Tuesday, August 30, 2016

GRBio: A Call for Community Curation - what community?

Singlefig 98253 jpg David Schindel and colleagues recently published a paper in the Biodiversity Data Journal:

Schindel, D., Miller, S., Trizna, M., Graham, E., & Crane, A. (2016, August 26). The Global Registry of Biodiversity Repositories: A Call for Community Curation. BDJ. Pensoft Publishers. http://doi.org/10.3897/bdj.4.e10293

The paper is a call for the community to help grow a database (GRBio) on biodiversity repositories, a database that will "will require community input and curation".

Reading this, I'm struck by the lack of a clear sense of what that community might be. In particular: who is this database for, and who is most likely to build it? I suspect that these are two different sets of people.

Who is it for?

It strikes me that the primary target for GrBio is people who care about cleaning up and linking data. This is very small set of people. While cleaned data is nice, and cleaned and linked data is great, by itself it's not much use until it finds its way into useful tools. Why would taxonomists, curators, and other people working with biodiversity data care about GrBio? What can it give them? Ultimately, we'd like things such as the ability to find any specimen in the world online using simply it's museum collection code. We'd like to track usage of that code in other databases, such as GenBank and BOLD, and in the primary literature. These are all nice things, but they won't happen simply because we have a curated list of natural history collections.

Who will curate it?

Arguably there are only two active communities who care about the contents of GrBio on a scale to actually contribute. One is GBIF, which is building its own registry of collections as more and more natural history collections move their collections online. GBIF's registry is primarily for digital access points to collection data, which don't necessarily readily map to physical collections listed by GrBio. If GrBo is to be relevant, it needs to have mappings between its data and GBIF.

But the community that I suspect will really care about this, to the point that they'd actively engage in editing the data, is not the biodiversity community. Rather, it's people who edit Wikipedia and Wikidata.

I was at one of the GrBio workshops and gave a short presentation, which included this slide:

If you search for a major museum on Google, on the right you will often see a rich "knowledge panel" giving much of the information that GrBio wants to capture (museum name, location, etc.), often with a link to the Wikipedia page for that institution (see http://g.co/kg/m/01t372 for a detailed view of the knowledge panel for the NHM). GrBio can't compete with Wikipedia for richness of content (just think of all the Wikipedia pages in languages other than English). Google's database is mostly hidden, but we can get some of the same data from Wikidata, e.g. the Natural History Museum is entity Q309388 on Wikidata.

From my perspective, the smart move to make is not to appeal to an overstretched community of biodiversity researchers, many of whom are suffering from "project fatigue" as yet more acronyms compete for their attention. Instead, position the project as adding to the already existing database of natural history institutions that is growing in Wikidata. GrBio could either link to Wikidata and Wikipedia pages for institutions, or simply move it's data editing efforts to Wikidata and have GrBio be (at most) a search interface to that data. The notion of having a separate database for the world's collections might not be the best way to achieve GrBio's goals. A lot of people involved in both Wikipedia and Wikidata care about cultural institutions (of which natural history museums and herbaria are examples), those are the people GrBio should be engaging with.

Friday, August 26, 2016

Displaying original species descriptions in BioNames

B8e253dc3be3d84f2c69c51b0af86c03 400x400The goal of my BioNames project is to link every taxonomic name to its original description (initially focussing on animal names). The rationale is that taxonomy is based on evidence, and yet most of this evidence is buried in a non-digitised and/or hard to find literature. Surfacing this information not only makes taxonomic evidence accessible (see Surfacing the deep data of taxonomy), it also surfaces a lot of basic biological information. In many cases the original taxonomic description will be an important source of information about what a species looks like, where it lives, and what it does.

