A presentation about Digital Repository @ Iowa State University to faculty from Iowa State University's College of Veterinary Medicine, February 20, 2013.
Increased access to the data generated is fuelling increased consumption and accelerating the cycle of discovery. But the successful integration and re-use of heterogeneous data from multiple providers and scientific domains is a major challenge within academia and industry, often due to incomplete description of the study details or metadata about the study. Using the BioSharing, ISA Commons and the STATistics Ontology (STATO) projects as exemplar community efforts, in this breakout session we will discuss the evolving portfolio of community-based standards and methods for structuring and curating datasets, from experimental descriptions to the results of analysis.
http://www.methodsinecologyandevolution.org/view/0/events.html#Data_workshop
A presentation about Digital Repository @ Iowa State University to faculty from Iowa State University's College of Veterinary Medicine, February 20, 2013.
Increased access to the data generated is fuelling increased consumption and accelerating the cycle of discovery. But the successful integration and re-use of heterogeneous data from multiple providers and scientific domains is a major challenge within academia and industry, often due to incomplete description of the study details or metadata about the study. Using the BioSharing, ISA Commons and the STATistics Ontology (STATO) projects as exemplar community efforts, in this breakout session we will discuss the evolving portfolio of community-based standards and methods for structuring and curating datasets, from experimental descriptions to the results of analysis.
http://www.methodsinecologyandevolution.org/view/0/events.html#Data_workshop
Identification of Early Career Researchers: How Universities and Funding Orga...ORCID, Inc
Funding agencies, universities, and research institutes all face challenges of reliably identifying their researchers and monitoring outcomes over time. All researchers—and especially early career researchers seeking to establish their careers—need to be reliably connected to their research outputs, without the confusion common, changeable names creates. Graduate students and postdoctoral researchers supported by grants also have specific challenges: if they are not the PI, they are not included in grant information; they may not even know which grant(s) they are supported by; and as a result, the existing challenges of reliably tying publications to grant funding are even more problematic. The use of the unique, persistent ORCID identifier can help support outcomes tracking and evaluation.
In 2012, the U.S. National Institutes of Health Biomedical Research Workforce Working Group made recommendations that the NIH should take to support a sustainable biomedical research workforce in the U.S. In the course of its study, working group members were “frustrated and sometimes stymied” by the lack of quality, comprehensive data about biomedical researchers. In response, NIH has recommended the development of a simple, comprehensive tracking system for trainees, implemented a shared, voluntary researcher profile system called the Science Experts Network Curriculum Vitae (SciENcv), and encouraged the adoption of unique, persistent ORCID identifiers for researchers. Additionally, NIH has begun collecting data about individuals in graduate and undergraduate student project roles who are supported by NIH grants.
Research universities like Texas A&M are also responding by incorporating the ORCID identifier into their systems, enabling the improved identification, data collection, and career outcome tracking of students and postdoctoral researchers--and educating these early career researchers about the benefits they will receive from a unique, persistent research identifier. They are also beginning to link Electronic Theses and Dissertations (ETDs) to early career researchers' ORCID records.
ORCID is an independent, non-profit organization that provides an open registry of unique and persistent identifiers for researchers and scholars. ORCID collaborates with the community to integrate ORCID identifiers into research systems and workflows, improving data management and accuracy across systems. ORCID enables interoperability between research systems worldwide, ensuring that researchers are correctly and automatically linked to their contributions. Since its launch in October 2012, ORCID has seen rapid adoption by more than 670,000 researchers and 130+ member organizations.
From Webinar 4/23/14, https://orcid.org/content/identification-early-career-researchers-how-universities-and-funding-organizations-are-using
Challenges and benefits of using ORCID for early career researchers and resea...ORCID, Inc
Universities and postdoctoral affairs offices also have challenges of collecting meaningful data about the outcomes of their students and trainees. Early career researchers also face the challenge of not having their work discovered and recognized because of name ambiguity problems: common, changed, or misspelled names.
