Difference between revisions of "DFM Info hub specifications"

From DFM Wiki
(Created page with basic information about info hub from the project proposal and listing of current knowledge management tools.)
 
(Added design specifications for the Info Hub based on the project document and WG1 meeting.)
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* [The] online hub is a critical part of our Web-based knowledge mobilization strategy.
 
* [The] online hub is a critical part of our Web-based knowledge mobilization strategy.
 
* [Project outcome] Online information hub and academic publications that present multi-dimensional maps and descriptions of regional and local value chain(s); e.g: comparative institutional maps of responsibility for dried fish sector; comparative cultural attachments to dried fish; comparative maps of intensity of labour exploitation; drivers of change.
 
* [Project outcome] Online information hub and academic publications that present multi-dimensional maps and descriptions of regional and local value chain(s); e.g: comparative institutional maps of responsibility for dried fish sector; comparative cultural attachments to dried fish; comparative maps of intensity of labour exploitation; drivers of change.
* Our flagship digital knowledge mobilization platform will be the DFM online information hub. There we will follow FAIR data sharing practices [1] to make our original survey data available for re-analysis as well as a host of other products of our research including images, video, recipes, research and policy briefs, and GIS-based visualizations of our emerging understanding of the social economy of dried fish in South and Southeast Asia. The online information hub will have interactive functionality to permit comments and discussion. It will also allow for crowdsourcing of information on dried fish and for the collation of gray literature on the social economy of dried fish.
+
* Our flagship digital knowledge mobilization platform will be the DFM online information hub. There we will follow FAIR data sharing practices<ref name=":0">Wilkinson, M., M. Dumontier, I. Aalbersberg, G. Appleton, M. Axton, A. Baak, and e. al., "The FAIR Guiding Principles for scientific data management and stewardship". ''Scientific Data'', 2016. Mar 15(3).</ref> to make our original survey data available for re-analysis as well as a host of other products of our research including images, video, recipes, research and policy briefs, and GIS-based visualizations of our emerging understanding of the social economy of dried fish in South and Southeast Asia. The online information hub will have interactive functionality to permit comments and discussion. It will also allow for crowdsourcing of information on dried fish and for the collation of gray literature on the social economy of dried fish.
 
* [Academic stakeholder impact] Summaries of [DFM-sponsored] articles will be translated into local languages, disseminated locally, and published on the online information hub.
 
* [Academic stakeholder impact] Summaries of [DFM-sponsored] articles will be translated into local languages, disseminated locally, and published on the online information hub.
 
* [Other impact] Practitioners, Civil Society Organizations, and the General Public: While our online information hub will be a valuable resource for academics and researchers, it will also appeal to participants in dried fish chains, NGOs working in fisheries, and the general public. Although the platform will be in English, we will post documents and videos in regional languages that will allow us to broaden our reach to NGOs active in fisheries, and participants in the social economy of dried fish. This latter group is very large as it includes dried fish consumers, and bridges into the general public category as well.
 
* [Other impact] Practitioners, Civil Society Organizations, and the General Public: While our online information hub will be a valuable resource for academics and researchers, it will also appeal to participants in dried fish chains, NGOs working in fisheries, and the general public. Although the platform will be in English, we will post documents and videos in regional languages that will allow us to broaden our reach to NGOs active in fisheries, and participants in the social economy of dried fish. This latter group is very large as it includes dried fish consumers, and bridges into the general public category as well.
 
* When linked to the umbrella DFM information hub, all of these [knowledge mobilization] activities will have an important impact in terms of creating awareness, facilitating the sharing of knowledge about dried fish among multiple audiences, and building networks among groups involved in the social economy of dried fish.
 
* When linked to the umbrella DFM information hub, all of these [knowledge mobilization] activities will have an important impact in terms of creating awareness, facilitating the sharing of knowledge about dried fish among multiple audiences, and building networks among groups involved in the social economy of dried fish.
 
* [Government impact] Our website and DFM information hub will have policy pages and areas to target government audiences. We will prepare targeted research and policy briefs for government agencies which we will also make available online.
 