To date I've focussed on linking names to publications, such as articles, on the grounds that this is the unit of citation in science. It's also the unit most often digitised and assigned an identifier, such as a DOI. But often taxonomists cite not an article but the individual page on which the description appears. In web-speak, taxonomists cite "fragment identifiers". Page-level identifiers are not often encountered in the digital world, in part because many digital representations don't have "pages". But this doesn't mean that we can't have identifiers for parts of an article, for example in Fragment Identifiers and DOIs Martin Fenner gives examples of ways to link to specific parts of an online article. His examples work if the article is displayed as HTML. If we are working with XML (say, for a journal published by Pensoft), then we can use XPath to refer to sections of a document. Ultimately it would be nice to have stable identifiers for document fragments linked to taxonomic names, so that we can readily go from name to description (even better if that description was in machine-readable form). You could think of these as locators for "taxonomic treatments", e.g. Miller et al. 2015.

As a quick and dirty approach to this I've reworked BioNames to be able to show the page where a species name is first published. This only works if a number of conditions are met:

  • The BioName database has the page number ("micro reference") for the name.
  • BioNames has the full text for the article, either from BioStor or a PDF.
  • The taxonomic name has been found in that text (e.g., by the Global Names GNRD service).

If these conditions are met, then BioNames will display the page, like this example (Belobranchus segura Keith, Hadiaty & Lord 2012: Screenshot 2016 08 26 16 13 50

Both the page image and OCR text (if available) are displayed. This is a first step towards (a) making stable identifiers available for these pages, and (b) making the text accessible for machine reading.

For some more examples, try Heterophasia melanoleuca kingi Eames 2002 (bird), Echinoparyphium anatis Fischthal & Kuntz 1976 (trematode), Bathymodiolus brooksi Gustafson, Turner, Lutz & Vrijenhoek 1998 (bivalve), Amolops cremnobatus Inger & Kottelat 1998 (frog), Leptothorax caesari Espadaler 1997 (ant), and Daipotamon minos Ng & Trontelj 1996 (crab).

Thursday, August 18, 2016

GBIF Challenge: €31,000 in prizes for analysing and addressing gaps and biases in primary biodiversity data

Full widthIn a classic paper Boggs (1949) appealed for an “atlas of ignorance”, an honest assessment of what we know we don’t know:

Boggs, S. W.. (1949). An Atlas of Ignorance: A Needed Stimulus to Honest Thinking and Hard Work. Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society, 93(3), 253–258. Retrieved from http://www.jstor.org/stable/3143475

This is the theme of this year's GBIF Challenge: Analysing and addressing gaps and biases in primary biodiversity data. "Gaps" can be gaps in geographic coverage, taxa group, or types of data. GBIF is looking for ways to access the nature of the gaps in the data it is aggregating from its network of contributors.

How to enter

Details on how to enter are on the Challenge website, deadline is September 30th.

Ideas

One approach to gap analysis is to compare what we expect to see with what we actually have. For example, we might take a “well-known” group of organisms and use that to benchmark GBIF’s data coverage. A drawback is that the “well-known” organisms tend to be the usual suspects (birds, mammals, fish, etc.), and there is the issue of whether the chosen group is a useful proxy for other taxa. Another approach is to base the estimate of ignorance on the data itself. For example, OBIS has computed Hurlbert's index of biodiversity for its database, e.g. http://data.unep-wcmc.org/datasets/16 Screenshot 2016 08 18 15 13 59 Can we scale these methods to the 600+ million records in GBIF? There are some clever methods for using resampling methods (such as the bootstrap) on large data sets that might be relevant, see http://www.unofficialgoogledatascience.com/2015/08/an-introduction-to-poisson-bootstrap_26.html.

Another approach might be to compare different datasets for the same taxa, particularly if one data set is not in GBIF. Or perhaps we can compare datasets for the same taxa collected by different methods.