Melanie Sinche, Harvard University
From Webinar 4/23/14, https://orcid.org/content/identification-early-career-researchers-how-universities-and-funding-organizations-are-using
Panel discussion: Why ORCID? Perspectives from the university community
Moderator: Barbara Allen, Executive Director, Committee on Institutional Cooperation
Presenters:
Karen Butler-Purry, Associate Provost for Graduate and Professional Studies, Texas A&M University
Keith Hazelton, Senior IT Architect the University of Wisconsin-Madison/Chair of Internet2 MACE-Dir working group
Neil Jacobs, Programme Director, Digital Infrastructure, Jisc
Yan Shuai, President, Society of China University Journals (CUJS)
The adoption of ORCID identifiers by funding organizationsORCID, Inc
Walter Schaffer, NIH
Overview of the challenges funding organizations face in collecting information about early career researchers. Learn more about how the U.S. NIH has integrated the ORCID identifier into SciENv, as well as future plans, including the adoption of SciENcv by NSF in 2014.
From Webinar 4/23/14, https://orcid.org/content/identification-early-career-researchers-how-universities-and-funding-organizations-are-using
Presented at the ACRL Scholarly Communication 101 Road Show at The Ohio State University in Newark, Ohio on June 7, 2011; sponsored by the Academic Library Association of Ohio (ALAO) and OhioLINK
Presentation to the "FAIRification put into practice: Characterization of energy data and development of workflows" event by https://www.eeradata.eu => https://www.eeradata.eu/event/2857:online-discussion-fairification-put-into-practice-characterization-of-energy-data-and-development-of-workflows.html#
My presentation at the http://neuroinformatics2017.org (Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia) on FAIR and FAIRsharing (previously BioSharing); metadata standards and their implementation by databases/repositories and adoption by journals' and funders' data policies.
Brief introduction to FAIRsharing work with industry (publishers, pharmas) and the FAIR Cookbook (for the Life Science): https://www.opensciencefair.eu/2021/workshops/applying-fair-principles-to-open-science-and-industry-to-drive-innovation-challenges-and-opportunities
Presentation to the EC Workshop on Maximizing investments in health research: FAIR data for a coordinate COVID-19 response. Workshop I, October 11, 2021.
Presented at http://mcbios-maqc.org. The FAIR Principles have propelled the global debate in all disciplines about better RDM, transparent and reproducible data worldwide, and in all disciplines. FAIR has de facto become a global norm for good RDM, a prerequisite for data science, since their endorsement by global and intergovernmental leaders. Funding bodies are consolidating FAIR into their funding agreements; publishers have united behind FAIR as a way to remain at the forefront of open research; and in the private sector FAIR is adopted and enshrined in policy in major biopharmas, libraries, and unions. FAIR is changing the culture of data science, but work is needed to turn the principles into reality. I will use the work of the FAIRplus project as examplar to illustrate challenges and progresses.
Practical applications for altmetrics in a changing metrics landscapeDigital Science
"Practical applications for altmetrics in a changing metrics landscape" - Sara Rouhi, Altmetric product specialist, and Anirvan Chatterjee, Director Data Strategy for CTSI at UCSF
Identification of Early Career Researchers: How Universities and Funding Orga...ORCID, Inc
Funding agencies, universities, and research institutes all face challenges of reliably identifying their researchers and monitoring outcomes over time. All researchers—and especially early career researchers seeking to establish their careers—need to be reliably connected to their research outputs, without the confusion common, changeable names creates. Graduate students and postdoctoral researchers supported by grants also have specific challenges: if they are not the PI, they are not included in grant information; they may not even know which grant(s) they are supported by; and as a result, the existing challenges of reliably tying publications to grant funding are even more problematic. The use of the unique, persistent ORCID identifier can help support outcomes tracking and evaluation.
