EGU21-13155, updated on 09 Jan 2024
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-13155
EGU General Assembly 2021
© Author(s) 2024. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

The I-ADOPT Interoperability Framework: a proposal for FAIRer observable property descriptions

Barbara Magagna1, Gwenaelle Moncoiffe2, Maria Stoica3, Anusuriya Devaraju4, Alison Pamment5, Sirko Schindler6, and Robert Huber7
Barbara Magagna et al.
  • 1Umweltbundesamt GmbH, Ecosystem Research and Environmental Information Management, Vienna, Austria (barbara.magagna@umweltbundesamt.at)
  • 2National Oceanography Centre, British Oceanographic Data Centre, Liverpool, United Kingdom (gmon@bodc.ac.uk)
  • 3University of Colorado, Boulder, United States (maria.stoica@colorado.edu)
  • 4Terrestrial Ecosystem Research Network (TERN), University of Queensland, Brisbane, Australia (a.devaraju@uq.edu.au)
  • 5National Centre for Atmospheric Science / Centre for Environmental Data Analysis, STFC Rutherford Appleton Laboratory, Leeds, United Kingdom (alison.pamment@stfc.ac.uk)
  • 6Institute of Data Science, German Aerospace Center (DLR), Jena, Germany (sirko.schindler@dlr.de)
  • 7MARUM – Center for Marine Environmental Sciences, University of Bremen, Bremen, Germany (rhuber@uni-bremen.de)

Global environmental challenges like climate change, pollution, and biodiversity loss are complex. To understand environmental patterns and processes and address these challenges, scientists require the observations of natural phenomena at various temporal and spatial scales and across many domains. The research infrastructures and scientific communities involved in these activities are often following their own data management practices which inevitably leads to a high degree of variability and incompatibility of approaches. Consequently, a variety of metadata standards and vocabularies have been proposed to describe observations and are actively used in different communities. However, this diversity in approaches now causes severe issues regarding the interoperability across datasets and hampers their exploitation as a common data source.

Projects like ENVRI-FAIR, FAIRsFAIR, FAIRplus are addressing this difficulty by working on the full integration of services across research infrastructures based on FAIR Guiding Principles supporting the EOSC vision towards an open research culture. Beyond these projects, we need collaboration and community consensus across domains to build a common framework for representing observable properties. The Research Data Alliance InteroperAble Descriptions of Observable Property Terminology Working Group (RDA I-ADOPT WG) was formed in October 2019 to address this need. Its membership covers an international representation of terminology users and terminology providers, including terminology developers, scientists, and data centre managers. The group’s overall objective is to deliver a common interoperability framework for observable property variables within its 18-month work plan. Starting with the collection of user stories from research scientists, terminology managers, and data managers or aggregators, we drafted a set of technical and content-related requirements. A survey of terminology resources and annotation practices provided us with information about almost one hundred terminologies, a subset of which was then analysed to identify existing conceptualisation practices, commonalities, gaps, and overlaps. This was then used to derive a conceptual framework to support their alignment. 

In this presentation, we will introduce the I-ADOPT Interoperability Framework highlighting its semantic components. These represent the building blocks for specific ontology design patterns addressing different use cases and varying degrees of complexity in describing observed properties. We will demonstrate the proposed design patterns using a number of essential climate and essential biodiversity variables. We will also show examples of how the I-ADOPT framework will support interoperability between existing representations. This work will provide the semantic foundation for the development of more user-friendly data annotation tools capable of suggesting appropriate FAIR terminologies for observable properties.

How to cite: Magagna, B., Moncoiffe, G., Stoica, M., Devaraju, A., Pamment, A., Schindler, S., and Huber, R.: The I-ADOPT Interoperability Framework: a proposal for FAIRer observable property descriptions, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-13155, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-13155, 2021.