Or we could look at taxonomic gaps. In an earlier post The Zika virus, GBIF, and the missing mosquitoes I noted that GBIF's coverage of vectors of the Zika virus was very poor. How well does GBIF cover vectors and other organisms relevant to human health? Maybe we could generalise this to explore other taxa. It might, for example, be interesting to compare degree of coverage for a species with some measure of the "importance" of that species. Measures of importance could be based on, say, number of hits in Google Scholar for that species, size of Wikipedia page (see Wikipedia mammals and the power law), etc.

Gaps might also be gaps in data completeness, quality, or type.

Summary

This post has barely scratched the surface of what is possible. But I think one important thing to bear in mind is that the best analyses of gaps are those that lead to "actionable insights", in other words, if you are going to enter the challenge (and please do, it's free to enter and there's money to be won), how does you entry help GBIF and the wider biodiversity community decide what to do about gaps?

BioStor updates: nicer map, reference matching service

BioStor now has 150,000 articles. When I wrote a paper describing how BioStor worked it had 26,784 articles, so things have progressed somewhat!

I continue to tweak the interface to BioStor, trying different ways to explore the articles.

Spatial search

I've tweaked spatial search in BioStor. As blogged about previously I replaced the Google Maps interface with Leaflet.js, enabling you to draw a search area on the map and see a set of articles that mention that area. I've changed the base map to the prettier "terrain" map from Stamen, and added back the layer showing all the localities in BioStor. This gives you a much better sense of the geographic coverage in BioStor. This search interface still needs work, but is a fun way to discover content.

Screenshot 2016 08 18 14 04 03

Reference matching

In the "Labs" section of the web site I've added a demonstration of BioStor's reconciliation service. This service is based on the Freebase reconciliation service used by tools such as OpenRefine, see Reconciliation Service API. The goal is to demonstrate a simple way to locate references in BioStor, simply paste references, one per line, click Match and BioStor will attempt to find those references for you.

This service is really intended to be used by tools like OpenRefine, but this web page helps me debug the service.

Suggestions?

BioStor is part labour of love, part albatross around my neck. I'm always open to suggestions for improvements, or for articles to add (but remember that all content must first have been scanned and in the Biodiversity Heritage Library). If you are involved in publishing a journal and are interested in getting it into BHL, please get in touch.

Wednesday, August 17, 2016

Containers, microservices, and data

Docker Some notes on containers, microservices, and data. The idea of packaging software into portable containers and running them either locally or in the cloud is very attractive (see Docker). Some use cases I'm interested in exploring.

Microservices

In Towards a biodiversity knowledge graph (doi:10.3897/rio.2.e8767) I listed a number of services that are essentially self contained, such as name parsers, reconciliation tools, resolvers, etc. Each of these could be packaged up and made into containers.

Databases

We can use containers to package database servers, such as CouchDB, ElasticSearch, and triple stores. Using containers means we don't need to go through the hassle of installing the software locally. Interested in RDF? Spin up a triple store, play with it, then switch it off if you decide it's not for you. If it proves useful, you can move it to the cloud and scale up (e.g., sloppy.io).

Data

A final use case is to put individual datasets in a container. For exmaple, imagine that we have a large Darwin Core Archive. We can distribute this as a simple zip file, but you can't do much with this unless you have code to parse Darwin Core. But imagine we combine that dataset with a simpel visualisation tool, such as VESpeR (see doi:10.1016/j.ecoinf.2014.08.004). Users interested in the data could then play with the data without the overhead of installing specialist software. In a sense, the data becomes an app.

Friday, August 12, 2016

Spatial search in BioStor

I've been experimenting with simple spatial search in BioStor, as shown in the demo below. If you go to the map on BioStor you can use the tools on the left to draw a box or a polygon on the map, and BioStor will search it's database for articles that mention localities that occur in that region. If you click on a marker you can see the title of the article, clicking on that title takes you to the article itself.

This is all rather crude (and a little slow), but it provides another way to dive into the content I've been extracting from the BHL. One thing I've been doing is looking at protected areas (often marked on Open Street Map), drawing a simple polygon around that area, then seeing if BioStor knows anything about that area.

