Metadata for Discovery in Materials Science Laura Bartolo & James Warren, MDII IG Co-Chairs Robert Hanisch, Chandler Becker, Ray Plante, Sharief Youssef.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
The Messy World of Grey Literature in Cyber Security 8 th Grey Literature Conference 4-5 December 2006 New Orleans, Louisiana Patricia Erwin – I3P Senior.
Advertisements

Panel 2 – Promoting Re-Use of Scientific Collections John Harrison SHAMAN Project University of Liverpool
White Paper on Establishing an Infrastructure for Open Language Archiving Steven Bird and Gary Simons.
Electronic Theses: The Next Stage Metadata for ETDs Richard Milne The Robert Gordon University 27 th September 2004.
S.J. Coles a*, M.B. Hursthouse a, R.A. Stephenson a, P. Cliff b, E. Lyon b, M. Patel b J. Downing c & P. Murray-Rust.
EBankII Workshop 1 Making Scientific Data Openly Available Simon Coles School of Chemistry, University of Southampton.
American Chemical Society Undergraduate Curriculum and the ACS Guidelines Anne McCoyClark Landis Ohio State University of Wisconsin The evolution of the.
ACS PUBLICATIONS An Overview of Products & Services A C S P U B L I C A T I O N S H I G H Q U A L I T Y. H I G H I M P A C T.
Materials Science research and the Library Cynthia Bail Science and Engineering Librarian.
DEVELOPMENT OF A EUROPEAN NETWORK OF LIBRARIES Hans Geleijnse Director of Library and IT Services & CIO Tilburg University, The Netherlands.
Engineering Village ™ ULAKBIM Istanbul, Turkey November/2006.
Jeffery Loo NLM Associate Fellow ’03 – ’05 chemicalinformaticsforlibraries.
Introduction and Overview “the grid” – a proposed distributed computing infrastructure for advanced science and engineering. Purpose: grid concept is motivated.
Metadata: An Introduction By Wendy Duff October 13, 2001 ECURE.
Energy efficient scientific methods Materials Engineering By Drs J. Whitty and B. Henderson.
Development of a wiki-based, expert community-driven nanosystem vocabulary International Conference on Dublin Core and Metadata Applications October 3-6.
Overview of the Institute of Materials Science (IMS) February 20, 2009 Presented to SOE Faculty Meeting A clear definition of the mission and commitments.
National Science Foundation: Transforming Undergraduate Education in Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics (TUES)
What is “Biomedical Informatics”?. Biomedical Informatics Biomedical informatics (BMI) is the interdisciplinary field that studies and pursues.
Springer for R&D Materials Science. Springer for R&D – Materials Science Springer for R&D – rd.springer.comrd.springer.com Immediate Access to Quality.
Research Methods Nanda Ganesan, Ph.D. Professor of Information Systems California State University, Los Angeles.
Educause October 29, 2001 A GEM of a Resource: The Gateway to Educational Materials Copyright Nancy Virgil Morgan, This work is the intellectual.
Grey Literature, E-Repositories and Evaluation of Academic & Research Institutes. The case study of BPI e-repository Maria V. Kitsiou - Head Librarian,
College of Engineering Spring 2013 Materials Science & Engineering Info & Advising Session.
By: Lea Versoza. Chemistry  A branch of physical science, is the study of the composition, properties and behavior of matter.  Is concerned with atoms.
Guide to the Software Engineering Body of Knowledge Chapter 1 - Introduction.
Course Name : Material Science
Design For Engineering Materials Science 2006 Greg Heitkamp This material is based upon work supported by the National Science Foundation under Grant No.
Providing Access to Your Data: Access Mechanisms Robert R. Downs, PhD NASA Socioeconomic Data and Applications Center (SEDAC) Center for International.
Meghan Lafferty September 11, 2006 Brief introduction to materials science for the information professional.
Nano WG 12 March Why in the world do we need a nanomaterials description system? – How CODATA and VAMAS answers that question Co-Chairs John Rumble.
The Materials Genome Initiative and Materials Innovation Infrastructure Meredith Drosback White House Office of Science and Technology Policy September.
Elsevier Engineering Information Inc. Engineering Village 2 : Compendex & INSPEC ChemVillage CRC Press Handbooks NTIS Jack O’Toole EI Vice President of.
