Prof. Amir Aryani1,2, Dr. Aland Astudillo2, Mr. Peter Vats2, Mr. Alessandro Luongo3, Prof. Luis Salvador-Carulla4, Prof. Sotiris Vardoulakis4, Dr. Tom Verhelst5, Dr. Kristen Moeller-Saxone8, Prof. Suzie Lavoie7, Dr. Frankie Stevens6, Dr. Mingfang Wu9
1Swinburne University of Technology, Australia, 2Research Graph Foundation Ltd, Australia, 3Digital Health CRC Ltd, Australia, 4University of Canberra, Australia, 5Griffith University, Australia, 6Research Infrastructure Services, Australia, 7Orygen Ltd, Australia, 8Infoxchange Ltd, Australia, 9Australian Research Data Commons (ARDC), Australia
Biography:
Amir Aryani has a substantial track record of leading multi-disciplinary and cross-organisation research projects. He has a proven track record in leading research data infrastructure projects and he has demonstrated skills in designing and leading large-scale data-driven research data systems. His research background and interests include big-data analytics, graph modelling, interoperability between information systems, open science and advanced data analytics.
Abstract:
This presentation demonstrates the findings of the "Data CoP for Health and Wellbeing”, a collaborative project that aims to transform research information into insights on research-industry collaborations within the health sector. By creating a secure, cloud-based environment on Azure, organisations’ information is hosted and converted into an augmented collaboration graph, and other visualisation and decision support products. This process connects siloed information across multiple health organisations, creating a comprehensive research collaboration network.
A key objective is to create capabilities at research institutions and their partners to collect, connect, and generate actionable insights from their research-industry collaborations. This work leverages persistent identifiers beyond academic publications, leading to a better understanding of the required information systems for similar analyses in research institutions and their industry partners. Furthermore, the project enriches funding information by integrating research information from participants. This integration unlocks access to information on many grants (e.g. NHMRC, NIH), philanthropy funding, industry, and government contracts.
Central to our project are data workshops, where we collaborate with subject matter experts to generate valuable insights. These insights are visualised through data dashboards, both private and public, that animate the collaborative data derived from these workshops. Public dashboards contribute to the Australian Research Data Commons (ARDC) Research Link Australia platform, enhancing transparency and accessibility.
Funded by ARDC and partnered with the Research Graph, DHCRC, Orygen, HRI (University of Canberra), HEAL Network, Infoxchange, and Insights Data Lab at Griffith, this project investigates the infrastructure required to enable such analysis on a larger scale in Australia.