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Big data in radiation biology and epidemiology; an overview of the historical and contemporary landscape of data and biomaterial archives.

Published version
Peer-reviewed

Type

Article

Change log

Authors

Grosche, Bernd 

Abstract

Over the past 60 years a great number of very large datasets have been generated from the experimental exposure of animals to external radiation and internal contamination. This accumulation of 'big data' has been matched by increasingly large epidemiological studies from accidental and occupational radiation exposure, and from plants, humans and other animals affected by environmental contamination. We review the creation, sustainability and reuse of this legacy data, and discuss the importance of Open data and biomaterial archives for contemporary radiobiological sciences, radioecology and epidemiology. We find evidence for the ongoing utility of legacy datasets and biological materials, but that the availability of these resources depends on uncoordinated, often institutional, initiatives to curate and archive them. The importance of open data from contemporary experiments and studies is also very clear, and yet there are few stable platforms for their preservation, sharing, and reuse. We discuss the development of the ERA and STORE data sharing platforms for the scientific community, and their contribution to FAIR sharing of data. The contribution of funding agency and journal policies to the support of data sharing is critical for the maximum utilisation and reproducibility of publicly funded research, but this needs to be matched by training in data management and cultural changes in the attitudes of investigators to ensure the sustainability of the data and biomaterial commons.

Description

Keywords

Big data, biorepository, data sharing, database, epidemiology, radiobiology, Animals, Archives, Big Data, Ecology, Epidemiology, History, 20th Century, History, 21st Century, Humans, Information Dissemination, Occupational Exposure, Radiation Injuries, Radiobiology, Reproducibility of Results, Tissue Banks

Journal Title

Int J Radiat Biol

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

0955-3002
1362-3095

Volume Title

95

Publisher

Informa UK Limited
Sponsorship
European Commission (232628)
Euratom contract 662287