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For over 20 years, ESIP meetings have brought together the most innovative thinkers and leaders around Earth observation data, thus forming a community dedicated to making Earth observations more discoverable, accessible and useful to researchers, practitioners, policy makers, and the public. The theme of this year’s meeting is Leading Innovation in Earth Science Data Frontiers.

Join is for the ESIP Meeting Highlights Webinar on Friday February 19th at 2 pm ET/11 am PT. Find connection info at https://www.esipfed.org/telecons.
Biological Data Standards [clear filter]
Wednesday, January 27
 

11:00am EST

Advances in Semantic Harmonization: from the Cryosphere, to the Earth System
A major goal of the ESIP Semantic Harmonization Cluster is to promote common understanding and encourage discussion with other ESIP clusters that are developing vocabularies, thesauri, metadata schemas, or ontologies to increase the FAIRness of Earth Science data in potentially specialized domains (e.g. Marine, Soil, or Biological data). By adopting shared approaches among these efforts whenever possible — such as re-using terms, implementing common design patterns, and standardized tooling for vocabulary harmonization — semantic harmonization should vastly increase the capability of researchers to more effectively pursue their science. Thus, we are seeking to build new collaborations with domain experts from various disciplines to harmonize and further develop semantic resources relevant to their respective fields.

This session will continue ongoing discussion of the benefits, goals, and progress in semantically harmonizing Earth Science terminologies, data models and ontologies. Using actual examples integrating vocabularies from the Cryospheric domain, and with a focus on the SWEET and Environment (ENVO) Ontologies, we will present lessons learned for “good enough”/“working practices” learned during our efforts to harmonize the glacial and crosphere terminology between SWEET and ENVO. We hope that our efforts to date can inspire new collaborations and set novel harmonization activities in motion.

How to prepare for this session: For more Information see our ESIP page: https://wiki.esipfed.org/SemanticHarmonization, as well as our running meeting notes: https://www.google.com/url?q=https://docs.google.com/document/d/1IFA6AsCdxESh9mZB5W1bZ_vARFkF3OvnL-KgdGNcp60/edit&sa=D&ust=1604399963101000&usg=AOvVaw0-fqz1-MEOZYXx5PsongvZ, and our ESIP summer 2020 session: https://2020esipsummermeeting.sched.com/event/cIuW/semantic-harmonization-see-it-in-action-bridging-metagenomics-and-earth-science-data.

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Speakers
avatar for Gary Berg-Cross

Gary Berg-Cross

Board Member, Ontolog
Cognitive Psychologist and long-time data and knowledge engineer. Board member of the Ontolog Forum. Activities including hosting VoCamps to develop modular ontologies and harmonize semantics between terminologies, conceptual models and ontologies.
avatar for Kai Blumberg

Kai Blumberg

Ontologist, BCODMO
Kai Blumberg is an ontologist BCODMO and a PhD candidate at the University of Arizona. #FAIR-data #ENVO #BCODMO units-of-measurement.org #OBO #Interoperability
avatar for Pier Luigi Buttigieg

Pier Luigi Buttigieg

Digital Architect & Senior Data Scientist, Alfred Wegener Institute / Helmholtz
avatar for Ruth Duerr

Ruth Duerr

Research Scholar, Ronin Institute for Independent Scholarship
avatar for Mark Schildhauer

Mark Schildhauer

Senior Technology Fellow, NCEAS/UCSB
Data semantics, Ecoinformatics training, Arctic data, LTER data, Ecological synthesis
avatar for Brandon Whitehead

Brandon Whitehead

environmental data scientist, manaaki whenua -- landcare research


Wednesday January 27, 2021 11:00am - 12:30pm EST
Room 3

4:00pm EST

Determining the current and future Earth Science Data Frontiers
One of the strategic themes proposed for the ESIP 2021-2026 Strategic Plan is ‘Leading Innovation in Earth Science Data Frontiers’. This then begs the following questions:
1. Where are those Earth Science Data Frontiers?
2. Who is leading them?
3. How do we know that ESIP is at those frontiers?
4. How do we position ESIP to take advantage of emerging Frontiers?
5. How do we monitor emerging Earth Science Data Frontiers?

