Title : Two Procedures for Analyzing the Reliability of Open Government Data

Presenter Davide Ceolin
Abstract Open Government Data often contain information that, in more or less detail, regard private citizens. For this reason, before publishing them, public authorities manipulate data to remove any sensitive information while trying to preserve their reliability. In this presentation I address the lack of tools aimed at measuring the reliability of these data. I present two procedures for the assessment of the Open Government Data reliability, one based on a comparison between open and closed data, and the other based on analysis of open data only. We evaluate the procedures over data from the data.police.uk website and from the Hampshire Police Constabulary in the United Kingdom. The procedures effectively allow estimating the reliability of open data and, actually, confirm that the data reliability is high even though they are aggregated and smoothed.

Title : Understanding scientific spreadsheets

Presenter Martine de Vos
Abstract Spreadsheets are frequently used by domain scientists to store and analyze research data. As the data in these spreadsheets are often poorly annotated, it is hard to interpret these data by other people than the original developers. In this talk I propose a methodology for semi-automatic interpretation of scientific spreadsheets and show some results of my case study on a model for energy policy analysis