Semantic Layer • M. Schröder; S. Genehr; R. Köhling; S. Schmidt; R. Schneider; S. Spors; G. Szepannek; D. Waltemath; F. Krüger A survey on the current status of Research Data Management in Mecklenburg-Vorpommern: Preliminary results for a questionnaire study among researchers
Linking RDM I
Linking RDM I
10:30 AM - 12:00 PM
• F. Alshawaf; R. Guescini; F. Kotschka; M. Bierwirth; M. Dreyer Harmonized research information for classifying and linking research data • L. Rossenova; M. Schubotz; R. Shigapov The case for a common, reusable Knowledge Graph Infrastructure for NFDI • S. Auer; M. Stocker; O. Karras; A. Oelen; J. D’Souza; A.-L. Lorenz Organizing Scholarly Knowledge in the Open Research Knowledge Graph • H. Sack; T. Schrade; O. Bruns; E. Posthumus; T. Tietz; E. Norouzi; J. Waitelonis; H. Fliegl; L. Söhn; J. Tolksdorf; J. Steller; A. Azócar Guzmán; S. Fathalla; A. Ihsan; V. Hofmann; S. Sandfeld; F. Fritzen; A. Laadhar; S. Schimmler; P. Mutschke Knowledge Graph based RDM Solutions: NFDI4Culture – NFDI-MatWerk – NFDI4DataScience
Spreading RDM I
Spreading RDM I
10:30 AM - 12:00 PM
• S. Leimer; S. Hendriks; L. Korte; J. Stegemann; S. Stock; H. Timm; S. Rehwald Research Data Management Curriculum of the Research Data Services at the University Library Duisburg-Essen • M. Richter; J. Putzke; T. Schimmer; A. Mehler-Bicher We are still here, too! Research Data Management at Universities of Applied Sciences: Approaches from the Project „FDM@HAW.rlp“ in the German State Rhineland-Palatinate • A. Erxleben-Eggenhofer; B. Batut FAIR and scalable education: The Galaxy training network (GTN) and a Training Infrastructure as a Service (TIaaS) • B. Slowig; M. Blümm; K. Förstner; B. Lindstädt; R. Müller; M. Lanczek Der Zertifikatskurs „Forschungsdatenmanagement“ als Blaupause für die FDM-bezogene Kompetenzentwicklung im Rahmen der NFDI
12:00 PM
Lunch & Market of the consortia
Lunch & Market of the consortia
12:00 PM - 1:30 PM
1:30 PM
Enabling RDM IV
Enabling RDM IV
1:30 PM - 3:00 PM
• S. Schaaf; A. Erxleben-Eggenhofer; B. Grüning Galaxy and RDM: Being more than a workflow manager: living the data life cycle • F. Bach; K. Soltau; S. Göller; C. Bonatto Minella; S. Hofmann RADAR: building a FAIR and community tailored Research Data Repository • Y. Minamiyama; M. Hayashi; I. Fujiwara; J. Onami; S. Yokoyama; Y. Komiyama; K. Yamaji Toward the development of NII RDC application profile using ontology technology • P. Dolcet; M. Schulte; F. Maurer; N. Jung; R. Chacko; O. Deutschmann; J.-D. Grunwaldt LabIMotion Electronic Lab Notebook as Research Data Management tool in Catalysis • M. Doerr; S. Maak; M. Menke; U. Bornscheuer The RDM System LARA: – semantics through automation from bottom up
Harmonizing RDM IV
Harmonizing RDM IV
1:30 PM - 3:00 PM
• O. Giraldo; D. Dessi; S. Dietze; D. Rebholz-Schuhmann; L. Castro Machine-Actionable Metadata for Software and Software Management • B. Heinrichs; M. Yazdi Determining the Similarity of Research Data by Using an Interoperable Metadata Extraction Method • M. Moser; J. Werheid; T. Hamann; A. Abdelrazeq; R. Schmitt Which FAIR Are You? A Detailed Comparison of Existing FAIR Metrics in the Context of Research Data Management
Linking RDM II
Linking RDM II
1:30 PM - 3:00 PM
• C. Speck; P. Jaquart; C. Weinhardt; J. Lilliestam; M. Schäfer; A. Weidlich; J. Zilles; N. Kerker Transparency and Involvement of Society and Policy in a Data Sharing Platform • R. Voshage; S. Sikder; S. Della Chiesa; T. Krüger; M. Schorcht; G. Meinel Data, Tools and Services for spatial sustainability Science: The Story of the new IOER Research Data Centre • M. Schäfer; R. Qussous; L. Hülk; J. Lilliestam; A. Weidlich NFDI4Energy Case-Study: Comparative Analysis and Visualisation of Long-Term Energy System Scenarios • A. Czech; V. Geenen; C. Breß; M. Turkovic Popovski; P. Krauß; T. Riedel; F. Gauterin Designing a Mobility Data Trustee (MDT): Findings from a Multi-Disciplinary Analysis of Requirements of an MDT
Spreading RDM II
Spreading RDM II
1:30 PM - 3:00 PM
• C. van Gelder; A. Cardona; B. Leskošek; P. Palagi Building Research Data Management (RDM) expertise and training resources in ELIXIR Nodes • J. Ortmeyer; F. Fink; A. Hoffmann; S. Herres-Pawlis RDM in Chemistry: How to Educate and Train Future Researchers to Manage Their Data • D. Waltemath; E. Inau; V. Satagopam; I. Balaur Experiences from FAIRifying community data and FAIR infrastructure in biomedical research domains • K. Behrens; K. Blask RDM Compas: Building Competencies for the Professional Curation of Research Data
3:00 PM
Coffee break & Market of the consortia
Coffee break & Market of the consortia
3:00 PM - 3:30 PM
3:30 PM
Closing
Closing
3:30 PM - 4:00 PM