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iPhylo

Rants, raves (and occasionally considered opinions) on phyloinformatics, taxonomy, and biodiversity informatics. For more ranty and less considered opinions, see my Twitter feed.ISSN 2051-8188. Written content on this site is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license.
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Biodiversity InformaticsBowkerGBIC2012GBIFPlanet ManagementScienze informatiche e dell'informazioneInglese
Pubblicato

Next week I'm in Copenhagen for GBIC, the Global Biodiversity Informatics Conference. The goal of the conference is to:The collaboration referred to is the agreement to mobilise data and informatics capability to met the Aichi Biodiversity Targets.I confess I have mixed feelings about the upcoming meeting. There will be something like 100 people attending the conference, with backgrounds ranging from pure science to intergovernmental policy.

CrowdsourcingEOLFigShareFlickrGithubScienze informatiche e dell'informazioneInglese
Pubblicato

In any discussion of data gathering or data cleaning the term "crowdsourcing" inevitably comes up. A example where this approach has been successful is the Encyclopedia of Life's Flickr pool, where Flickr users upload images that are harvested by EOL.Given that many Flickr photos are taken with cameras that have built-in GPS (such as the iPhone, the most common camera on Flickr) we could potentially use the Flickr photos not only as a source of

Catalogue Of LifeChresonymData CleaningErrorsHomonymScienze informatiche e dell'informazioneInglese
Pubblicato

I know I'm starting to sound like a broken record, but the more I look, the more taxonomic databases seem to be full of garbage. Databases such as the Catalogue of life, which states that it is a "quality-assured checklist" have records that are patently wrong.

BHLErrorsFictional TaxaGBIFGoogleScienze informatiche e dell'informazioneInglese
Pubblicato

Anyone who works with taxonomic databases is aware of the fact that they have errors. Some taxonomic databases are restricted in scope to a particular taxon in which one or more people have expertise, these then get aggregated into larger databases, which may in turn be aggregated by databases whose scope is global.

Arthur C ClarkeCanonical NameGodTaxonomic NameTDWGScienze informatiche e dell'informazioneInglese
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In Arthur C. Clarke's short story The Nine Billion Names of God Tibetan monks hire two programmers to help them generate all the the possible names of God. The monks believe that the purpose of the Universe is to generate those names, once that goal is achieved the Universe will end.