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Dryad, DOIs, and why data matters more than journal articles


For the last two days I've been participating in a NESCent meeting on Dryad, a "repository of data underlying scientific publications, with an initial focus on evolutionary biology and related fields". The aim of Dryad is to provide a durable home for the kinds of data that don't get captured by existing databases such as GenBank and TreeBASE (for example, the Excel spreadsheets, Word files, and tarballs of data that, if they are lucky, make it on to a journal's web site as supplementary material (like this example). These data have an alarming tendency to disappear (see "Unavailability of online supplementary scientific information from articles published in major journals" doi:10.1096/fj.05-4784lsf).

Perhaps it was because I was participating virtually (via Adobe Connect, which worked very well), but at times I felt seriously out of step with many of the participants. I got the sense that they regard the scientific article as primary, data as secondary, and weren't entirely convinced that data needed to be treated in the same way as a publication. I was arguing that Dryad should assign DOIs to data sets, join CrossRef, and ensure data sets were cited in the same way as papers. For me this is a no brainer -- by making data equivalent to a publication, journals don't need to do anything special, publishers know how to handle DOIs, and will have fewer qualms than handling URLs, which have a nasty tendency to break (see "Going, Going, Gone: Lost Internet References" doi:10.1126/science.1088234).

Furthermore, being part of CrossRef would bring other benefits. Their cited-by linking service enables publishers to display lists of articles that cite a given paper -- imagine being able to do this for data sets. Dryad could display not just the paper associated with publication of the data set, but all subsequent citations. As an author, I'd love to see this. It would enable me to see what others had done with my data, and provide an incentive to submit my data to Dryad (providing incentives to authors to archive data is a big issue, see Mark Costello's recent paper doi:10.1525/bio.2009.59.5.9).

Not everyone saw things this way, and it's often a "reality check" to discover that things one takes for granted are not at all obvious to others (leading to mutual incomprehension). Many editors, understandably, think of the the journal article as primary, and data as something else (some even struggle to see why one would want to cite data). There's also (to my mind) a ridiculous level of concern about whether ISI would index the data. In the age of Google, who cares? Partly these concerns may reflect the diversity of the participants. Some subjects, such as phylogenetics, are built on reuse of previous data, and it's this reuse that makes data citation both important and potentially powerful (for more on this see my papers hdl:10101/npre.2009.3173.1 and doi:10.1093/bib/bbn022). In many ways, the data is more important than the publication. If I look at a phylogenetics paper published, say 5 or more years ago, the methods may be outmoded, the software obsolete (I might not be able to run it on a modern machine), and the results likely to be outdated (additional data and/or taxa changing the tree). So, the paper might be virtually useless, but the data continues to be of value. Furthermore, the great thing about data (especially sequence data) is that it can be used in all sorts of unexpected ways. In disciplines such as phylogenetics, data reuse is very common. In other areas in evolution and ecology, this might not be the case.

It will be clear from this that I buy the idea articulated by Philip Bourne (doi:10.1371/journal.pcbi.0​010034) that there's really no difference between a database and a journal article and that the two are converging (I've argued for a long time that the best thing that could happen to phylogeneics would be if Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution and TreeBASE were to merge and become one entity). Data submission would equal publication. In the age of Google where data is unreasonably effective (doi:10.1109/mis.2009.36, PDF here), privileging articles at the expense of data strikes me as archaic.

So, whither Dryad? I wish it every success, and I'm sure it will be a great start. There are some very clever people behind it, and it takes a lot of work to bring a community on board. However, I think Dryad's use of Handles is a mistake (they are the obvious choice of identifier given Dryad is based on DSpace), as this presents publishers with another identifier to deal with, and has none of the benefits of DOIs. Indeed, I would go further and say that the use of Handles + DSpace marks Dryad as being basically yet another digital library project, which is fine, but it puts it outside the mainstream of science publishing, and I think that is a strategic mistake. An example of how to do things better is Nature Precedings, which assigns DOIs to manuscripts, reports, and presentations. I think the use of DOIs in this context demonstrated that Nature was serious, and valued these sorts of resource. Personally, I'd argue that Dryad should be more ambitious, and see itself as a publisher, not a repository. In fact, it could think of itself as a journal publisher. Ironically, maybe the editors at the NESCent meeting were well advised to be wary, what they could be witnessing is the formation of a new kind of publication, where data is the article, and the article is data.

Nomenclators + digitised literature = fail


Continuing with RSS feeds, I've now added wrappers around IPNI that will return for each plant family a list of names added to the IPNI database in the last 30 days. You can see the list at here.

One thing which is a constant source of frustration for me is the disconnect between nomenclators (lists of published names for species) and scientific publishing. The unit of digitisation for a publisher is the scientific article, but nomenclators often cite not the article in which a name was published, but the page on which the name appears.

