What does the science library / informatics professional need to know and be able to do? Ronald L. Larsen, Dean The iSchool at Pitt Oct. 17, 2008.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Approach to bringing in Certainty To input volatility GRAIN ASIA 2010 CONFERENCEMUMBAI.
Advertisements

1 KHAZAR UNIVERSITY INSTITUTIONAL REPOSITORY Tatyana Zaytseva February 18, 2011.
7 th Open Acces Conference 2nd - 3rd November 2009 Accra, Ghana Rodrigo Torréns Universidad de Los Andes, Mérida, Venezuela Institutional Repository saber.ula.ve.
Usage statistics in context - panel discussion on understanding usage, measuring success Peter Shepherd Project Director COUNTER AAP/PSP 9 February 2005.
The Messy World of Grey Literature in Cyber Security 8 th Grey Literature Conference 4-5 December 2006 New Orleans, Louisiana Patricia Erwin – I3P Senior.
1 Integrating user environments and data liquidity to improve the research experience.
+ Making Web2.0 Researchable Web2.0 and Scholarly Communication innovation and use James Stewart.
Alma Swan Key Perspectives Ltd Truro, UK UUK Workshop on Research Information and Management London, 5 December 2007 OVERVIEW: The communication and effectiveness.
The Future of Scholarship in the Digital Age: The Role of Institutional Repositories Ann J. Wolpert Director of Libraries Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
Lorcan Dempsey OCLC Big Heads – Heads of Technical Services of Large Research Libraries ALA 2013 Chicago 28 June things about
Enhancing Graduate Education ARL/CNI Fall Forum Joan K. Lippincott Coalition for Networked Information ARL/CNI Fall Forum Joan K. Lippincott Coalition.
NG-CHC Northern Gulf Coastal Hazards Collaboratory Simulation Experiment Integration Sandra Harper 1, Manil Maskey 1, Sara Graves 1, Sabin Basyal 1, Jian.
ISI Web of Knowledge – Innovative Solutions ISI Web of Knowledge / Web of Science – coming developments BIOSIS Archive Web Citation Index – New product.
Digital Collections: Use, Value and Impact Lorna Hughes University of Wales Chair in Digital Collections, National Library of Wales Aberystwth University.
Reference 2.0: Using New Web Technologies to Enhance Public Service Texas Library Association Conference April 17, 2008 Stephen F. Austin State University’s.
Terri Muraski, UW Stevens Point Katie Sanders, UW Colleges.
Scholarship 2.0 Gideon Burton Asst. Prof. of English Assoc. Editor, BYU Studies Presentation to HBLL Faculty Council March 23, 2007.
Copyright c 2001 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.1 Chapter 2 The Research Process: Getting Started Researcher as a detective Seeking answers to questions.
Data Sources & Using VIVO Data Visualizing Scholarship VIVO provides network analysis and visualization tools to maximize the benefits afforded by the.
© 2004 University of Rochester LibrariesSlide 1 Enhancing DSpace Based on a Work-Practice Study DSpace Federation User Group Meeting March 10, 2004 Dave.
Institutional Perspective on Credit Systems for Research Data MacKenzie Smith Research Director, MIT Libraries.
The University Library as Publisher UKSG Webinar 29 October 2014 Janet Aucock University of St Andrews.
Canadian Research Libraries: A History of Cooperation Canadian Research Libraries: A History of Cooperation Gwendolyn Ebbett Dean of the Library University.
/ Lisa Spiro Digital Media Center, Rice University October 2010.
Grey Literature in Scholarly Communication Current Thinking from Libraries and Publishers James Neal and Kate Wittenberg.
Much Ado about Everything: Data, Publications, and the Role of Repositories Rebecca Kennison Center for Digital Research and Scholarship Columbia University.
Swapan Deoghuria Scientist-II, Computer Centre Indian Association for the Cultivation of Science Kolkata , INDIA URL:
Final Search Terms: Archiving (digital or data) Authentication (data) Conservation (digital or data) Curation (digital or data) Cyberinfrastructure Data.
Support for Graduate Thesis and Dissertation Work Joan K. Lippincott, Coalition for Networked Information ETD 2011, Cape Town, South Africa.
Overview: FY12 Strategic Communications Plan Meredith Fisher Director, Administration and Communication.
Responsible Publishing Sustainable Models for Scholarly Communication Kate Wittenberg, Director, EPIC.
LIS 506 (Fall 2006) LIS 506 Information Technology Week 11: Digital Libraries & Institutional Repositories.
SCIENCE, RESEARCH DATA, AND PUBLISHING Stewart Wills Editorial Director, Web & New Media, Science 26 February 2013.
CDRS.COLUMBIA.EDU Partnering with Researchers to Share New Knowledge Through Digital Technologies Rebecca Kennison, Director, CDRS Partnering to Publish:
Ensemble Computing in the National Science Digital Library (NSDL)
E-Science Developments in Australia and New Zealand Ainslie Dewe University Librarian La Trobe University 16 November 2009 Traditional science at Uppsala.
Max Planck Institute for the History of Science Urs Schoepflin & Simone Rieger, Max Planck Institute for the Histoy of Science, 2009Schoepflin/Rieger December.
Open Access The Lingo, The History, The Basics, and Why Should We Care.
Choosing Delivery Software for a Digital Library Jody DeRidder Digital Library Center University of Tennessee.
Microsoft Academic Search Search | Explore | Discover Alex D. Wade Director - Scholarly Communication.
IT in Academic Libraries: A Retrospective Gwendolyn Ebbett Dean of the Library.
Next Steps???. Funding Agencies/Foundations Agencies and foundations that provide financial support to scholars should require that the projects they.
CDRS.COLUMBIA.EDU CCLIP December 5, CDRS.COLUMBIA.EDU What We Do Partner with researchers and scholars at Columbia to share new knowledge through.
PLoS ONE Application Journal Publishing System (JPS) First application built on Topaz application framework Web 2.0 –Uses a template engine to display.
MENAlab -A consortium of websites dedicated to bringing the history of the Middle East and North Africa to a wide audience
‘intelligent openness’ The common objective of an RCUK data policy Gregor McDonagh
A few possibilities for librarianship by 2015 Eric Lease Morgan University of Notre Dame November 26 and 30, 2009.
Faculty Survey 2009: The Format Transition for Scholarly Works Ross Housewright ALA Annual /26/2010.
ORGANIZATIONS AT THE MARGINS: PROSPECTS AND NEW DIRECTIONS Deanna B. Marcum July 20, 2002.
UC Libraries Leslie Schick Associate Dean, UC Libraries
Discovery Informatics Workshop Social Computing Challenges DRAFT.
© 2006 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. 1 Chapter 2 The Research Process: Getting Started Researcher as a detective –Seeking answers.
Examples for Open Access Scholar Electronic Repository by New Bulgarian University IP LibCMASS Sofia 2011 Contract № 2011-ERA-IP-7 Sofia, September,
Building an Infrastructure for Digital Humanities: Issues and Considerations Peter Zhou 周欣平 University of California, Berkeley October 8, 2009.
LIFE Conference 20 April 2006 The Researchers’ Perspective Michael Jubb Director Research Information Network.
Queensland University of Technology CRICOS No J HOW RESEARCHERS FIND INFORMATION IN THE NEW DIGITAL AGE Gaynor Austen Director, Library Services.
Chapter 20 by Sylvia M. DeSantis Nursing Research: Data Collection, Processing and Analysis.
Managing Access at the University of Oregon : a Case Study of Scholars’ Bank by Carol Hixson Head, Metadata and Digital Library Services
Overview of the NEH’s Digital Humanities Initiative
Working with your archive organization: Broadening your user community Robert R. Downs, PhD Socioeconomic Data and Applications Center (SEDAC) Center for.
Leveraging the Expertise of our Staff and the Information Resources We Manage MIT Libraries Visiting Committee April 13, 2005.
Institutional Repository “A university-based institutional repository is a set of services that a university offers to the members of its community for.
Working with Your Archive : Broadening Your User Community Robert R. Downs, PhD NASA Socioeconomic Data and Applications Center (SEDAC) Center for International.
The National Digital Stewardship Alliance: Stewardship, Collaboration, Inclusiveness, Exchange.
A Shared Commitment to Digital Preservation and Access.
Data Management: Data Analysis Types of Data Analysis at USGS There are several ways to classify Data Analysis activities at USGS, and here are some of.
Ingest – Acquisition and deposit Irena Vipavc Brvar ADP SEEDS Workshop I Belgrade, October.
ESciDoc Introduction M. Dreyer.
Bird of Feather Session
Presentation transcript:

