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- R1-Explanation type Explanation assertion.
- R1-Explanation label "R1 Explanation" assertion.
- R1-Explanation isDefinedBy R1-Explanation assertion.
- R1-Explanation comment "On its surface, principle R1 appears very similar to principle F2. However, the rationale behind principle F2 is to enable effective attribute-based search and query (findability), while the focus of R1 is to enable machines and humans to assess if the discovered resource is appropriate for reuse, given a specific task. For example, not all gene expression data for a given locus are relevant to a study of the effects of heat stress. While inappropriate data may be discovered by the agent’s initial search (principle F2) for expression data about a given gene, here we address the ability to assess the discovered data based on suitability-for-purpose. This reiterates the need for providers to consider not only high-level metadata facets, that will assist in generic search, but also to consider more detailed metadata that will provide much more ‘operational’ instructions for re-use. In this setting, a wide variety of factors may be needed to determine whether a resource is suitable for inclusion in an analysis, and how to adequately process it. " assertion.
- R1-Explanation seeAlso R1.1-Explanation assertion.
- R1-Explanation seeAlso R1.2-Explanation assertion.
- R1-Explanation seeAlso R1.3-Explanation assertion.
- R1-Explanation explains-principle R1 assertion.
- R1-Explanation implementation-examples "The term “plurality” is used to indicate that the metadata author should be as generous as possible, not presuming who the consumer might be, and therefore provide as much metadata as possible to support the widest variety of use-cases and agent needs. The sub-principles R1.1, R1.2 and R1.3 define some critical types of attributes that contribute to R1." assertion.