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Lisa Johnston

Digital Curation Centre: DCC SCARP Project - 0 views

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    18 January 2010 | Key perspectives | Type: report The Digital Curation Centre is pleased to announce the report "Data Dimensions: Disciplinary Differences in Research Data Sharing, Reuse and Long term Viability" by Key Perspectives, as one of the final outputs of the DCC SCARP project. The project investigated attitudes and approaches to data deposit, sharing and reuse, curation and preservation, over a range of research fields in differing disciplines. The synthesis report (which drew on the SCARP case studies plus a number of others, identified in the Appendix), identifies factors that help understand how curation practices in research groups differ in disciplinary terms. This provides a backdrop to different digital curation approaches.
Lisa Johnston

Tim Berners-Lee: The year open data went worldwide | Video on TED.com - 0 views

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    6-min Video of open data examples at TED conference
Lisa Johnston

Digital Curation Centre: Events: 6th International Digital Curation Conference - 0 views

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    The conference is being presented jointly with the Graduate School of Library and Information Science of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, USA and in partnership with the Coalition for Networked Information (CNI) [External]. The 6 December will offer a programme of workshops. The main conference will take place 7-8 December. the call for papers will be released in March and registration will open in September 2010.
Lisa Johnston

Open Science Data Initiative (OSDI) - 0 views

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    he Open Science Data Initiative is an initiative led by Oak Ridge National Laboratory in partnership with Microsoft's Public Sector Developer Evangelism team. OSDI is based on OGDI which in turn uses the Azure Services Platform to make it easier to publish and use a wide variety of scientific data from government agencies. OSDI is an sample of OGDI's open source 'starter kit' (coming soon) with code that can be used to publish data on the Internet in a Web-friendly format with easy-to-use, open API's. OSDI-based web API's can be accessed from a variety of client technologies such as Silverlight, Flash, JavaScript, PHP, Python, Ruby, mapping web sites, etc. Whether you are a researcher wishing to use scientific data, a hobyist developer, or a "budding scientist", these open API's will enable you to build innovative applications, visualizations and mash-ups that empower people through access to scientific information. This site is built using the OGDI starter kit software assets and provides interactive access to some publicly-available data sets along with sample code and resources for writing applications using the OSDI APIs.
Lisa Johnston

Chronopolis -- Digital Preservation Program -- Long-Term Mass-Scale Federated Digital P... - 0 views

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    The Chronopolis Digital Preservation Demonstration Project, one of the Library of Congress' latest efforts to collect and preserve at-risk digital information, has been officially launched as a multi-member partnership to meet the archival needs of a wide range of cultural and social domains. Chronopolis is a digital preservation data grid framework being developed by the San Diego Supercomputer Center (SDSC) at UC San Diego , the UC San Diego Libraries (UCSDL) , and their partners at the National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR) in Colorado and the University of Maryland's Institute for Advanced Computer Studies (UMIACS) . A key goal of the Chronopolis project is to provide cross-domain collection sharing for long-term preservation. Using existing high-speed educational and research networks and mass-scale storage infrastructure investments, the partnership is designed to leverage the data storage capabilities at SDSC, NCAR, and UMIACS to provide a preservation data grid that emphasizes heterogeneous and highly redundant data storage systems.
Lisa Johnston

nsf.gov - National Science Foundation (NSF) News - NSF Releases Open Government Plan - ... - 0 views

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    National Science Foundation (NSF) is finding ways to make its work more accessible to the general public. 
Lisa Johnston

Sharing Data for Disease Research - WSJ.com - 0 views

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    A bold project hopes that getting scientists to share information can deepen their understanding of diseases
Lisa Johnston

Scientists Embrace Openness - Science Careers - Biotech, Pharmaceutical, Faculty, Postd... - 0 views

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    At first glance, going "open" would seem like a serious career risk -- years of work could be for nothing if a competitor uses your work to beat you to publication -- but many practitioners of openness say the benefits outweigh those risks
Amy West

Liveblog: BRDI: Plans : Gavin Baker - 0 views

  • Getting funds for data storage isn’t hard. It’s getting information for decision-making out of data that matters.
Amy West

Liveblog: BRDI: Author Deposit Mandates for Federal Research Grantees : Gavin Baker - 0 views

  • DC Principles Coalition: We believe in free access to science, within the constraints of our business models.
  • The public doesn’t need access to the full articles
  • The problem is that consumers want everything for free.
  • ...6 more annotations...
  • Repositories can do all the functions of journals except quality control, and we don’t want government doing that.
  • Social sciences often left out of discussions about data curation, open access, etc.
  • We could argue that taxpayers paid for the research in general, not necessarily each publication.
  • But the Public Access Policy requires the peer-reviewed manuscript, not the one after which the publishers add value. The America COMPETES model, for un-peer-reviewed grant proposals, is almost useless to the public. In health, you want the refereed results, not the grantee’s report to the agency.
  • If journals can’t survive, from an economic perspective, that’s not harm — it’s just a failure to adapt.
  • Journal growth trends with funding for researchers. As universities want to be more prestigious, they aim to publish more. Trying to have access to everything requires too much money — you have to prioritize.
Amy West

Liveblog: BRDI: Briefings from Federal Interagency Data and Information Groups : Gavin ... - 0 views

    • Amy West
       
      What are they talking about here?
  • But people in the libraries think that someone is supposed to do the work for them before they do anything — originally done by publishers.
Lisa Johnston

Open science at web-scale: Optimising participation and predictive potential : JISC - 0 views

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    This report has attempted to draw together and synthesise evidence and opinion associated with data-intensive open science from a wide range of sources. The potential impact of data-intensive open science on research practice and research outcomes, is both substantive and far-reaching. There are implications for funding organisations, for research and information communities and for higher education institutions.
Lisa Johnston

DigitalKoans » Blog Archive » Planets Project Deposits "Digital Genome" Ti... - 0 views

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    Over the last decade the digital age has seen an explosion in the rate of data creation. Estimates from 2009 suggest that over 100 GB of data has already been created for every single individual on the planet ranging from holiday snaps to health records-that's over 1 trillion CDs worth of data, equivalent to 24 tons of books per person!
Lisa Johnston

NSF to Ask Every Grant Applicant for Data Management Plan - ScienceInsider - 0 views

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    Scientists seeking funding from the National Science Foundation (NSF) will soon need to spell out how they plan to manage the data they hope to collect. It's part of a broader move by NSF and other federal agencies to emphasize the importance of community access to data.
Lisa Johnston

Scientific Data Sharing Project - 0 views

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    The Data Sharing Project proposes to further this goal initially in the field of medicine by working to create a raw data sharing program that will serve as a model to other disciplines attempting to make their own way in this arena.
Lisa Johnston

Digital Preservation Courses & Workshops - Digital Preservation Outreach and Education ... - 0 views

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    more online training opportunities...the DPOE program 
Lisa Johnston

HPCwire: SDSC Cloud Supports New NSF Mandate for Data Management - 0 views

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    Standard "on-demand" storage costs for UC researchers on the SDSC Cloud start at only $3.25 a month per 100GB (gigabytes) of storage. A "condo" option, which allows users to make cost-effective long term investment in hardware that becomes part of the SDSC Cloud, is also available. Full details can be found at https://cloud.sdsc.edu/hp/index.php.
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