Verhulst Stefaan, Young Andrew
The Governance Lab, An Action Research Centre at New York University's Tandon School of Engineering, New York, NY, United States.
Front Big Data. 2022 Jul 18;5:888384. doi: 10.3389/fdata.2022.888384. eCollection 2022.
As a society, we need to become more sophisticated in assessing and addressing data asymmetries-and their resulting political and economic power inequalities-particularly in the realm of open science, research, and development. This article seeks to start filling the analytical gap regarding data asymmetries globally, with a specific focus on the asymmetrical availability of privately-held data for open science, and a look at current efforts to address these data asymmetries. It provides a taxonomy of asymmetries, as well as both their societal and institutional impacts. Moreover, this contribution outlines a set of solutions that could provide a toolbox for open science practitioners and data demand-side actors that stand to benefit from increased access to data. The concept of data liquidity (and portability) is explored at length in connection with efforts to generate an ecosystem of responsible data exchanges. We also examine how data holders and demand-side actors are experimenting with new and emerging operational models and governance frameworks for purpose-driven, cross-sector data collaboratives that connect previously siloed datasets. Key solutions discussed include professionalizing and re-imagining data steward roles and functions (i.e., individuals or groups who are tasked with managing data and their ethical and responsible reuse within organizations). We present these solutions through case studies on notable efforts to address science data asymmetries. We examine these cases using a repurposable analytical framework that could inform future research. We conclude with recommended actions that could support the creation of an evidence base on work to address data asymmetries and unlock the public value of greater science data liquidity and responsible reuse.
作为一个社会,我们需要在评估和解决数据不对称问题以及由此产生的政治和经济权力不平等方面变得更加成熟,特别是在开放科学、研究和开发领域。本文旨在填补全球范围内关于数据不对称的分析空白,特别关注开放科学中私有数据的不对称获取情况,并审视当前为解决这些数据不对称问题所做的努力。它提供了不对称性的分类,以及它们对社会和机构的影响。此外,本文还概述了一套解决方案,可为开放科学从业者和有望从增加数据获取中受益的数据需求方提供一个工具箱。本文详细探讨了数据流动性(和可移植性)的概念,以及为建立一个负责任的数据交换生态系统所做的努力。我们还研究了数据持有者和需求方如何尝试新出现的运营模式和治理框架,以实现目标驱动的跨部门数据合作,这些合作将以前孤立的数据集连接起来。讨论的关键解决方案包括使数据管理角色和功能专业化并重新构想(即负责在组织内管理数据及其道德和负责任的再利用的个人或团体)。我们通过关于解决科学数据不对称的显著努力的案例研究来展示这些解决方案。我们使用一个可重复使用的分析框架来研究这些案例,该框架可为未来的研究提供参考。我们最后提出了一些建议行动,这些行动可以支持建立一个关于解决数据不对称问题的证据基础,并释放更大的科学数据流动性和负责任再利用的公共价值。