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Gosia Stergios

What would scholarly communications look like if we invented it today? (blog entry, C. ... - 0 views

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    Characteristics: Registration of ideas, data or other outputs for the purpose of assigning credit and priority to the right people is high on everyone's list. The ability to re-use, replicate, and re-purpose outputs very highly as well. It would need to enable and support public and stakeholder engagement. The the system will support discovery and filtering tools so that users can find the content they are looking for in a huge and diverse volume of available material.
Gosia Stergios

InfoVis CyberInfrastructure- Home - 0 views

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    provides access to a comprehehsive set of software packages easing the exploration, modification, comparison, and extension of data mining and information visualization algorithms. Diverse software packages were bundled into learning modules. Access to a large-scale data repository, extensive compute resources, and a growing set of references are provided as well. It is our hope that the community will adopt this resource to foster Information Visualization education and research.
Garrett Eastman

E-only scholarly journals: overcoming the barriers - 0 views

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    "In recent years, publishers, librarians and academics have seized the opportunities offered by the electronic publication of scholarly journals. Despite the popularity of e-journals, however, content continues to be published, acquired and used in physical printed form. In the UK, we are still some way from a wholly electronic journal environment. This study is prompted by a concern from publishers and librarians that the retention of both printed and e-journal formats adds unnecessary costs throughout the supply chain from publisher to library to user. In view of the many advantages of electronic journals, this report sets out to understand the barriers to a move to e-only provision of scholarly journals in the UK, and to investigate what various players within the scholarly communications system could do in order to encourage such a move."
Garrett Eastman

Future Professional Communication in Astronomy II - 1 views

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    "Future Professional Communication in Astronomy II"
Garrett Eastman

Louisiana State Joins Eduroam Network -- Campus Technology - 0 views

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    "Eduroam is a secure, world-wide wireless network roaming access service developed for the international research and education community."
Garrett Eastman

Wired Campus - The Chronicle of Higher Education - 0 views

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    "How to Teach With Google Wave" build online classrom communities
Gosia Stergios

Rapid Research Notes and PloS Influenza site - 0 views

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    Launched by NCBI, Rapid Research Notes (RRN) "allows users to access and cite research that is provided through participating publisher programs designed for immediate communication."
Gosia Stergios

CLARIN - 0 views

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    The CLARIN project is a large-scale pan-European collaborative effort to create, coordinate and make language resources and technology available and readily usable. CLARIN offers scholars the tools to allow computer-aided language processing, addressing one or more of the multiple roles language plays (i.e. carrier of cultural content and knowledge, instrument of communication, component of identity and object of study) in the Humanities and Social Sciences.
Garrett Eastman

Self-Assessment of a Long-Term Archive for Interdisciplinary Scientific Data as a Trust... - 2 views

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    "Long-term preservation and stewardship of scientific data and research-related information are vitally important to future science and scholarship. Scientific data archives can offer capabilities for managing and preserving disciplinary and interdisciplinary data for research, education, and decision-making activities of future communities of users. Meeting the requirements for a trusted digital repository will help to ensure that today's collections of scientific data will be available in the future. A continuing self-assessment of a long-term archive for interdisciplinary scientific data is being conducted to identify the additional steps needed for it to become a trustworthy repository. Recommendations include a strategy for collaborative organizational sustainability, a model for submission and workflow to ingest interdisciplinary scientific data into a repository, and a plan for facilitating intra-organizational transfer between repositories."
Garrett Eastman

Discussion of hybrid journals and future of scholarly publishing | ALA Connect - 0 views

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    Presentations from the ALCTS Scholarly Communications Group in January 2011 on the topic of the "author pays" model in open access journal publishing
Garrett Eastman

Who owns our work? - 1 views

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    "Much turmoil in the scholarly-communication ecosystem appears to revolve around simple ownership of intellectual property. Unpacking that notion, however, produces a fascinating tangle of stakeholders, desires, products and struggles. Some products of the research process, especially novel ones, are difficult to fit into legal concepts of ownership. As collaborative research burgeons, traditional ownership and authorship criteria are stretched to their limits and beyond, with many contributors still feeling short of due credit. The desire for access and impact brings institutions and grant funders into the formerly exclusive relationship between authors and publishers. Librarians, stripped of first-sale rights by electronic licensing, wonder about both access and long-term preservation. Emerging solutions to many of these difficulties threaten to cut publishers out of the picture altogether, perhaps a welcome change to those stakeholders who find publishers' behavior to block progress."
Garrett Eastman

Social Media and the Academy: Enhancing and enabling scholarly communication - 0 views

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    Fifth Bloomsbury Conference on E-Publishing and E-Publications, June 30-July 1, 2011
Gosia Stergios

Harvard Digital Scholarship Summit 2011 | May 5, 2011 - 2 views

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    Three questions dominated the event: re-ingineering scholarly communications (a scholarly article, metrics, and a journal), future of faculty portfolio and reproducibility of research
Gosia Stergios

A Decade in Internet Time (0xford Conference, Sept. 21- ) - 1 views

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    many sessions with implications for digital scholarship and new forms of scholarly communications
Gosia Stergios

Beyond Impact: Measuring Research, Making a Difference - 0 views

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    Open Society Foundations funded project that aims to facilitate a conversation between researchers, their funders, and developers about what we mean by the "impact" of research and how we can make its measurement more reliable, more useful, and more accepted by the research community
Garrett Eastman

Mandated data archiving greatly improves access to research data - 0 views

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    "The data underlying scientific papers should be accessible to researchers both now and in the future, but how best can we ensure that these data are available? Here we examine the effectiveness of four approaches to data archiving: no stated archiving policy, recommending (but not requiring) archiving, and two versions of mandating data deposition at acceptance. We control for differences between data types by trying to obtain data from papers that use a single, widespread population genetic analysis, STRUCTURE. At one extreme, we found that mandated data archiving policies that require the inclusion of a data availability statement in the manuscript improve the odds of finding the data online almost a thousand-fold compared to having no policy. However, archiving rates at journals with less stringent policies were only very slightly higher than those with no policy at all. At one extreme, we found that mandated data archiving policies that require the inclusion of a data availability statement in the manuscript improve the odds of finding the data online almost a thousand fold compared to having no policy. However, archiving rates at journals with less stringent policies were only very slightly higher than those with no policy at all. We also assessed the effectiveness of asking for data directly from authors and obtained over half of the requested datasets, albeit with about 8 days delay and some disagreement with authors. Given the long term benefits of data accessibility to the academic community, we believe that journal based mandatory data archiving policies and mandatory data availability statements should be more widely adopted."
Gosia Stergios

Economics of scholarly communication in transition | Morrison | First Monday - 0 views

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      useful price point
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