In 2012, the U.S. National Institutes of Health Biomedical Research Workforce Working Group made recommendations that the NIH should take to support a sustainable biomedical research workforce in the U.S. In the course of its study, working group members were “frustrated and sometimes stymied” by the lack of quality, comprehensive data about biomedical researchers. In response, NIH has recommended the development of a simple, comprehensive tracking system for trainees, implemented a shared, voluntary researcher profile system called the Science Experts Network Curriculum Vitae (SciENcv), and encouraged the adoption of unique, persistent ORCID identifiers for researchers. Additionally, NIH has begun collecting data about individuals in graduate and undergraduate student project roles who are supported by NIH grants.
Research universities like Texas A&M are also responding by incorporating the ORCID identifier into their systems, enabling the improved identification, data collection, and career outcome tracking of students and postdoctoral researchers--and educating these early career researchers about the benefits they will receive from a unique, persistent research identifier. They are also beginning to link Electronic Theses and Dissertations (ETDs) to early career researchers' ORCID records.
ORCID is an independent, non-profit organization that provides an open registry of unique and persistent identifiers for researchers and scholars. ORCID collaborates with the community to integrate ORCID identifiers into research systems and workflows, improving data management and accuracy across systems. ORCID enables interoperability between research systems worldwide, ensuring that researchers are correctly and automatically linked to their contributions. Since its launch in October 2012, ORCID has seen rapid adoption by more than 670,000 researchers and 130+ member organizations.
From Webinar 4/23/14, https://orcid.org/content/identification-early-career-researchers-how-universities-and-funding-organizations-are-using
Challenges and benefits of using ORCID for early career researchers and resea...ORCID, Inc
Universities and postdoctoral affairs offices also have challenges of collecting meaningful data about the outcomes of their students and trainees. Early career researchers also face the challenge of not having their work discovered and recognized because of name ambiguity problems: common, changed, or misspelled names.
Melanie Sinche, Harvard University
From Webinar 4/23/14, https://orcid.org/content/identification-early-career-researchers-how-universities-and-funding-organizations-are-using
Panel discussion: Why ORCID? Perspectives from the university community
Moderator: Barbara Allen, Executive Director, Committee on Institutional Cooperation
Presenters:
Karen Butler-Purry, Associate Provost for Graduate and Professional Studies, Texas A&M University
Keith Hazelton, Senior IT Architect the University of Wisconsin-Madison/Chair of Internet2 MACE-Dir working group
Neil Jacobs, Programme Director, Digital Infrastructure, Jisc
Yan Shuai, President, Society of China University Journals (CUJS)
The adoption of ORCID identifiers by funding organizationsORCID, Inc
Walter Schaffer, NIH
Overview of the challenges funding organizations face in collecting information about early career researchers. Learn more about how the U.S. NIH has integrated the ORCID identifier into SciENv, as well as future plans, including the adoption of SciENcv by NSF in 2014.
From Webinar 4/23/14, https://orcid.org/content/identification-early-career-researchers-how-universities-and-funding-organizations-are-using
Presented at the ACRL Scholarly Communication 101 Road Show at The Ohio State University in Newark, Ohio on June 7, 2011; sponsored by the Academic Library Association of Ohio (ALAO) and OhioLINK
Presentation to the "FAIRification put into practice: Characterization of energy data and development of workflows" event by https://www.eeradata.eu => https://www.eeradata.eu/event/2857:online-discussion-fairification-put-into-practice-characterization-of-energy-data-and-development-of-workflows.html#
My presentation at the http://neuroinformatics2017.org (Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia) on FAIR and FAIRsharing (previously BioSharing); metadata standards and their implementation by databases/repositories and adoption by journals' and funders' data policies.
Brief introduction to FAIRsharing work with industry (publishers, pharmas) and the FAIR Cookbook (for the Life Science): https://www.opensciencefair.eu/2021/workshops/applying-fair-principles-to-open-science-and-industry-to-drive-innovation-challenges-and-opportunities
Presentation to the EC Workshop on Maximizing investments in health research: FAIR data for a coordinate COVID-19 response. Workshop I, October 11, 2021.