For example, consider IPNI record 77096979-1 (or, if you prefer LSIDs urn:lsid:ipni.org:names:77096979-1). It is for the begonia Begonia ozotothrix, and the citation is:

Edinburgh J. Bot. 66(1): 105 (-110; figs. 1, 4-5, map). 2009 [Mar 2009]

Very detailed, and great if I have access to a physical library that has the Edinburgh Journal of Botany -- I just find volume 66 on the shelf and turn to page 105. But, I want this on my computer now ("library" - who they?). How do I find this reference on the web? The answer, is not easily. Tools such as OpenURL, which could be used, assume that I know at least the starting page of the article, but IPNI doesn't tell me that. Nor do I have an article title, which might help, but a Google search on "Begonia ozotothrix" finds the article:

TWO NEW SPECIES OF BEGONIA ( BEGONIACEAE) FROM CENTRAL SULAWESI, INDONESIA
D C Thomas, W H Ardi and M Hughes
Edinburgh Journal of Botany 66, 103 (2009)
doi:10.1017/S0960428609005320

Note the DOI! This article exists on the web, so why can't IPNI give me the DOI? They've gone to a lot of trouble to describe the citation in great detail, but adding the DOI brings the record into the 21st century and the web (the DOI is even printed on the article!).

I think nomenclators need to make a concerted effort to integrate with the digital scientific literature, otherwise they will remain digital backwaters that make the implicit assumption that their users have access to libraries such as that at the Royal Botanic Gardens, Edinburgh (pictured).

For recently published articles there's absolutely no reason not to store the DOI. Finding these retrospectively is a pain, but I need these for my RSS feed (and other projects) so one thing I added a while ago to bioGUID's OpenURL resolver is the ability to search for an article given an arbitrary page. For example,

http://bioguid.info/openurl/?genre=article&title=Edinburgh J. Bot.&volume=66&pages=105

will search various sources (such as CrossRef) to find an article that includes page 105. Now, I just have to have a parser that can make sense of IPNI bibliographic citations...

Integrating and displaying data using RSS


Although I'd been thinking of getting the wiki project ready for e-Biosphere '09 as a challenge entry, lately I've been playing with RSS has a complementary, but quicker way to achieve some simple integration.

I've been playing with RSS on and off for a while, but what reignited my interest was the swine flu timemap I made last week. The neatest thing about the timemap was how easy it was to make. Just take some RSS that is geotagged and you get the timemap (courtesy of Nick Rabinowitz's wonderful Timemap library).

So, I began to think about taking RSS feeds for, say journals and taxonomic and genomic databases and adding them together and displaying them using tools such as timemap (see here for an earlier mock up of some GenBank data). Two obstacles are in the way. The first is that not every data source of interest provides RSS feeds. To address this I've started to develop wrappers around some sources, the first of which is ZooBank.

The second obstacle is that integration requires shared content (e.g., tags, identifiers, or localities). Some integration will be possible geographically (for example, adding geotagged sequences and images to a map), but this won't work for everything. So, I need to spend some time trying to link stuff together. In the case of Zoobank there's some scope for this, as ZooBank metadata sometimes includes DOIs, which enables us to link to the original publication, as well as bookmarking services such as Connotea. I'm aiming to include these links within the feed, as shown in this snippet (see the <link rel="related"...> element):


<entry>
<title>New Protocetid Whale from the Middle Eocene of Pakistan: Birth on Land, Precocial Development, and Sexual Dimorphism</title>
<link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://zoobank.org/urn:lsid:zoobank.org:pub:8625FB9A-1FC3-43C3-9A99-7A3CDE0DFC9C"/>
<updated>2009-05-06T18:37:34+01:00</updated>
<id>urn:uuid:c8f6be01-2359-1805-8bdb-02f271a95ab4</id>
<content type="html">Gingerich, Philip D., Munir ul-Haq, Wighart von Koenigswald, William J. Sanders, B. Holly Smith & Iyad S. Zalmout<br/><a href="http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0004366">doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0004366</a></content>
<summary type="html">Gingerich, Philip D., Munir ul-Haq, Wighart von Koenigswald, William J. Sanders, B. Holly Smith & Iyad S. Zalmout<br/><a href="http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0004366">doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0004366</a></summary>
<link rel="related" type="text/html" href="http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0004366" title="doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0004366"/>
<link rel="related" type="text/html" href="http://bioguid.info/urn:lsid:zoobank.org:pub:8625FB9A-1FC3-43C3-9A99-7A3CDE0DFC9C" title="urn:lsid:zoobank.org:pub:8625FB9A-1FC3-43C3-9A99-7A3CDE0DFC9C"/>
</entry>


What I'm hoping is that there will be enough links to create something rather like my Elsevier Challenge entry, but with a much more diverse set of sources.