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JOINT EUROPEAN RESEARCH INFORMATION SYSTEM (RIS)
Activities and Recommendations of an
ESF - EUROHORCS Working GroupDr. Alexis – Michel Mugabushaka, Science Officer Corporate Science Policy (ESF)
EuroCris 2008, 5-7 June 2008, Maribor, Slovenia
www.esf.org
ContentContent
ESF and EUROHORCS
Background of the initiative
ESF – EUROHORCS Working Group
Overview of the RIS of EUROHORCS MOs
Added value of a joint RIS
Models for a joint RIS
Recommendations of the WG The views expressed in this presentation are – to great extent - those of the ESF-EUROHORCS
Working Group (especially the recommendations) and partly my own. They do not necessarily reflect neither the views nor the policies of the European Science Foundation, its member
organizations or EUROHORCS
www.esf.org3
78 MOs in 30 78 MOs in 30 countriescountries
Research Research funding funding organisationsorganisations
Research Research performing performing organisationsorganisations
AcademiesAcademies
ESF – I ESF – I
www.esf.org4
MissionThe ESF provides a common platform for its
Member Organisations in order to:– Advance European research– Explore new directions for research at
the European level
Through its activities, the ESF serves the needs of the European research community in a
global context
Values– Excellence – Openness – Responsiveness– Pan European– Ethical awareness and human
values
ESF – II ESF – II
www.esf.org5
1974 2000 2006
• Budget: 340 k€ 20 Mio € 44 Mio €
• Staff: 9 51 128
• Offices in Strasbourg and Brussels (COST)
ESF – III ESF – III
www.esf.org6
EUROHORCS EUROHORCS
European Heads of Research Councils
Heads of public Research Funding Organisations (RFOs) and Research Performing Organisations (RPOs) in Europe
Established in 1992
Currently 41 Organisations
www.esf.org7
EUROHORCS – Aims and Objectives EUROHORCS – Aims and Objectives
To represent the interest of research nationally and internationally
To give recognition to excellence and to support frontier research of the highest quality
To act as an inter-council platform for discussion and joint activities
To promote international collaboration
To provide research policy advice in Europe
www.esf.org
Background of the RIS initiativeBackground of the RIS initiative
Traditionally, research organizations reported to their governing bodies through annual reports and other dedicated publications recording their activities (and later by listing the projects on their internet pages)
More and more member organizations of EUROHORCS/ESF have developed or are developing complex Information systems which provide, in real time, information on funded projects (research funding agencies) and performed projects (research performing organizations)
An idea, a growing sense that, in the context of the increasing European cooperation (e.g. cross-border research funding….) such system might have a potential to facilitate the cooperation; a potential under- or not utilized
www.esf.org
10 .06.2006
EUROHORCS involvement in RIS – preparation of this project
EUROHORCS involvement in RIS – preparation of this project
EuroHORCS decides to “look into the possibility of linking up the databases of National Research Councils”
11 .10.2006 Proof of Principle by UNICRIS (on behalf of EuroCRIS)Workshop, den Haag at NWO (EuroHORCS Secretariat) and recommendation to continue the project
08.12.2006 EuroHORCS asks ESF to set up a Working Group to draft aproject outline
12.02 .2007 First draft of the project outline to the EuroHORCS Steering and Management Committee
Tasks of the Working Group clearly defined and
Start of the activities
www.esf.org
Assess the added value of a joint RIS
Make an overview of existing Research Information Systems (in EUROHORCS Member
Organisations)
Tasks of the Working Group Tasks of the Working Group
Added value
Overview of RIS
Identify appropriate models of a joint RIS Models
Make recommendations to EUROHORCS on how to proceed further
Recommendations
www.esf.org
Working Group Working Group
Invited: organisations which took part in the NWO Workshop
Members of the Working Group
Gerry Lawson, RCUKJesper Aven, SRC (till August 2007)Jürgen Güdler, DFGRuud Strijp, NWONeil Williams, ESF (Chair) Alexis-Michel Mugabushaka, ESF (Coordinator)
www.esf.org
Make an overview of existing Research Information Systems (of EUROHORCS Member Organisations)
Results Results
Added value
Overview of RIS
Models
Recommendations
www.esf.org13
Questionnaire to EuroHORCS Member Organisations (41 organisations)
Internet-research
Field phaseQuestionnaire sent 30 April 2007 to EuroHORCS members with deadline 15 May 2007Reminder 23 May 2007 (and phone calls)
Replies + Internet search Information about RIS in 26 Organisations (about 2/3 of the group targeted)
Approach Approach
www.esf.org
41 organizations contacted
26 replies 3 no RIS 6 planning a RIS 17 RIS
www.esf.org15
RIS – Internet accessRIS – Internet access
1 FWF www.fwf.ac.at/de/projects/projekt_suche.html
2 FWO www.vlaanderen.be/iweto
3 GA CR pala.gacr.cas.cz/web/Seznam_php-en.htm
4 SNF www.projectdb.snf.ch//webforms/Frameset.aspx