Presented at http://mcbios-maqc.org. The FAIR Principles have propelled the global debate in all disciplines about better RDM, transparent and reproducible data worldwide, and in all disciplines. FAIR has de facto become a global norm for good RDM, a prerequisite for data science, since their endorsement by global and intergovernmental leaders. Funding bodies are consolidating FAIR into their funding agreements; publishers have united behind FAIR as a way to remain at the forefront of open research; and in the private sector FAIR is adopted and enshrined in policy in major biopharmas, libraries, and unions. FAIR is changing the culture of data science, but work is needed to turn the principles into reality. I will use the work of the FAIRplus project as examplar to illustrate challenges and progresses.
Practical applications for altmetrics in a changing metrics landscapeDigital Science
"Practical applications for altmetrics in a changing metrics landscape" - Sara Rouhi, Altmetric product specialist, and Anirvan Chatterjee, Director Data Strategy for CTSI at UCSF
Gather evidence to demonstrate the impact of your researchIUPUI
This workshop is the 3rd in a series of 4 titled "Maximize your impact" offered by the IUPUI University Library Center for Digital Scholarship. Faculty must provide strong evidence of impact in order to achieve promotion and tenure. Having strong evidence in year 5 is made easier by strategic dissemination early in your tenure track. In this hands-on workshop, we will introduce key sources of evidence to support your case, demonstrate strategies for gathering this evidence, and provide a variety of examples. These sources include citation metrics, article level metrics, and altmetrics as indicators of impact to support your narrative of excellence.
2016 State of Facilities in Higher EducationSightlines
Get an exclusive look at the 2016 facilities trends in higher education and explore some key insights into the challenges - and opportunities - that face campus facilities managers and finance leaders.
Modern research metrics and new models of evaluation have risen high on the academic agenda in the last few years. In this session two UK institutions who have adopted such metrics across their faculty will share their motivations and experiences of doing so, and explain further how they are integrating these data into existing models of review and analysis.
Cliffs Notes from the Journal of Financial Planning & Counseling milfamln
Many financial practitioners do not take the time to read research journals, let alone apply the findings of personal finance studies to their work. This 90-minute webinar will address this concern head on. It will begin with participants sharing some of the most memorable personal finance research studies that they recall and specific ways that they have put research findings into practice with clients or students. It will then present a summary of research findings on a wide variety of personal finance topics including saving, investing, credit, cash flow management, purchase of a home, planning for retirement, and managing money in retirement. The source of the webinar content will be studies published in the Journal of Financial Counseling and Planning during the past decade. Even more importantly than the research summaries, however, will be the discussion of actionable implications for financial practitioners; i.e., the “so what?” of published studies. Every study that is mentioned in the webinar will be presented in “split screen” format with one side of each slide briefly describing a study and the other listing specific implications for practitioners. The webinar will conclude with a consolidated list of action steps and online resources. Participant interaction will include answering some of the same questions that researchers have posed in their published studies.
Montana Academic Library Consortium PresentationPamela Benjamin
This is a presentation designed to show:
> current status of library consortia - especially academic
> current status of library consortial efforts in Montana
> benefits of joining a consortium
> challenges of maintaining a consortium
> brief outline of steps to establish a consortium
Webinar slides from June 8 Library Connect webinar "Researcher profiles and metrics that matter" with: Chris Belter, Bibliometrics Informationist, NIH Library; Andrea Michalek, VP of Research Metrics, Elsevier | Managing Director of Plum Analytics; Ellen Cole, Scholarly Publications Librarian, Learning and Research Services, Northumbria University.
View the webinar at: http://libraryconnect.elsevier.com/library-connect-webinars?commid=257883
This presentation was provided by Holly Falk-Krzesinski of Elsevier during the NISO event, "Is This Still Working? Incentives to Publish, Metrics, and New Reward Systems," held on February 20, 2019.
Academics must provide evidence to demonstrate the impact and outcomes of their scholarly work. This webinar, presented by librarians, will help faculty explore various forms of documentary evidence to support their case for excellence. Sponsored by the IUPUI Office of Academic Affairs.
Note: The webinar included demonstrations of Web of Science & Scopus, which the slides do not reflect.