* [Government impact] Our website and DFM information hub will have policy pages and areas to target government audiences. We will prepare targeted research and policy briefs for government agencies which we will also make available online.
 +
 +
== Other design needs specified by WG1 ==
 +
 +
* Our platform facilitates collaborative writing of documents that create or summarize knowledge about dried fish economies across sites and regions.
 +
** Draft documents are available online.
 +
** There is a clear revision history for each document.
 +
** The editing process does not require significant technical skill.
 +
* DFM-affiliated researchers (and other stakeholders) are able to contribute to texts occasionally and informally, according to their evolving interests, without being required to participate consistently in a formal group or team.
 +
** Work is accessible to everyone at any time, not exchanged only through mailing lists or meetings.
 +
** It is very straightforward to make small, incremental changes to documents.
 +
** The process of creating an account in the system is simple but secure.
 +
** Robust controls are in place to guard against unwanted contributions (spam and vandalism), while allowing collaborators and other stakeholders to contribute and update knowledge in their own expert domains.
 +
* We have a mechanism for discussion of texts and other outputs.
 +
** Each discussion thread is retained in one place, so that the history of the thread/conversation can easily be viewed.
 +
** Users are able to receive (and potentially assign) notifications of issues that concern them.
 +
** Ideally it is possible to mark discussions as "resolved".
 +
* We are able to collaborate in the production of visual documents such as videos, photographs, and maps.
 +
** It is possible to create collaboratively-authored maps with points of interest (e.g., research sites, fish markets).
 +
** We have tools to visualize flows of dried fish across value chains.
 +
 +
== Summary of info hub design goals ==
 +
 +
* Geospatial visualizations
 +
* Dissemination of preliminary outputs.
 +
* Knowledge mobilization
 +
* Raw data archival (for reuse)
 +
* Data sharing with non-academic stakeholders
 +
 +
== Metadata requirements ==
 +
The "FAIR Guiding Principles"<ref name=":0" /> are mentioned in the project proposal. They are copied below for reference; we should link each of these principles to the Knowledge Management platforms in use.
 +
 +
To be '''Findable''':
 +
 +
# (meta)data are assigned a globally unique and persistent identifier
 +
# data are described with rich metadata (defined by R1 below)
 +
# metadata clearly and explicitly include the identifier of the data it describes
 +
# (meta)data are registered or indexed in a searchable resource
 +
 +
To be '''Accessible''':
 +
 +
# (meta)data are retrievable by their identifier using a standardized communications protocol
 +
## the protocol is open, free, and universally implementable
 +
## the protocol allows for an authentication and authorization procedure, where necessary
 +
# metadata are accessible, even when the data are no longer available
 +
 +
To be '''Interoperable''':
 +
 +
# (meta)data use a formal, accessible, shared, and broadly applicable language for knowledge representation.
 +
# (meta)data use vocabularies that follow FAIR principles
 +
# (meta)data include qualified references to other (meta)data
 +
 +
To be '''Reusable''':
 +
 +
# meta(data) are richly described with a plurality of accurate and relevant attributes
 +
## (meta)data are released with a clear and accessible data usage license
 +
## (meta)data are associated with detailed provenance
 +
## (meta)data meet domain-relevant community standards

Revision as of 15:00, 15 January 2021

The Dried Fish Matters proposal mentions the establishment of an "info hub" as a core project output and knowledge mobilization support.

While this hub was originally conceived as an integrated knowledge management system modelled on ISSF (Information System on Small-Scale Fisheries), DFM has in practice adopted several platforms that serve dedicated functions in the knowledge management workflow:

This working document summarizes the knowledge management goals of the DFM project and outlines an evolving strategy for meeting those goals using existing platforms and the DFM Knowledge Base.

