DATAMITE attends the DSCC Get-to-know workshop

The Data Spaces Support Centre (DSCC) organised on 23 February 2023 the “DSCC Get-to-know” workshop to introduce all projects funded by Horizon Europe under the HORIZON-CL4-2021 and HORIZON-CL4-2022 DATA programs. DATAMITE, as part of these calls, was present at the meeting, which was held online.

ITI, the project coordinator, represented DATAMITE in this workshop, which was an excellent platform to establish connections with fellow coordinators and to learn about the other projects. “The structured blocks allowed for fruitful exchanges and a better understanding of the synergies between our initiatives. During the session we presented the overall overview of the project (Mission and objectives), concrete expected contributions from DATAMITE to the European Common Data Spaces and expected needs for collaboration with Data Spaces and other initiatives”, explains ITI.

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#WomenInScience: Meet Daniela Greven

Every 11th of February the world hosts the International Day of women and Girls in Science. This milestone is a celebration but, moreover, it is a reminder of the need to achieve equality in STEM in order to not miss any possible talent. “A significant gender gap has persisted throughout the years at all levels of science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) disciplines all over the world. Even though women have made tremendous progress towards increasing their participation in higher education, they are still under-represented in these fields”, says the UN.

The DATAMITE consortium is well aware of the reality of inequality in the STEM sector and fully supports the integration of gender and diversity analysis in research activities to achieve the most complete results that include all the parts that make up the reality of society. All activities conducted in DATAMITE take the measures necessary to ensure all members of the society benefit equally from the project outputs.

To learn more about women in STEM and how girls can be encouraged to choose this career path, we talk to Daniela Greven, member of DATAMITE on behalf of FIR an der RWTH Aachen, and leader of the Work Package 4.

When and why did you decide to dedicate yourself professionally to science or tech?

I became interested in natural sciences at an early age and quickly found my strengths there as well. When I was about 14 years old, I interned at an engineering office in my hometown. From then on I knew that I wanted to be an engineer!

As a woman, do you think it is important to have female references when choosing the professional path? 

My role models are not only purely female. However, it definitely gives me a boost in this very male-dominated domain to see how other women are following or have already followed a similar path to mine. It is inspiring what some women have already achieved and built up in their careers. Every day each one of us goes new ways and talking about it encourages one another again and again to try something new, outside the traditional way.

How do you expect working at DATAMITE impacts your career?

Within DATAMITE, I will be able to dive deeper into the area of data exchange and technical platform building and look at the interconnection and interdependency in relation to the business model than ever before. This will allow me to better understand and support the cross-sections working on technical solution building in the future. In addition, working in our very interdisciplinary team from all over Europe offers the chance to gain a higher understanding of cultural differences and uniqueness, which will become a core asset for the ever closer European collaboration.

What advice would you advise to any little girl who is thinking of studying something related to science or tech?

Don't let anyone tell you which path to take. Learn to value your interests and individual strengths. Bringing in a new, female perspective often opens the door to a completely new range of opportunity. You can do anything YOU want.

In DATAMITE we celebrate and value the work of all the women who have decided to dedicate their path to STEM. We also want to encourage all the little girls who want to become scientists or engineers in the future. 

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Welcome! We invite you to make some puzzles!

By Jordi Arjona Aroca, the DATAMITE Coordinator

Think of a puzzle. If you have little girls, like I do, you have a 100 pieces Elsa and Anna in front of you, but that is a different story. Each one of those 100 pieces is a data fragment. By themselves, they probably mean nothing or have no purpose. However, it is when we put them together, that we create an image, something valuable. Making the puzzle is usually straightforward, might take longer or not, but you have a perfect group of pieces, that match and complement and will let you extract some added value, conclusion, or Frozen picture. Now well, problems come if your daughters mixed three puzzles, took 20 pieces at random to see whether they float in the tube, and a couple more to see how they taste. Now you have more data that you really need (say 300 pieces), although your data is incomplete (remember those 22 fallen pieces), and you better forget of ever seeing that picture complete again.

These are examples of the challenges organizations face with their data. Organizations tend to store data that they will never use, maybe because it is not well described, or because it is not findable or not usable. In addition, these data usually have problems: it may not be complete, there may be outliers, there can be different ways of denominating the same information, ... basically, you do not have a 100 pieces puzzle. Moreover, in general, organizations have large quantities of data, but it is not good data. This has a critical consequence; it is extremely hard to monetize it.

Organizations need tools that allow them to easily enrich their data with metadata, uniformly, so non-technical personnel can easily find it, use it and consume it. They also need tools to ensure that data is good and, otherwise, be able to identify its issues and solve them. It is equally important to define security policies that ensure that only those who are allowed can access the data and avoid security breaches. Then, once you can ensure these aspects, you will be able to rely on your data and think of monetizing it, exploiting it internally, creating reliable models or projections that help boosting your revenues. Moreover, you may even think of sharing or trading it with third parties, but here, again, you must be able to define and enforce terms of use, which is not trivial at all. Of course, assuming that you have technical and business personnel that know how to handle your data.

Currently, we have tools that may aid in these purposes... but do not cover the whole span of needs organizations have. Furthermore, most of them will imply the payment of a hardly affordable, specially for SMEs, license. Open-source tools can help with some of the needs, but we do not have a framework that can help the organizations making up the European productive fabric.

DATAMITE is here to help. During our project we will create an open-source modular framework covering aspects related to data governance, quality, security, and sharing, mainly. Jointly with this, we will foster the creation of an open-source community around the project and produce, within, technical and business training materials with the mission of upskilling EU data professionals and assisting on increasing the maturity level of companies. To do so, we have put together a great and well-balanced consortium, led by ITI and composed by 26 partners of 12 countries. To validate our approach, we will deploy 6 different pilots in different environments (e.g., industry, energy, agrifood, meteo) and with different goals, such as sharing data in Data Spaces, with the EU AIoD or in EOSC, improving how data is consumed within large companies or how it can be offered to EU researchers.

Do you want a bunch of pieces? If you prefer a puzzle, stay tuned!

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