As a bottom up organisation, it is possible for ESIP to internally determine the changing face of Earth science data frontiers through:
1. Tracking clusters as they form and wane;
2. The evolution of session proposals at the ESIP Summer and Winter meetings;
3. Analysis of ESIP’s 5-year strategic plans through time;
4. Issues raised at Help Desks ESIP coordinates at conferences (AGU, GSA, EGU);
5. ESIP Lab submissions.

But we need to know how these Data Frontiers determined internally align with external initiatives elsewhere? Current international activities that ESIP is involved in include:
1. The Earth and Environmental Science Partners Downunder (E2SIP) cluster has been formed by the Oceania Partners of ESIP (AuScope, IMOS, TERN, NCI, CSIRO, ARDC). The goal of E2SIP is to leverage work of key interest undertaken in the ESIP community for Australian projects, and bring key Australian initiatives back to ESIP.
2. The ESIP/Research Data Alliance (RDA) Earth and Space and Environmental Science Interest Group (ESES-IG) is co-chaired by people form E2SIP, ESIP and the Environmental Research Infrastructure (ENVRI) FAIR project in Europe. The goal of ESES-IG is to connect these “Global North” data infrastructure initiatives to those in the “Global South” (Africa, South America, Asia, China, etc)
3. ESIP is a participatory organisation in GEO.

Combined these initiatives have the potential to build a global Map of the Landscape of data infrastructures and help determine the global Earth science Data frontiers. The ESIP/RDA ESES-IG and GEO also provide opportunities for close connections to the data frontiers in other domains such as Bio, Health, Agriculture.

The session will be run in as a workshop and will provide short presentations on ESIP’s international activities and potential ways to map ‘hot topics’ on data frontiers. It will actively then seek input from attendees on how THEY determine where the Earth science data frontiers are and more importantly how they would KNOW if ESIP is at them.

How to prepare for this session: Please come with your ideas on what you think are the current frontiers of Earth science data, ask if ESIP is in participating at them, and present ideas on how you determine what these data frontiers are.

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Speakers
avatar for Lesley Wyborn

Lesley Wyborn

Honorary Professor, Australian National University
avatar for Karl Benedict

Karl Benedict

Director of Research Data and IT Services, University of New Mexico, College of University Libraries & Learning Sciences
Since 1986 I have had parallel careers in Information Technology, Data Management and Analysis, and Archaeology. Since 1993 when I arrived at UNM I have worked as a Graduate Student in Anthropology, Research Scientist, Research Faculty, Applied Research Center Director, and currently... Read More →
avatar for Rebecca Koskela

Rebecca Koskela

Executive Director, Research Data Alliance US
avatar for George Percivall

George Percivall

CTO, Chief Engineer, OGC
As CTO and Chief Engineer of the Open Geospatial Consortium (OGC), George Percivall is responsible for the OGC Interoperability Program and the OGC Compliance Program. His roles include articulating OGC standards as a coherent architecture, as well as addressing implications of technology... Read More →
avatar for Siri-Jodha Singh Khalsa

Siri-Jodha Singh Khalsa

CIRES/NSIDC, University of Colorado
avatar for Tim Rawling

Tim Rawling

CEO, AuScope
Research Infrastructure



Wednesday January 27, 2021 4:00pm - 5:30pm EST
Room 8
 
Thursday, January 28
 

1:30pm EST

Best Practices & Fundamental Challenges of AI in Earth and Space Sciences
Deriving scientific insights from artificial intelligence methods requires adhering to best practices and moving beyond off-the-shelf approaches” (Imme Ebert-Uphoff et al 2019). Artificial intelligence (AI) has been showing promises to address many challenges associated with Earth sciences, such as remote mapping, prediction, anomaly detection, event classification, and potentially provide high-speed, effortless alternatives for representing vague non-observable processes in Earth system models. However, due to AI's uncertainty and black box nature, there is no consensus on a universal way to correctly use AI. This session calls for best practices of AI utilization and invites the current AI practitioners to present their experiences and workflows on preparing AI-ready data, training AI models, or applying AI in real scenarios, as examples for the community to learn from. The successful use of AI in any domain of Earth and Space Sciences is welcomed for this session.