Info hub specifications listed in the project proposal document

  • The final component of the first two years of the project is the development and launching of the Dried Fish Matters website and information hub. The former will serve as the project’s first line of knowledge dissemination to the general public; the latter will be a repository for a wide range of information and media related to dried fish, including geospatial visualizations of the social economy of dried fish in South and Southeast Asia.
  • The DFM information hub is a research tool. It is a custom-built web database through which the partnership will engage in knowledge mobilization. The hub initially will be a site where DFM will upload various preliminary outputs from the project. Later in the project period, it will serve as the host for the raw data collected in the project. As more audiences begin to interact with the hub, it will become a unique collaborative space for sharing information and materials related to dried fish. As the only online space for sharing knowledge of dried fish, the hub will have considerable appeal for fisheries specialists, food security practitioners, and national and international organizations in Asia and around the world. The hub will be designed with open code so that it can be migrated to other hosts if needed. The hub aligns with the University of Manitoba’s strategic research priority to support research on safe, healthy, just and sustainable food systems.
  • [The] online hub is a critical part of our Web-based knowledge mobilization strategy.
  • [Project outcome] Online information hub and academic publications that present multi-dimensional maps and descriptions of regional and local value chain(s); e.g: comparative institutional maps of responsibility for dried fish sector; comparative cultural attachments to dried fish; comparative maps of intensity of labour exploitation; drivers of change.
  • Our flagship digital knowledge mobilization platform will be the DFM online information hub. There we will follow FAIR data sharing practices[1] to make our original survey data available for re-analysis as well as a host of other products of our research including images, video, recipes, research and policy briefs, and GIS-based visualizations of our emerging understanding of the social economy of dried fish in South and Southeast Asia. The online information hub will have interactive functionality to permit comments and discussion. It will also allow for crowdsourcing of information on dried fish and for the collation of gray literature on the social economy of dried fish.
  • [Academic stakeholder impact] Summaries of [DFM-sponsored] articles will be translated into local languages, disseminated locally, and published on the online information hub.
  • [Other impact] Practitioners, Civil Society Organizations, and the General Public: While our online information hub will be a valuable resource for academics and researchers, it will also appeal to participants in dried fish chains, NGOs working in fisheries, and the general public. Although the platform will be in English, we will post documents and videos in regional languages that will allow us to broaden our reach to NGOs active in fisheries, and participants in the social economy of dried fish. This latter group is very large as it includes dried fish consumers, and bridges into the general public category as well.
  • When linked to the umbrella DFM information hub, all of these [knowledge mobilization] activities will have an important impact in terms of creating awareness, facilitating the sharing of knowledge about dried fish among multiple audiences, and building networks among groups involved in the social economy of dried fish.
  • [Government impact] Our website and DFM information hub will have policy pages and areas to target government audiences. We will prepare targeted research and policy briefs for government agencies which we will also make available online.

Other design needs specified by WG1

  • Our platform facilitates collaborative writing of documents that create or summarize knowledge about dried fish economies across sites and regions.
    • Draft documents are available online.
    • There is a clear revision history for each document.
    • The editing process does not require significant technical skill.
  • DFM-affiliated researchers (and other stakeholders) are able to contribute to texts occasionally and informally, according to their evolving interests, without being required to participate consistently in a formal group or team.
    • Work is accessible to everyone at any time, not exchanged only through mailing lists or meetings.
    • It is very straightforward to make small, incremental changes to documents.
    • The process of creating an account in the system is simple but secure.
    • Robust controls are in place to guard against unwanted contributions (spam and vandalism), while allowing collaborators and other stakeholders to contribute and update knowledge in their own expert domains.
  • We have a mechanism for discussion of texts and other outputs.
    • Each discussion thread is retained in one place, so that the history of the thread/conversation can easily be viewed.
    • Users are able to receive (and potentially assign) notifications of issues that concern them.
    • Ideally it is possible to mark discussions as "resolved".
  • We are able to collaborate in the production of visual documents such as videos, photographs, and maps.
    • It is possible to create collaboratively-authored maps with points of interest (e.g., research sites, fish markets).
    • We have tools to visualize flows of dried fish across value chains.

Summary of info hub design goals

  • Geospatial visualizations
  • Dissemination of preliminary outputs.
  • Knowledge mobilization
  • Raw data archival (for reuse)
  • Data sharing with non-academic stakeholders

Metadata requirements

The "FAIR Guiding Principles"[1] are mentioned in the project proposal. They are copied below for reference; we should link each of these principles to the Knowledge Management platforms in use.

To be Findable:

  1. (meta)data are assigned a globally unique and persistent identifier
  2. data are described with rich metadata (defined by R1 below)
  3. metadata clearly and explicitly include the identifier of the data it describes
  4. (meta)data are registered or indexed in a searchable resource

To be Accessible:

  1. (meta)data are retrievable by their identifier using a standardized communications protocol
    1. the protocol is open, free, and universally implementable
    2. the protocol allows for an authentication and authorization procedure, where necessary
  2. metadata are accessible, even when the data are no longer available

To be Interoperable:

  1. (meta)data use a formal, accessible, shared, and broadly applicable language for knowledge representation.
  2. (meta)data use vocabularies that follow FAIR principles
  3. (meta)data include qualified references to other (meta)data

To be Reusable:

  1. meta(data) are richly described with a plurality of accurate and relevant attributes
    1. (meta)data are released with a clear and accessible data usage license
    2. (meta)data are associated with detailed provenance
    3. (meta)data meet domain-relevant community standards
  1. 1.0 1.1 Wilkinson, M., M. Dumontier, I. Aalbersberg, G. Appleton, M. Axton, A. Baak, and e. al., "The FAIR Guiding Principles for scientific data management and stewardship". Scientific Data, 2016. Mar 15(3).