scholarly journals Concealment and discovery: The role of information security in biomedical data re-use

2018 ◽  
Vol 48 (5) ◽  
pp. 663-690 ◽  
Author(s):  
Niccolò Tempini ◽  
Sabina Leonelli

This paper analyses the role of information security (IS) in shaping the dissemination and re-use of biomedical data, as well as the embedding of such data in material, social and regulatory landscapes of research. We consider data management practices adopted by two UK-based data linkage infrastructures: the Secure Anonymised Information Linkage, a Welsh databank that facilitates appropriate re-use of health data derived from research and routine medical practice in the region, and the Medical and Environmental Data Mash-up Infrastructure, a project bringing together researchers to link and analyse complex meteorological, environmental and epidemiological data. Through an in-depth analysis of how data are sourced, processed and analysed in these two cases, we show that IS takes two distinct forms: epistemic IS, focused on protecting the reliability and reusability of data as they move across platforms and research contexts, and infrastructural IS, concerned with protecting data from external attacks, mishandling and use disruption. These two dimensions are intertwined and mutually constitutive, and yet are often perceived by researchers as being in tension with each other. We discuss how such tensions emerge when the two dimensions of IS are operationalized in ways that put them at cross purpose with each other, thus exemplifying the vulnerability of data management strategies to broader governance and technological regimes. We also show that whenever biomedical researchers manage to overcome the conflict, the interplay between epistemic and infrastructural IS prompts critical questions concerning data sources, formats, metadata and potential uses, resulting in an improved understanding of the wider context of research and the development of relevant resources. This informs and significantly improves the reusability of biomedical data, while encouraging exploratory analyses of secondary data sources.

2022 ◽  
pp. 1017-1053
Author(s):  
Giulia Flamini ◽  
Luca Gnan

The chapter aims to develop a theoretical configurational model of HRM practices for family firms based on the construct of awareness. The typology of ideal HRM practices configurations the authors developed grounds on are 1) two organizational factors (awareness of the internal and external environment and organizational awareness) and 2) two dimensions of organizational awareness (the need for explicit and implicit coordination mechanisms). The first dimension refers to the need for mechanisms explicitly adopted by a family firm to manage task or communication interdependencies. The second one relates to those requirements for mechanisms that are available to family firms from shared cognition, which enable them to explain and anticipate task statuses and individuals' collaborative behaviors, thus helping them in managing task interdependencies. The authors combined these results in four configurations of HRM practices (administrative, shared, professional, and integrated configurations) and developed seven propositions.


Cryptologia ◽  
2005 ◽  
Vol 29 (3) ◽  
pp. 257-271
Author(s):  
Robert Cordery ◽  
Leon Pintsov

Author(s):  
Julian Paul Sidin ◽  
Zakariya Belkhamza

The relationship between knowledge management practices and quality production has not received much attention. The objective of this paper is twofold. The first objective is to investigate this relationship in the Malaysian manufacturing and service firms. The second objective is to investigate the mediating role of these firms' innovation on this relationship. Six hypothesised relationships were tested using a sample of 201 manufacturing and service firms in Malaysia. The results show that the two dimensions of knowledge management have a significant positive effect on quality production. Furthermore the results showed that innovation does not mediate the relationship between knowledge management and quality production. The implications of the study as well as suggestions for future studies are also discussed.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mary Cialone ◽  
Gregory Slusarczyk

<p>This paper will provide an evaluation of the role of coastal wetlands in flood risk mediation by performing hydrodynamic modeling of storm surge in back bays that include various configurations of wetland features. Wetland parameters varied in the research study include the elevation, shape, volume, and vegetation type (represented by the Manning’s friction coefficient) to identify the role of wetlands in reducing back bay flooding.   This information can be used to determine best future management practices for dredged material placement that will serve to maintain and restore wetlands in light of environmental pressures such as climate change, subsidence, storm-induced erosion, boat wakes, and other factors influencing coastal wetland dynamics.</p><p>Following Hurricane Sandy in 2012, the United States (U.S.) Congress authorized the large scale North Atlantic Coast Comprehensive Study (NACCS) to address the present and future flood risk to this region. Part of that study was an in-depth numerical modeling and statistical analysis using the ADvanced CIRCulation (ADCIRC) and STeady-state spectral WAVE (STWAVE) models and the Joint Probability with Optimal Sampling (JPM-OS) statistical technique. Following the NACCS, the New Jersey back bays were identified as a high-risk area requiring further in-depth analysis of the effectiveness of surge barriers and coastal wetlands to reduce water levels in the back bays during storms. This paper will discuss the analysis of a set of coastal wetland configurations in the New Jersey back bay region simulated with a set of 10 synthetic storm suite selected from the NACCS study.   Analysis of maximum surge envelopes, water level time series, and characteristics of tropical storm forcing conditions were used to evaluate and compare the effectiveness of the wetland configurations.</p>


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