Similar to 2014 International Conference on Arabidopsis Research (ICAR) presentation (20)
Introduction to an online resource that displays pre-computed phylogenetic trees of gene families alongside experimental gene function data to facilitate inference of unknown gene function in plants. From the same team that brings you TAIR (The Arabidopsis Information Resource)
How to make your published data findable, accessible, interoperable and reusablePhoenix Bioinformatics
Seminar Presentation for PMB Department, UC Berkeley for Love Data Week. Subject is how to prepare publications and associated data sets for maximum reuse.
Macroeconomics- Movie Location
This will be used as part of your Personal Professional Portfolio once graded.
Objective:
Prepare a presentation or a paper using research, basic comparative analysis, data organization and application of economic information. You will make an informed assessment of an economic climate outside of the United States to accomplish an entertainment industry objective.
How to Make a Field invisible in Odoo 17Celine George
It is possible to hide or invisible some fields in odoo. Commonly using “invisible” attribute in the field definition to invisible the fields. This slide will show how to make a field invisible in odoo 17.
Welcome to TechSoup New Member Orientation and Q&A (May 2024).pdfTechSoup
In this webinar you will learn how your organization can access TechSoup's wide variety of product discount and donation programs. From hardware to software, we'll give you a tour of the tools available to help your nonprofit with productivity, collaboration, financial management, donor tracking, security, and more.
2024.06.01 Introducing a competency framework for languag learning materials ...Sandy Millin
http://sandymillin.wordpress.com/iateflwebinar2024
Published classroom materials form the basis of syllabuses, drive teacher professional development, and have a potentially huge influence on learners, teachers and education systems. All teachers also create their own materials, whether a few sentences on a blackboard, a highly-structured fully-realised online course, or anything in between. Despite this, the knowledge and skills needed to create effective language learning materials are rarely part of teacher training, and are mostly learnt by trial and error.
Knowledge and skills frameworks, generally called competency frameworks, for ELT teachers, trainers and managers have existed for a few years now. However, until I created one for my MA dissertation, there wasn’t one drawing together what we need to know and do to be able to effectively produce language learning materials.
This webinar will introduce you to my framework, highlighting the key competencies I identified from my research. It will also show how anybody involved in language teaching (any language, not just English!), teacher training, managing schools or developing language learning materials can benefit from using the framework.
Introduction to AI for Nonprofits with Tapp NetworkTechSoup
Dive into the world of AI! Experts Jon Hill and Tareq Monaur will guide you through AI's role in enhancing nonprofit websites and basic marketing strategies, making it easy to understand and apply.
The French Revolution, which began in 1789, was a period of radical social and political upheaval in France. It marked the decline of absolute monarchies, the rise of secular and democratic republics, and the eventual rise of Napoleon Bonaparte. This revolutionary period is crucial in understanding the transition from feudalism to modernity in Europe.
For more information, visit-www.vavaclasses.com
Operation “Blue Star” is the only event in the history of Independent India where the state went into war with its own people. Even after about 40 years it is not clear if it was culmination of states anger over people of the region, a political game of power or start of dictatorial chapter in the democratic setup.
The people of Punjab felt alienated from main stream due to denial of their just demands during a long democratic struggle since independence. As it happen all over the word, it led to militant struggle with great loss of lives of military, police and civilian personnel. Killing of Indira Gandhi and massacre of innocent Sikhs in Delhi and other India cities was also associated with this movement.
Read| The latest issue of The Challenger is here! We are thrilled to announce that our school paper has qualified for the NATIONAL SCHOOLS PRESS CONFERENCE (NSPC) 2024. Thank you for your unwavering support and trust. Dive into the stories that made us stand out!
