BREAKOUT SESSION 24 - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 14
About This Presentation
Title:

BREAKOUT SESSION 24

Description:

13. Hardware/software system development efforts should be based on a model that ... In addition, system designers should work from the assumption that systems will ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:15
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 15
Provided by: cnie
Category:
Tags: breakout | session

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: BREAKOUT SESSION 24


1
BREAKOUT SESSION 24
  • Designing for Complementarity Among
    ProgramsGenerating Environmental and Health
    Information
  • Pre-Session Discussion Notes

2
Looking Back
  • Reference is made to
  • Finding the Forest in the Trees
  • The Challenge of Combining Diverse Environmental
    Data
  • National Research Council. 1995.
  • Committee for a Pilot Study on Database
    Interfaces

3
Its Issues
  • . . . the observational, computational, and
    communications technologies have enabled the
    scientific community to undertake a broad range
    of interdisciplinary environmental research and
    assessment programs.
  • Sound practice in database management is
    required to deal with the problems of complexity
    in such programs and a great deal of attention
    and resources has been devoted to this area in
    recent years.
  • . . . little guidance has been provided on
    overcoming the barriers frequently encountered in
    the interfacing of disparate data sets.

4
Its Recommendations
  • 1. In the planning for interdisciplinary
    research, careful thought should be given to the
    implications of different inherent spatial and
    temporal scales and the processes they represent.
  • 2. Metadata should explicitly describe all
    preliminary processing associated with each data
    set, along with its underlying scientific purpose
    and its effects on the suitability of the data
    for various purposes.
  • 3. All proposed data management and interfacing
    methods should be weighed carefully in terms of
    their ability to deal with large volumes of data.
  • 4. Efforts to establish data standards should
    focus on a key subset of common parameters whose
    standardization would most facilitate data
    interfacing.
  • 5. Agencies that perform or support environmental
    research and assessment generally, and global
    change research particularly, should identify and
    define key ecological data sets that do not exist
    but are important to their mission.

5
Its Recommendations
  • 6. Project scientists and data managers should
    adopt the view that one of their primary
    responsibilities is the creation of long-lasting
    data and information resources for the broad
    research community.
  • 7. Professional societies, research institutions,
    and funding and management agencies should
    reevaluate their reward systems in order to give
    deserved peer recognition to scientists and data
    managers for their contributions to
    interdisciplinary research.
  • 8. Because organizational missions and reward
    systems inherently reflect a larger policy
    context, relevant policy issues should be
    included in the planning for interdisciplinary
    research.
  • 9. Research universities should include courses
    in their curricula that provide environmental
    scientists with an in-depth understanding of the
    rationale for and principles of sound data
    management.
  • 10. In order to encourage interdisciplinary
    research and to make data available as quickly as
    possible to all researchers, specific guidelines
    should be established for when and under what
    conditions data will be made available to users
    other than those who collected them.

6
Its Recommendations
  • 11. In the planning of any interdisciplinary
    research program, as much consideration should be
    given to organizational and institutional issues
    as to technical issues.
  • 12. The agencies involved in supporting and
    carrying out interdisciplinary research should
    investigate the possibility of establishing one
    or more ecosystem data and information analysis
    centers to facilitate the exchange of data and
    access to data, help improve and maintain the
    quality of valuable data sets, and provide
    value-added services.
  • 13. Hardware/software system development efforts
    should be based on a model that includes ongoing
    interaction with users as an integral part of the
    design process. In addition, system designers
    should work from the assumption that systems will
    never be finished, but will continue to evolve
    along with the data collected and users' needs.

7
Its Recommendations
  • 14. Program managers, project scientists, and
    data managers should review the interoperability
    of their hardware, software, and data management
    technologies to facilitate locating, retrieving,
    and working with data across several disciplines.
  • 15. The production of detailed metadata should be
    a mandatory requirement of every study whose data
    might be used for interdisciplinary research.
  • 16. Metadata should contain enough information to
    enable users who are not intimately familiar with
    the data to backtrack to earlier versions of the
    data so that they can perform their own
    processing or derivation as needed.
  • 17. In general, the presumption in environmental
    research should be that "data worth collecting
    are worth saving."
  • 18. The committee is concerned about the gaps in
    the existing system for long-term retention and
    maintenance of environmental data. Funding
    agencies should provide guidelines that define
    the requirements for preparing data sets for
    long-term archiving.

8
Its Keys To Success
  • Be practical.
  • Use appropriate information technology.
  • Start at the right scale.
  • Proceed incrementally.
  • Plan for and build on success.
  • Use a collaborative approach.
  • Account for human behavior and motivation.
  • Consider needs of participants as well as users.
  • Create common needs for data.
  • Build participation by demonstrating the value of
    data interfacing.

9
Looking Back
  • Reference is made to
  • Environmental Health Indicators Bridging the
    Chasm of Public Health and the Environment A
    Workshop
  • Institute of Medicine. 2004.
  • Roundtable on Environmental Health
  • Sciences, Research, and Medicine.

10
Workshop Foci
  • envision a national tracking system to bridge the
    gap between health and the environment
  • identifying, developing, and using indicators to
    monitor environmental health
  • dialogue on benefits and limitations of a
    national environmental health monitoring system
    and discuss steps needed to create this system.

11
Stated Challenges Ahead
  • Environmental Health Monitoring System Overview
  • Limitation of the Environmental Monitoring
    System and
  • Learning Lessons from Past and Current
    Monitoring Systems.
  • Expanding Research Efforts
  • Gaps in Data Collection
  • Ensuring a Continuum of Data from Source to
    Health Outcome and
  • Integrating Biomonitoring and Human Outcomes
    Data Across Agencies and Organizations.

12
Stated Challenges Ahead
  • Improving Capacity
  • Myriad Agencies Involved in Environmental Health
    MonitoringEliminating the Stovepipes and
  • Personnel Infrastructure.
  • Community Involvement
  • Future Steps for Environmental Health Monitoring

13
Breakout Session 24 Challenges
  • Incorporate human health, environmental health
    and ecosystem/wildlife health considerations
  • Espouse Measure Once Use Many
  • Capitalize on advancing information technologies
  • Employ inclusive assessment approaches
  • Advance communication for achievement of desired
    outcomes

14
Session Notes
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com