What does the science library / informatics professional need to know and be able to do? Ronald L. Larsen, Dean The iSchool at Pitt Oct. 17, 2008

Come gather 'round people Wherever you roam And admit that the waters Around you have grown And accept it that soon You'll be drenched to the bone. If your time to you Is worth savin' Then you better start swimmin' Or you'll sink like a stone For the times they are a-changin'.

Qualitatively different opportunities for new forms of research and scholarship A content infrastructure for novel forms of research. A blend of interdisciplinary research and development that engages scientists, technologists, and humanities scholars.

Data-driven Collect, curate, preserve, and support access to content of enduring value A human reads one document at a time… a computer analyzes millions, discovering patterns otherwise undetectable Communication-enabled arXiv.org, protein database, NVO, wikis, blogs, … Accelerating the exchange of ideas Expanding the field of contributors

Components Collections of digital content Software Web services Workflows Uneven progress Primary research data often discarded after publication When saved, rarely publicly accessible When published, frequently incompatible with e-science Approaching a tipping point Digital content the norm in most disciplines Infrastructure lagging

… the current scientific literature, were it to be presented in semantically accessible form, contains huge amounts of undiscovered science. However, the apathy of the academic, scientific, and information communities, coupled with the indifference or even active hostility and greed of many publishers, renders literature-data-driven science still inaccessible.

Ensure that all publicly funded research products and primary resources will be readily available, accessible, and usable via common infrastructure and tools through space and time, and across disciplines, stages of research, and modes of human expression.

Capture content Guidelines, norms, and incentives for publishing data, software, surveys, … Make it broadly accessible When collections get large, only the computer reads every word. Gregory Crane, Tufts University Enable innovative value-added services Cataloging, indexing, customizing, personalizing, summarizing, visualizing, translating, analyzing, … Curate & preserve Primary data, web services, workflows, the data journal

Variety Digitized books, e-journals, web pages, scientific data, courseware, new media, … Resistance to change Tradition & complacency Scholarly reputation of alternative venues Scale and complexity 161 x 10 9 GB in % / year growth rate 1 online + 3 tape backups = $7T / yr (national debt $10T) Open access to science and public scholarship Our mission of disseminating knowledge is only half complete if the information is not made widely and readily available to society. Berlin Declaration, Oct Stability Of organizations, associations, technology, and data

What does the science library / informatics professional need to know and be able to do? Seek the high ground Assure linkage to institutional mission Create new value-added services Serve on disciplinary research teams Measure, assess, revise…