How to prepare for this session: Please refer to this repository to find out the existing efforts on AI utilization in Earth science: https://github.com/ESIPFed/Awesome-Earth-Artificial-Intelligence

TALKS

Mike Giordano
AfriqAir; Observatoire de Sciences de l'UNIVERS EFLUVE, LISA/IPSL, UMR CNRS 758; Université Paris Est Créteil et Université Paris
Title: Low-Cost Air Quality Monitoring and Machine Learning: Challenges and Lessons Learned from the AfriqAir Network
S. Mostafa Mousavi
Stanford University
Title: Earthquake Monitoring in Artificial Intelligence Era

Aji John and Nicoleta Cristea
University of Washington
Title: High-resolution snow-covered area mapping in mountain ecosystems using PlanetScope imagery
Kevin Booth
Radiant Earth
Title: Radiant MLHub: An Open Library for Geospatial Training Data

Ryan McGranaghan
ASTRA LLC
Title: The opportunities and challenges of ML: Trends from the space weather perspective
Slides: https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.13728070.v1

Ziheng Sun
George Mason University
Title: Earth AI: Formulating ESIP ML Community Effort
Slides: https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.13721521.v1

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Speakers
avatar for Annie Burgess

Annie Burgess

Lab Director, ESIP
avatar for Julien Chastang

Julien Chastang

Software Engineer, UCAR - Unidata
Scientific software developer at UCAR-Unidata.
SM

S. Mostafa Mousavi

Stanford University
avatar for Douglas Rao

Douglas Rao

Research Scientist, NESDIS/NCEI/CSSD/CSB
I am currently a Research Scientist at North Carolina Institute for Climate Studies, affiliated with NOAA National Centers for Environmental Information. My current research at NCICS focuses on generating a blended near-surface air temperature dataset by integrating in situ measurements... Read More →
avatar for Ziheng Sun

Ziheng Sun

research associate professor, George Mason University
My research interests are mainly on geospatial cyberinfrastructure and machine learning in atmospheric and agricultural sciences.
avatar for Ryan McGranaghan

Ryan McGranaghan

Data Scientist/Aerospace Engineering Scientist, ASTRA LLC
Space scientist, engineer, data scientist, designer, podcast host. Observer of beauty in liminal spaces. I believe in being led around by your curiosity.
avatar for Kevin Booth

Kevin Booth

Geospatial Software Engineer, Radiant Earth Foundation
avatar for Nicoleta Cristea

Nicoleta Cristea

Research Scientist, University of Washington
avatar for Cindy Lin

Cindy Lin

Postdoctoral Fellow, Cornell University
Cindy Lin is a Postdoctoral Fellow at the Atkinson Center for Sustainability, affiliated with the Department of Information Science. In Fall 2022, she will be an assistant professor at Pennsylvania State University’s College of Information Sciences and Technology. Her current research... Read More →


Thursday January 28, 2021 1:30pm - 3:00pm EST
Room 2

4:00pm EST

SWEET Ontology Suite Working Session
This session offers a hands-on working agenda for SWEET community members.

Audience
In order to focus on work items, this session targets people who are already familiar with the SWEET ontology. This session will NOT provide an introduction to ontology engineering or the semantic technologies ecosystem.
 

 Preparation
Prior to the session we will have prioritized a handful of Github issues we want to work through. Issues should be labeled with #esipwinter2021To align with the ESIP Meeting theme 'Leading Innovation in Earth Science Data Frontiers', issues focusing on INTEROPERABILITY will be prioritized. Please feel free to create issues and label them appropriately.