For the technically minded, this tool is an extension of the Searching GBIF by drawing on a map demo, and uses the geospatial indexing offered by Cloudant.

Wednesday, August 10, 2016

On asking for access to data

In between complaining about the lack of open data in biodiversity (especially taxonomy), and scraping data from various web sites to build stuff I'm interested in, I occasionally end up having interesting conversations with the people whose data I've been scraping, cleaning, cross-linking, and otherwise messing with.

Yesterday I had one of those conversations at Kew Gardens. Kew is a large institution that is adjusting to a reduced budget, a changing ditigal landscape, and a rethinking of it's science priorities. Much of Kew's data has not been easily accessible to the outside world, but this is changing. Part of the reason for this is that Defra, which part-funds Kew, is itself opening up (see Ellen Broad's fascinating post Lasers, hedgehogs and the rise of the Age of Yoghurt: reflections on #OpenDefra).

During this conversation I was asked "Why didn't you just ask for the data instead of scraping it? We would most likely have given it to you." My response to this was "well, you might have said no". In my experience saying "no" is easy because it is almost always the less risky approach. And I want a world where we don't have to ask for data, in the same way that we don't ask to get source code for open source software, and we don't ask to download genomic data from GenBank. We just do it and, hopefully, do cool things with it. Just as importantly, if things don't work out and we fail to make cool things, we haven't wasted time negotiating access for something that ultimately didn't work out. The time I lose is simply the time I've spent playing with the data, not any time negotiating access. The more obstacles you put in front of people playing with your data, the fewer innovative uses of that data you're likely to get.

But it was pointed out to me that a consequence of just going ahead and getting the data anyway is that it doesn't necessarily help people within an organisation make the case for being open. The more requests for access to data that are made, the easier it might be to say "people want this data, lets work to make it open". Put another way, by getting the data I want regardless, I sidestep the challenge of convincing people to open up their data. It solves my problem (I want the data now) but doesn't solve it for the wider community (enabling everyone to have access).

I think this is a fair point, but I'm going to try and wiggle away from it. From a purely selfish perspective, my time is limited, there are only so many things I can do, and making the political case for opening up specific data sets is not something I really want to be doing. In a sense, I'm more interested in what happens when the data is open. In other words, let's assume the battle for open has been won, what do we then? So, I'm essentially operating as if the data is already open because I'm betting that it will be at some point in time.

Without wishing to be too self-serving, I think there are ways that treating closed data as effectively open can help make the case that the data should (genuinely) open. For example, one argument for being open is that people will come along and do cool things with the data. In my case, "cool" means cross linking taxonomic names with the primary literature, eventually to original decsriptions and fundamental data about the organisms tagged with the taxonomic names (you may feel that this stretches the definitoon of "cool" somewhat). But adding value to data is hard work, and takes time (in some cases I've invested years in cleaning and linking the data). The benefits from being open may take time, especially if the data is messy, or relatively niche so that few people are prepared to invest the time necessary to do the work.

Some data, such as the examples given in Lasers, hedgehogs and the rise of the Age of Yoghurt: reflections on #OpenDefra will likely be snapped up and give rise to nice visualisations, but a lot of data won't. So, imagine that you're making the case for data to be open, and one of your arguments is "people will do cool things with it", eventually you win that argument, the data is opened up... and nothing happens. Wouldn't it be better if once the data is open, those of us who have been beavering away with "illicit" copies of the data can come out of the woodwork and say "by the way, here are some cool things we've been doing with that data"? OK, this is a fairly self-serving argument, but my point is that while internal arguments about being open are going on I have three choices:

  1. Wait until you open the data (which stops me doing the work I want to do)
  2. Help make the case for being open (which means I engage in politics, an area in which I have zero aptitude)
  3. Assume you will be open eventually, and do the work I want to do so that when you're open I can share that work with you, and everyone else
Call me selfish, but I choose option 3.