5 DFG www.dfg.de/gepris
6 ETF www.etis.ee
7 NWO www.nwo.nl/projecten.nsf/pages/losearch_eng/
8 FCT www.fct.mctes.pt/pt/apoios/projectos/bd/
9 TÜBITAK mistug.tubitak.gov.tr/proje
10 SRC vrproj.vr.se
11 SRA sicris.izum.si
12 EPSRC gow.epsrc.ac.uk
13 NERC gotw.nerc.ac.uk
14 AHRC www.ahrc.ac.uk/awards
15 ESRC www.esrcsocietytoday.ac.uk
16 STFC www.so.stfc.ac.uk/gow/intro.asp
17 RCN http://www.forskningsradet.no/en/Project+database/1184150364215
www.esf.org16
Comparing the RIS – major dimensionsComparing the RIS – major dimensions
Other Dimensions
Autonomy
content
Language (Inteface and
content)
-Search modalities -Datamodel
- CERIF-Other
- Technical Platform-Database system
The RIS Systems of euroHORCS Organisations share basic common features, but a close look shows that they are far from convergent
www.esf.org17
Comparing the RIS : Autonomy Comparing the RIS : Autonomy
- Stand alone RIS* - Information from one Organisation- Dedicated System to provide information on funded
projects - Embedded in a wider Research Information Portal
- National Portal - together with other organisations
The System of the Belgian FWO in Belgium is part of IWETO (research System for Flanders) The RIS of the Estonian Science Foundation are a subset of the National Research Portal (ETIS) SICRIS, the RIS of the Slovenian Research Agency aims to be a national Research Information Portal (contains EC FP Projects and records also data from other all research organisations in Slovenia)
* By Stand alone, a difference can be made between RIS embedded in operational information Systems and separate RIS
www.esf.org
Assess the added value of a joint RIS
Tasks of the Working Group Tasks of the Working Group
Added value
Overview of RIS
Models
Recommendations
www.esf.org19
ADDED VALUE of a joint RIS ADDED VALUE of a joint RIS
- CAVEATS : The Task of the WG was not to imagine a radically new system but a LINKING OF EXISTISTING RIS (Nemo dat quod non habet, freely translated ... What you do not have, you can’t give)
The Focus: who needs a joint System ? What for ? And not “can it be technically built ?”
Not: Just build it, they will come !
www.esf.org20
ADDED VALUE of a joint RIS ADDED VALUE of a joint RIS
„Trust me ! this dog won‘t hunt“ (as they say in the deep South of US)
„A joint RIS will help avoid duplication and fragmentation“
„A joint RIS will advance the European Research Area and help deliver the Lisbon Agenda“
YES, but HOW ?
www.esf.org21
ADDED VALUE of a joint RIS ADDED VALUE of a joint RIS
The case for a joint RIS has not been convincingly established in the
preparatory phase (my opinion:The discussion emerged later]
Very few (if at all) RIS track systematically the usage and have little insight on who the users are (result of the survey of the WG)
Any benefit of a joint RIS builds on features of EXISTING Sytems.
Examples of limits(1) Potential use in search for Refereers (for Peer Review ) - Only possible if the systems other information (e.g. Principal
investigators publications) - Yes, this feature can be built, but most RIS do not have it
currently (yet) (2) Use in statistics/evaluation: the current data quality likely to be a
problem
www.esf.org22
ADDED VALUE – the assessment of the WG ADDED VALUE – the assessment of the WG
The main benefit of a joint system is to make maximal use of information currently made available on the web, but scattered in a range of systems and formats. The joint system would allow multinational search of different systems and can be used alongside other well established systems such as bibliometric databases, Google and Google scholar, etc …
Its unique feature is that it will provide a single point of entry to information about projects (and related researchers and organizations) which have successfully undergone a competitive selection through peer review.
www.esf.org23
ADDED VALUE – potential users ADDED VALUE – potential users
• Researchers who would like to find others working in similar fields, or institutions with a strong research portfolio in a specific field or topic (In addition to other means they use such as publications, scientific conferences and EC databases). •Administrators from research funding agencies that wish to compare their research portfolios with those of other organisations. This can help to identify and compare research profiles of researchers, institutions and even countries in specific fields; to identify “hot topics” and gaps; and provide input in discussions on potential European collaborative programmes. With a common classification system, it can also be used to map resources (funding, number of researchers …) devoted to different research areas in different countries. •Administrators from research funding agencies can also use this system to find experts on a given topic. This information can be used (in combination with other sources of information) to identify referees or to see any potential conflict of interest (collaboration in a project, similar research topics likely to be a source of competition).•Journalists and the general public to identify experts on a given topic across Europe.