Materials Science Registry Will propose RDA Materials Science WG Define minimum/modest metadata extensions to Dublin Core to enable resource discovery.
SCAPE Scalable Preservation Environments. 2 Its all about scalability! Scalable services for planning and execution of institutional preservation strategies.
Providing Access to Your Data: Access Mechanisms Robert R. Downs, PhD NASA Socioeconomic Data and Applications Center (SEDAC) Center for International.
Under the Microscope: Science Resources in GALILEO and the National Science Digital Library. Modified from a Galileo presentation, June 2009.
Searching the Chemical Literature: Reference Books and Online Resources Dr. Sheppard Chemistry 4401L.
1 Advanced Software Architecture Muhammad Bilal Bashir PhD Scholar (Computer Science) Mohammad Ali Jinnah University.
Federated Discovery and Access in Astronomy Robert Hanisch (NIST), Ray Plante (NCSA)
Adoption of RDA-DFT Terminology and Data Model to the Description and Structuring of Atmospheric Data Aaron Addison, Rudolf Husar, Cynthia Hudson-Vitale.
Material Science (Code: PE 217 ) Prepared by: Dr. Ehssan Nassef Pharos University in Alexandria Faculty of Engineering. Petrochemical Department.
21 June 2001Managing Information Resources for e-Government1 The Dublin Core Makx Dekkers, Managing Director, Dublin Core Metadata Initiative
Copyright © 2011 by ABET, Inc. and TMS 1 December 2, 2008 ABET Update UMC Meeting April 6, 2015 San Francisco, CA Chester J. Van Tyne
AEM 338 Engineered Materials Testing Introduction to Materials Technology Sergio Sgro Eastern Kentucky University.
Hydro DWG at the RDA Plenary BoF - Improve sharing of water resource data globally 24 September BREAKOUT :30-15:00.
1 Metadata Elements and Domain Groups - Keith G Jeffery.
DOE Data Management Plan Requirements
Jemerson Pedernal IT 2.1 FUNDAMENTALS OF DATABASE APPLICATIONS by PEDERNAL, JEMERSON G. [BS-Computer Science] Palawan State University Computer Network.
Discussion of Data Fabric Terms & Preparation for RDA P7 Virtual Meeting Monday, January 25, 2016 Organized by Gary Berg-Cross (DFT-IG) and Peter Wittenburg.
Nucleus: Z = # protons = 1 for hydrogen to 94 for plutonium N = # neutrons Atomic mass A ≈ Z + N BOHR ATOM CHAPTER 2: ATOMIC STRUCTURE AND INTERATOMIC.
Describing resources II: Dublin Core CERN-UNESCO School on Digital Libraries Rabat, Nov 22-26, 2010 Annette Holtkamp CERN.
Introduction: Themes in the Study of Life. Topics, Concepts, and Themes Topics are the subject areas Concepts are the most important ideas that form our.
Campus Curricula Committee Report 18 February 2016 l CCC Meetings »2 February 2016 »1 March 2016 (upcoming) l Committee Activity »5 Degree change requests.
Introduction to Engineering Materials ET 241 Spring 2016 Southeastern Louisiana University Instructor:Junkun Ma Office:Fayard Hall 329C Phone:(985)
Biomedical Informatics and Health. What is “Biomedical Informatics”?
IPDA Architecture Project International Planetary Data Alliance IPDA Architecture Project Report.
Informatics for Scientific Data Bio-informatics and Medical Informatics Week 9 Lecture notes INF 380E: Perspectives on Information.
Chapter 1. Introduction <Objectives>
Developing our Metadata: Technical Considerations & Approach Ray Plante NIST 4/14/16 NMI Registry Workshop BIPM, Paris 1 …don’t worry ;-) or How we concentrate.
JOINT SESSION IG Domain Repositories, IG Agriculture Data, WG BioSharing Registry, IG Materials Data, WG Wheat Data RDA P6, Paris,
Materials Registry Working Group
NIST Office of Data and Informatics (ODI) of the Material Measurement Laboratory Robert Hanisch, director Ray Plante, interoperability expert ODI has responsibility.
RDA US Science workshop Arlington VA, Aug 2014 Cees de Laat with many slides from Ed Seidel/Rob Pennington.
Materials Resource Registries Working Group Co-chairs: Laura M
TERMINOLOGY AND TRANSLATION
Bird of Feather Session
LIBRARY Knovel Available from this
HOW (and why?) DO WE DESCRIBE ?
Presentation transcript:

Metadata for Discovery in Materials Science Laura Bartolo & James Warren, MDII IG Co-Chairs Robert Hanisch, Chandler Becker, Ray Plante, Sharief Youssef NIST ODI/MML/ITL Bowen Deng, RDA Fellow

