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An Interagency Model for Collaboration and Operation

An Interagency Model for Collaboration and Operation. Background - Relationship to CENDI - Funding - Operations - Milestones. CENDI Meeting, Nov. 4, 2010. Sharon Jordan Assistant Director DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (Operating Agent for Science.gov).

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An Interagency Model for Collaboration and Operation

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  1. An Interagency Model for Collaboration and Operation Background - Relationship to CENDI - Funding - Operations - Milestones CENDI Meeting, Nov. 4, 2010 Sharon Jordan Assistant Director DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (Operating Agent for Science.gov)

  2. What Is Science.gov? A Unique Collaboration with Tangible Results! • An interagency science discovery tool, providing single-query access to multiple government-sponsored R&D results and other S&T information • A cross-agency search that integrates and simplifies access to 200 million pages of content from 14 U.S. science agencies • The “USA.gov” science portal (formerly “FirstGov for Science”) • A voluntary large-scale collaboration of U.S. government agencies Drills down to selected databases and websites in parallel, then presents relevancy-rankedsearch results

  3. How Did It Begin? • Two workshops spawned origin: • 2000: Blue-ribbon panel explored concept of a physical science information infrastructure. http://www.osti.gov/physicalsciences/wkshprpt.pdf This prompted interagency involvement. • 2001: “Strengthening the Public Information Infrastructure for Science” http://www.science.gov/workshop/index.html Here the interagency Science.gov Alliance was formed • Participants included federal agencies, academia, information professionals and science experts. • Science.gov gained approval as “Firstgov for Science” in early 2002 • Science.gov was launched in December 2002.

  4. ARCHIVES.GOV Founding Agencies in 2001 • Department of Agriculture • Department of Commerce • Department of Defense • Department of Education • Department of Energy • Department of Health and Human Services • Department of Interior • Environmental Protection Agency • National Aeronautics and Space Administration • National Science Foundation New Alliance Members • Department of Transportation • Library of Congress • United States Government Printing Office • National Archives and Records Administration Support and coordination by CENDI – an interagency forum of senior information managers Alliance Only • United States Forest Service • National Institute of Standards and Technology

  5. Shared Premises • Science is not bounded by agency, organization or geography • Each agency has vast stores of information that fulfill its mission • A single web gateway is the tool of choice* • A commitment to voluntary collaboration is necessary *In OCLC Perceptions of Library and Information Resources, it was reported that 84% of public began search using search engines; only 1% began with online databases. Thus a “Google-like” easy search of authoritative sources with relevant results was desired.

  6. Integration Challenges • Broad scope of Federal science and technology research and development missions • Wide-ranging interest of potential audiences • Information organization (taxonomy) issues given the broad scope of disciplines and audiences • Blending information resources from different agencies into cohesive functionality and page design • Politics, human resources, funding, sustainability

  7. Guiding Principles for Content • Select authoritative web-based government-sponsored information resources • Rich science content, not merely organization pages • Databases contain primarily R&D results in the form of STI (bibliographic data and/or full documents) • Supplemented by websites for currency • Only freely available content that is well maintained • Our audience is “the science-attentive citizen”!

  8. Agency Potluck • Agencies brought to the Internet table their unique information specialties and resources • Flagship service a commitment • Notable contributions of many: • Science.gov Alliance and CENDI - seized opportunity without mandate • FirstGov.gov - supported the early stages with advice and two grants • Member agencies - provided participation of 200 staff members to working teams • NLM – provided usability testing prior to initial launch • USGS – managed original website search engine (surface web search) • NTIS - created initial catalog of S&T websites • IIa Inc. – provided secretariat support (CENDI special task) • DOE/OSTI - conceived idea, developed technologies/deep web search and hosted website • NAL and USGS – provided Science.gov Alliance co-chairs

  9. Collaboration Is Key • Alliance enjoyed extraordinary voluntary collaboration • Vision and strategic direction provided by Alliance principals • Administration provided by Chair(s) selected from Alliance • Technical team provided original technical direction and recommendations • Major support provided by CENDI • Additional task groups formed as needed • Science.gov taxonomy • Content guidance and development • Website management and redesign • Outreach activities • Enhancement development • Subject expansion • Image library

  10. The Funding Approach • Built and maintained with “in-kind” contributions: each agency’s staff time and existing information resources • Initial development benefitted from CIO Council e-gov grants for catalog + initial deep web search • Alliance annual dues help fund routine operations • CENDI support leverages resources • In-kind contributions supported special events • SBIR R&D resulted in innovations that were implemented in subsequent versions • “Pass the hat” contributions to take advantage of an opportunity, such as Version 3.0 development

  11. Science.gov Funding Doing “a lot with a little” by implementing creative funding methods • 2001: Cross agency portal grants: $170,000 • 2002: DOE SBIR conducts relevancy ranking research • 2003-2004: Voluntary Pass-the-Hat contributions: $200,000 • 2001-Present: Participating agencies and in-kind support develop and maintain Science.gov. Average since 2005 = approx $180K annually (fees plus in-kind support)

  12. CENDI promotes the productive intersection of science content, technology and interrelationships • The Alliance, made up of CENDI agencies plus others, provides direction and support for this intersection in the form of Science.gov • Through financial and in-kind commitments from its agencies, CENDI provides the ongoing infrastructure needed to offer a large-scale collaboration across organizational boundaries

  13. Overview of CENDI Finances Total Membership Funds Are Combined into One “Pot” Executive Secretariat for CENDI Includes Science.gov Support CENDI Reserve A portion of Secretariat effort is used for Science.gov Tasks Maintenance Costs include Alliance Only dues* *Science.gov Alliance Only dues are deposited into the CENDI treasury, with option of being used for direct costs/purchases for Science.gov (such as exhibit expenses) or being included in funding for overall Secretariat support of Science.gov.