www.esf.org
Tasks of the Working Group Tasks of the Working Group
Added value
Overview of RIS
Identify appropriate models of a joint RIS Models
Recommendations
www.esf.org25
Three Models for a Joint RIS Three Models for a Joint RIS
Web crawling
Central model
Distributed model
www.esf.org26
Three Models for a Joint RIS Three Models for a Joint RIS
In the Web Crawling Model, a crawler would be used to interrogate individual research information systems, and retrieve information on given “search words”. Administrators of national systems would need to make their information accessible to such a crawler
www.esf.org27
Three Models for a Joint RIS Three Models for a Joint RIS
In the Central Database Model, data from different systems would be transferred periodically to a central database (either by manual batch-transfer or via automatic machine-to-machine upload).
www.esf.org28
Three Models for a Joint RIS Three Models for a Joint RIS
In the Distributed Model, access to the data held in different systems is provided by a central hub (or node) which sends structured queries to the contributing databases in each country or institution and formats the output information to give an integrated report. Copies of the datasets would not be maintained centrally.
www.esf.org29
Three Models for a Joint RIS Three Models for a Joint RIS
WG Model of choice
www.esf.org
Tasks of the Working Group Tasks of the Working Group
Added value
Overview of RIS
Models
Make recommendations to EUROHORCS on how to proceed further
Recommendations
www.esf.org
Tasks of the Working Group Tasks of the Working Group
Nr Recommendation
1 To encourage the exchange of experiences (and independently of any ‘joint information system’), EUROHORCs is recommended to maintain a web-page of links to research information systems of their members and to facilitate the networking of their specialist staff who are involved in the development of research information systems.
2 The Working Group recommends not launching a pilot phase at this stage.
3 The Working Group recommends EUROHORCS to encourage member organizations to develop their systems in a more convergent way. The issue of a joint system’ should be discussed again at the first EUROHORCS general assembly in 2010.
www.esf.org
Tasks of the Working Group Tasks of the Working Group
Nr Recommendation
4 The Working Group recommends close collaboration with EuroCRIS to facilitate the convergence of research information systems of research funding and research performing organizations.
5 The Working Group recommends that the interest and commitment of EUROHORCS member organizations (in working toward the convergence of their research information systems) is assessed prior to launching the initiative. The initiative should only go ahead as a EUROHORCS initiative if there is critical mass of organizations which indicate their interest and commitment. The Working Group recommends at least 8 organizations as a threshold.
6 The Working Group presents two options for the EUROHORCs General Assembly to consider as on how to implement the recommendations made in this report: (1) By setting up a Working Group or a Task Force or (2) By asking the ESF office to implement the recommendations, in which case ESF will be assisted by a ‘reference group’ drawn among representatives of EUROHORCs interested member organizations.
www.esf.org
EUROHORCS Decision and Future Steps EUROHORCS Decision and Future Steps
In its Steering Committee Meeting on 29 January 2008 (Zürich) and General Assembly on 18 April (Istanbul) , EUROHORCS went along with recommendation #2 (more or less)
EUROHORCS will not continue with the Linking of the RIS initiative
The Working Group is preparing a report of its activities (to include the results of the survey, the recommendations etc …) after which it will terminate its activities.
ESF –EUROCRIS Memorandum of Understanding to formalize the existing cooperation and pave the way for collaboration in exchange of information / experiences on CRIS of ESF Members
www.esf.org
Outlook Outlook
EUROCRIS is a uniquely placed player to advance debates on information exchange and develop standards/formats for the interoperability of their research information systems.
(1) EUROCRIS – ESF MoU will ensure that no parallel structures are created as existing EUROCRIS meetings, conferences , working groups …. suit the needs of ESF MOs wishing to exchange information on their CRIS.
(2) EUROHORCS request : how can CRIS be used in the
management of Intellectual property rights.
Perhaps ESF can work with CERIF Task force to draft a recommendation for a generic data collection/exchange format.
www.esf.org
Lessons learntLessons learnt
Efforts should be put in exchange of information, experiences to achieve a convergence – perhaps here the whole is the sum of its parts
A joint System without convergence of the underlying systems makes little sense
Case for a Joint System should be put before its technical implementation and clearly and convincingly established