Agenda Introduce the session structure Est. time: 5
Landform introduction (Gary Berg-Cross) Est. time: 5
Part 1 - Prioritizing SWEET work

Slido poll #1 Which open Github issue is most important to you? Est. time: 5 min
BREAKOUT #1 Vote with your feet. Join the breakout of interest. Est. time: ~10 min
FEEDBACK #1 - Breakout representative briefs larger group on breakout outcomes; allow time for comments from broader group Est. time: 15-20 min
Part 2 - SWEET Community and Project Governance

Slido poll #2 Which community and/or project governance issues are of concern to you? Est. time: 5 min
BREAKOUT #2 VOTE with your feet. Join breakout of interest. Est. time: ~10 min
FEEDBACK #2 - Breakout representative briefs larger group on breakout outcomes; allow time for comments from broader group Est. time: 15-20 min
SURVEY FEEDBACK/CONCLUSION – Brandon provides commentary of the SWEET survey responses so far. Est time: ~5-10 min

Outcomes
  1. We will have identied community governance issues and built consensus on how to address them. Decisions will be recorded in the Github issue - [GOVERNANCE] Project and Community Governance Issues.
  2. We will have strategized solutions for current development activities. These will be documented in Github. Maybe even grouped and prioritized as a Github project.

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Speakers
avatar for Lewis McGibbney

Lewis McGibbney

Enterprise Search Technologist III, Jet Propulsion Laboratory
avatar for Simon Cox

Simon Cox

Research Scientist, CSIRO
avatar for Gary Berg-Cross

Gary Berg-Cross

Board Member, Ontolog
Cognitive Psychologist and long-time data and knowledge engineer. Board member of the Ontolog Forum. Activities including hosting VoCamps to develop modular ontologies and harmonize semantics between terminologies, conceptual models and ontologies.
avatar for Brandon Whitehead

Brandon Whitehead

environmental data scientist, manaaki whenua -- landcare research
avatar for Pier Luigi Buttigieg

Pier Luigi Buttigieg

Digital Architect & Senior Data Scientist, Alfred Wegener Institute / Helmholtz


Thursday January 28, 2021 4:00pm - 5:30pm EST
Room 5
 
Friday, January 29
 

11:00am EST

A Trip Around the World to Discover Innovative Approaches to Informatics Challenges Associated with Biological Data
Biological data represent a unique informatics challenge but researchers around the world are developing innovative methods for linking biological data, making biological data accessible, standardizing, and sharing biological data. In this breakout session we will provide a look at several projects with innovative approaches to informatics challenges related to biological data and showcase the power of open science principles and emerging observation methods. We will also highlight the role that standards play in making all this possible.

Nicole Kearney: How the biodiversity community are making historic literature discoverable online
The Biodiversity Heritage Library (BHL) is the world’s largest online repository of biodiversity literature and archival materials. It is a global consortium of 500 libraries who have made over 59 million pages from their collections freely accessible online. Yet accessible does not equate to discoverable. Unlike contemporary scientific papers, the historical literature was not “born” with digital object identifiers (DOIs). This means historic articles sit outside the convenient linked infrastructure of modern publications, appearing in today’s reference lists as unlinked citations or not at all. The upshot of this is that our historic literature is falling into obscurity. This paper will detail the work the BHL is undertaking to bring the world’s historic literature into the modern linked network of scholarly research. It will also discuss the responsibility that comes with assigning DOIs retrospectively, what we are doing to promote best practice for out-of-copyright and orphaned content, and how DOIs are demonstrating that the historic literature is still hugely relevant today.     

