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Data! Philip E. Bourne Ph.D. Associate Director for Data Science National Institutes of Health
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Some Context: NIH Data Science History 6/12 2/14 3/14 Findings: Sharing data & software through catalogs Support methods and applications development Need more training Need campus-wide IT strategy Hire CSIO Continued support throughout the lifecycle
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My Bias Still a scientist A funder who still thinks like a PI Not yet attuned to the federal system Big supporter of OA via PLOS and others
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Data – A Few Observations … We talk about the promise of big data, but we don’t even know the value of little data (aka could “Big Data” be the new “AI”) Good data is expensive in terms of time and money Looking at data retroactively is really expensive Good data begats trust; trust begats community; community is God The way we support scientific data currently is not sustainable There is no workable business model currently for scientific data
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Data – A Few NIH Observations … 1.We have little idea how much we spend on data – estimated over $1bn per year 2.We have even less idea how much we should be spending Point 2 is part of a culture clash between the more observational history of biomedicine and the new analytical approach to discovery
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ADDS Mission Statement To foster an ecosystem that enables biomedical research to be conducted as a digital enterprise that enhances health, lengthens life and reduces illness and disability
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What Problems Are We Trying to Solve? Possible Solutions Sustainability – 50% business model Efficiency – sharing best practices in longitudinal clinical studies Collaboration - identification of collaborators at the point of data collection not publication Reproducibility – data accessible with publication Integration – phenotype homogenization Accessibility – clinical trials registration Quality – sharing CDEs across institutes Training – keeping trainees in the ecosystem
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The Data Ecosystem Community Policy Infrastructure Sustainable business model Collaboration Training
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Raw Materials to Seed the Ecosystem NIH mandate & support ADDS team of 8 people Intramural participation of over 100 team members across ICs Funding through BD2K: –~$30M in FY14 –~$80M in FY15 –....
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Example Communities –NIH 20/27 ICs –Agencies NSF DOE DARPA NIST –Government OSTP HHS HDI ONC CDC FDA –Private sector Phrma Google Amazon –Organizations PCORI RDA, ELIXIR CCC CATS FASEB, ISCB Biophysical Society Sloan Foundation Moore Foundation
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Example Policies –Clinical data harmonization –Data citation –Machine readable data sharing plans on all grants –New review models, audiences etc. Open review Micro funding Standing data committees to explore best practices Crowd sourcing
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Example Infrastructure: The Commons Data The Long Tail Core Facilities/HS Centers Clinical /Patient The Why: Data Sharing Plans The Commons Government The How: Data Discovery Index Sustainable Storage Quality Scientific Discovery Usability Security/ Privacy The End Game: Knowledge NIH Awardees Private Sector Metrics/ Standards Rest of Academia Software Standards Index BD2K Centers Cloud, Research Objects, Business Models
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What Does the Commons Enable? Dropbox like storage The opportunity to apply quality metrics Bring compute to the data A place to collaborate A place to discover http://100plus.com/wp-content/uploads/Data-Commons-3-1024x825.png
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[Adapted from George Komatsoulis] One Possible Commons Business Model HPC, Institution …
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Pilots Around A Virtuous Cycle Expect a Funding Call
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Training & Diversity Training & Diversity Goals: –Develop a sufficient cadre of diverse researchers skilled in the science of Big Data –Elevate general competencies in data usage and analysis across the biomedical research workforce –Combat the Google bus How: –Traditional training grants –Work with IC’s on a needs assessment –Standards for course descriptions with EU –Work with institutions on raising awareness –Partner with minority institutions –Virtual/physical training center(s)?
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What Can Open Access Publishers Do? Work with NIH on supporting data citation Experiment with the idea of micropublication Other?
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NIH … Turning Discovery Into Health philip.bourne@nih.gov
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