2 Presentation Outline  Domain description and motivation  Beginning efforts for engagement & adoption Sustainability & Governance Relationship to other standards Community engagement Next steps

3  Domain: exceptionally broad Origins in Metallurgy, Ceramics, Polymer Science Important associations to cognate disciplines Physics, Chemistry, Chemical Engineering, Geology, Electronics, Optics, Biology  Community Academe & Government Labs Industry Professional Societies  Early Stages -- Starting Points: International Materials Resource Registry Common general description for resources of materials data Materials Science & Engineering

4 International Materials Resource Registry  Proposed as MDII IG’s first Working Group  Establish a network of materials resource registries in key sub-domains and regions  Resources include collection, database, repository, website, services,....  Harvest & make searchable high-level metadata descriptions of resources ? How best to describe Materials resources ?

5  Prototype set up on the National Data Service Wiki  Working draft for Materials community to review, edit and evolve  Initial organizers & contributors: NIST Office of Data & Informatics Materials Measurement Lab Information Technology Lab Beginning Sustainability & Governance

6 1.General Metadata Important to Materials Science Minimum level description in Dublin Core Applicable to data in any science domain with particular importance for materials science applications  Access restrictions: e.g., subscriptions, licenses, other  Open field for subject keywords: e.g., pipeline safety  Intended application(s): e.g., energy, environment  Data encoding type(s): e.g., images, files, data arrays  General description: e.g., A database of crystal structures generated with VASP density functional theory software and covering many compounds, elements, and some substitutional alloys. Prototype: Relationship to other standards

7 2.Materials Science Metadata Extensions For use with Materials Resource Registry, limited to 12 materials metadata fields Definition references: Kittel, C. 1986, Introduction to Solid State Physics Novikov, V.Y., 2003, The Concise Dictionary of Materials Science, published by CRC Press. The MATTER Glossary, produced by the MATTER consortium of UK university materials science departments, led by the University of Liverpool. Engineering-dictionary.org Prototype: Materials-specific Metadata Extensions

8 Materials Metadata Field: material type metal, semiconductor, ceramic, polymer, biomaterial, organic, inorganic, oxide, composite, nanomaterials, superconductor, non-specific, other Formal name: material type Definition: the category of solid material that the resource directly relates to. In the specific context of data: the category of solid material being studied Occurances: recommended; multiple values allowed Examples of Allowed values: metal -- an electropositive element or an alloy based on these elements [edo]; a material characterized by a partially filled energy band [kit] semiconductor -- a material characterized by slightly filled or slightly empty energy band [kit]; a material with a relatively narrow band gap between 0 and ~2 eV [mat] ceramic -- material primarily composed a compound of metallic and nonmetallic elements, for which the interatomic bonding is predominantly ionic. [edo] polymer -- material composed of large molecules built up by repetition of small, simple chemical units [mat]

9 Other Materials Metadata Extensions: morphology/structure(s): primary or prevalent characteristic of the structure of the material of interest to this resource, including features associated with structures material property class(es): property of a material that is of interest data acquisition method: experimental or computational technique used to acquire the data sample processing method: physical processing or preparation technique applied to the material being studied Prototype: Materials-specific Metadata Extensions

10 Community Engagement: Professional Societies  International Societies: ASM – Industry IUMRS – International Union of Materials Research Societies MRS – Materials Science TMS – Materials Engineering  Subdomains: ACerS – Ceramics AIChE: American Institute of Chemical Engineers ASC: American Society for Composites AFS: American Foundry Society SAMPE: Society for the Advancement of Material and Process Engineering SEM: Society for Experimental Mechanics SFB: Society for Biomaterials STLE: Society of Tribologists and Lubrication Engineers  Cognate Domains : ACS: American Chemical Society *SIAM: Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics

11  Best practice sharing  Cross-listing of materials data-related programming and meetings  Posting of open access articles and reports related to materials data issues  Establishment of “materials data ambassadors”, or leveraging of MGI Ambassadors for materials data topics  Coordinating access to existing databases through support for federation initiatives  Development of standards and protocols for materials data  Support for integrated workshops on materials data infrastructure areas From: Building the Materials Data Infrastructure Workshop Report, February 13, 2015 Emerging Professional Society Activities

12  Engaging Professional Societies  Engaging subdomains  Engaging researchers & industry Next Steps

13 Thanks! Laura Bartolo James Warren Robert Hanisch Northwestern University NIST NIST