  14. Content Management Is Distributed • NTIS developed the original “catalog” with input from agencies • CENDI Secretariat now maintains catalog with agency participation • Agency content managers submit and edit their information via a web form • Websites identified in the catalog were indexed by USGS; now done by OSTI • Deep web databases are identified by agencies and reviewed by team for suitability • Real-time search of content in large databases is maintained by OSTI, which continues to host the website and serve as operations manager

  15. The Alliance Members’ Page Provides administrative information, meeting minutes, usage statistics, content selection and cataloging guidelines, subject category information, and outreach materials such as presentations and flyers. User Name: scigov PW: scigov#1

  16. Metadata Input System: For Websites in Searchable Index (“Surface Web” portion of Science.gov) Provides Alliance members and content managers a secure tool to quickly retrieve Agency metadata, add or edit resource records, and expedite the maintenance and quality control of the metadata and URLs.

  17. Development Milestones • Science.gov Phase 1 (2001-2002) • Established policy & governance, technical design teams • Agreed on goals, policies, website look & feel • Created taxonomy • Selected, cataloged and indexed agency resources • Version 2.0 launched May 2004 • Introduced relevancy ranking of metasearch results • One-step search across ALL databases • Added advanced search • Version 3.0 • Enhanced precision searching, metarank & boolean/fielded searching • Other types of science content explored • Version 4.0 • Enhanced relevancy ranking, also full-text relevancy ranking

  18. Development Milestones • Version 5.0 (Sept 2008) • Clustering of results by subtopics or dates to help target your search • Wikipedia results related to your search terms • EurekaAlert News results related to your search terms • Mark-and-send option to email results to friends and colleagues • More science sources for a more thorough search • Enhanced information related to your real-time search • New look and feel • Updated Alerts Service • Standardized citation formats available for download • Version 5.1 • Aggregated news feeds from 11 science agencies • Internships and Fellowships section made searchable • Image Search Library (Coming soon!)

  19. Science.gov Today Science.gov: Finds Content from 200 Million Pages at 2100+ Websites and 42 Databases with One Query • Searches selected websites (“surface web”) and databases (“deep web”) from one search point • Combines results from all sources, ranks and displays by relevance and clusters • Sends weekly “alerts” for user-defined topics of interest • Displays related Wikipedia and EurekAlert items • Provides browsing of selected websites • Displays an integrated news feed from science agencies • Links to special collections and other information • Featured search and sites highlight hot topics

  20. Less than 1% overlap with Google; approximately 3.2% overlap with Google Scholar

  21. More About Science.gov You May Not Know • Goes where traditional search engines cannot go. Full-text documents if searchable on the target site are searchable via Science.gov. • Real-time search: If a target database adds a document or record, it is available on Science.gov immediately • During the query, the most-relevant documents or records from each source are gathered – approx 100-200 from each source – and then the combined set is relevancy ranked • Topic and date clusters for search results – subtopics, publication years displayed on-the-fly to enable efficient drilling down

  22. Usage Continues to Grow

  23. Notable Achievements • Large voluntary collaboration between agencies is often cited as a model • Collaboration AND infrastructure served as model for WorldWideScience.org; then Science.gov became U.S.’s contributed content • Also a model for ScienceEducation.gov • A top 10 Google result for “science” with other major science outlets • Provides core project for spin-offs such as Science Internships, Aggregated Science News, Science Image Search – and more!

  24. Science.gov is among 10 government websites “meeting and exceeding” the Obama Administration’s transparency goals, according to a special report by Government Computer News, released July 27, 2009. Science.gov In the News

  25. Scholarly Info? Relevancy Ranked? All Govt. Science? Known Sources? Real Time Search? Ads?

  26. Searches for science topics at the full record level Ease of searching, with immediate, useful results For the science-attentive citizen including researchers, teachers, students, business people, and the general public A Google-like interface with an advanced option for power users Drills down into the “deep web” Examples: 2668 results for diabetes from 35 sources; 2772 results for climate change from 38 sources Searches at the source level only, not at the record level Interface with search results pointing only to sources or databases Emphasizes machine-readable datasets, available in raw formats; some files are quite large, ranging up to hundreds of megabytes Data generally requires additional manipulation; of limited use to general public. Expect public interest groups, reporters, academics, and others to review information, build interfaces, and report on findings Examples: Zero results for specific terms such as diabetes One result (database pointer) for climate change Content and Purpose: Science.gov vs Data.gov

  27. A perfect platform on which to launch new technologies • Access to new forms of STI • Translation • Precision searches • Image searching Current Science.gov Prototype

  28. Future Opportunities What will Science.gov 10.0 look like?

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