Marie-Elise Lecoq: The Living Atlases Community
The Atlas of Living Australia (ALA) has worked on a modular and open-source platform that provides information on all known species in Australia and contributes to the GBIF (Global Biodiversity Information Facility). Its modular and open-source architecture enables other institutions to re-use and modify the ALA platform for their thematics or national data portals. For several years, GBIF nodes and institutions have worked together to create an open-source community, named the Living Atlases community, around the ALA software. Today, we have more than 25 live data portals around the world based on the ALA framework.  For two years, we have endeavoured to make this community more sustainable. First, we have organized a Community of Practice based on existing foundations such as the Apache or Linux communities. In addition, we have hired a technical coordinator and an administrative one that helped grow the community via better technical documentation on installing, maintaining data portals, and contributing to the main project. We have also developed tools that facilitate the installation and configuration of a Living Atlas data portal.
Nicky Nicolson: Specimen duplicate detection in aggregated biodiversity data
Plant specimens are considered easy to digitise, but they are often duplicated between separate institutions and duplicate specimens are independently curated and digitised. When these data are aggregated together into data portals, the duplicates are hidden. As the field values in these records may vary due to separate curation histories, these are not absolute (record-for-record) duplicates and it is necessary to use data-mining techniques for detection.
The GBIF network (www.gbif.org) mobilises c85 million records for plant specimens - this number will include many duplicated specimens. This talk outlines an automated process applied to GBIF mobilised data which identifies field collectors and their collecting activities (expeditions) and enables the detection of specimen duplicate sets. Resolution of these duplicates enables the sharing of curatorial information between separate institutions. A higher-level collector-oriented view of the specimens also helps users understand and summarise a collection. The process is enabled by data standards for specimen metadata sharing and has implications for data standards development in collection description efforts.
Curtis Dyreson & Neil Cobb: Symbiota2: Promoting FAIRness in biodiversity databases and developing “Extended Specimen” pathways
This talk discusses data management standards and practices in Symbiota2 from the values stored in a database to values in a knowledge graph.  Symbiota2 a biodiversity collection management system that is a rewrite of Symbiota, one of the most popular biodiversity database applications.  Symbiota2 is primarily used to store and manage specimen collection data. Data in Symbiota2 is stored and managed by a relational database.  Some of the data can be exported formatted to the Darwin Core standard for integration with other datasets.  Symbiota2 also provides web services to interact with the data at a more abstract level, documented using the OpenAPI standard.  Finally, Symbiota2 produces a knowledge graph using the R2RML standard. An emerging focus will be to accommodate data created as part of the “Extended Specimen” phase of US collection digitization (e.g., genetics, traits, phylogenetics) and integrate specimen-based data with environmental data.
Megan Cromwell: Video Data Solutions: Standard Biological Data Quantification and Data Accessibility with Machine Learning Techniques
Video data are qualitative data that are time consuming to analyze, standardize, and archive in a user friendly manner. Over the last 12 years, the NOAA National Centers for Environmental Data Management has collaborated with the NOAA Office of Ocean Exploration and Research and their partners to systematically work through many of these challenges. We have learned that standard annotations offer a key to finding and reusing these data for scientific analysis. Machine Learning techniques are opening the doorway for annotating these data without the heavy human time commitment typically required. Partners from NOAA, Academia and non-Governmental Organizations (NGOs)have begun developing annotation methodologies through student crowd-sourced projects that will eventually resolve the many challenges associated with biological imagery annotation, for the benefit of data access and reuse.

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Speakers
avatar for Abby Benson

Abby Benson

Biologist, U.S. Geological Survey
avatar for Neil Cobb

Neil Cobb

Biodiversity data portals, Northern Arizona University
I am an ecologist working on developing arthropod biodiversity data sets and integrating those into cross-disciplinary research. I coordinate SCAN, the most comprehensive data portal for North American arthropods with over 28 million records from over 200 collections. My goal is to... Read More →
CD

Curtis Dyreson

Utah State University
avatar for Megan Cromwell

Megan Cromwell

Assistant Chief Data Officer, NOAA National Ocean Service
avatar for Nicole Kearney

Nicole Kearney

Manager, Biodiversity Heritage Library (BHL) Australia, Biodiversity Heritage Library, Australia
Zoologist and science communicator working to make Australia's biodiversity heritage literature openly accessible and discoverable for everyone. Manager of the Australian branch of the Biodiversity Heritage Library (BHL). Chair of the BHL's Global Persistent Identifier Working Group... Read More →
avatar for Nicky Nicolson

Nicky Nicolson

Senior Research Leader, Royal Botanic Gardens



Friday January 29, 2021 11:00am - 12:30pm EST
Room 4
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