2014 International Conference on Arabidopsis Research (ICAR) presentation
1. TAIR Workshop schedule
• 4:30 – 4:55 A New Funding Model for Academic Resources
(Eva Huala)
• 4:55 – 5:20 TAIR: A Sustainable Community Database for
International Arabidopsis Research (Donghui Li)
• 5:20 – 5:30 Questions
2. Rise of the Phoenix
a New Funding Model
for Academic Resources
3. 1. Importance of TAIR
1. Ways to fund curation
2. TAIR’s new funding model
4. 1. Importance of TAIR
1. Ways to fund curation
2. TAIR’s new funding model
5. Computable
Not
Computable
Data Knowledge
Lab notebook
Gene ontology annotation
(gene function)
Plant ontology annotation
(gene expression pattern)
Research article
Microarray dataset
RNA-seq reads
Metabolite levels in
seeds of a mutant
Gene function
inferred from mutant
phenotype
Free text mutant
phenotype
cDNA sequence
Research seminar
6. Computable
Not
Computable
Data Knowledge
Lab notebook
Gene ontology annotation
(gene function)
Plant ontology annotation
(gene expression pattern)
Research article
Microarray dataset
RNA-seq reads
Metabolite levels in
seeds of a mutant
Gene function
inferred from mutant
phenotype
Free text mutant
phenotype
cDNA sequence
Research seminar
TAIR’s area of emphasis
7. TAIR has 2 main roles
1. Collect, convert and integrate information 2. Search, display, and analyze information
TAIR DB
Research
Articles
TAIR Curator Article Author
TAIR DB
Unique to TAIR Shared with many other sites
Unique Not Unique
8. TAIR DB
Research
Articles
Gene function
Gene symbol
Allele name
Phenotype
GO annotation
PO annotation
Publications
Etc…
AIP
TAIR’s unique role relative to
other resources – gathering
information from literature:
14. 1. Importance of TAIR
1. Ways to fund curation
2. TAIR’s new funding model
15. Funding models for biological databases – pros and cons
Type of Support:
Pros and cons:
Direct federal
funding
Federal or
foundation
grants
User fees
(for profit)
User fees
(nonprofit)
Budget scales with
usage and need
No No Yes Yes
Directly responsive to
community needs
No No Yes Yes
Accessible to all Yes Yes No ???
Unlimited lifespan Yes No Yes Yes
16. Type of Support:
Pros and cons:
Direct federal
funding
Federal or
foundation
grants
User fees
(for profit)
User fees
(nonprofit)
Budget scales with
usage and need
No No Yes Yes
Directly responsive to
community needs
No No Yes Yes
Accessible to all Yes Yes No ???
Unlimited lifespan Yes No Yes Yes
Funding models for biological databases – pros and cons
18. What does it mean to be a nonprofit?
• Motivated by mission, not profit
• Income must be used for nonprofit goals
• Governed by board of directors
“Develop an economically
and technologically
sustainable business model
and platform that provides
the resources to allow
scientific databases to
persist….”
19. What does it mean to be a nonprofit?
• Motivated by mission, not profit
• Income must be used for nonprofit goals
• Governed by board of directors
www.phoenixbioinformatics.org
20. Other
DBs
Other
tools
Shared tools and expertise:
• Fundraising
• Subscriptions
• Ad revenue
• Donations
• Technical help
Forecast: Stormy weather in Washington DC...
Many projects under one umbrella…
21. 1. Importance of TAIR
1. Ways to fund curation
2. TAIR’s new funding model
22. Options for user fees:
Type of User Fee Pros Cons
Open Access model
(charge submitters to
deposit data)
No one is shut out from data
access
Researchers have
Insufficient motivation to
pay for data submission.
No reward structure
analogous to promotion
based on articles listed in
CV.
Subscription model
(charge users to access
data)
People value access to TAIR
Many have said they would
be willing to pay for it to
sustain the database
Some people may lose
access
Data sharing – delay in
releasing data to other
sites
Can we make it fair?
Can we mitigate any drawbacks?
23. Institution-wide subscriptions:
• Cover all faculty, staff and students
• Allow access based on IP address of the institution
• Provide access to casual users (students looking up information, researchers
working on other organisms)
• Shift the cost from grants or personal funds to university library budgets
• Allow easy access to students and casual users of the database
Individual or lab subscriptions:
• Will require login with a username and password
• Will provide access method for researchers who can’t get an institutional
subscription
1. Provide several ways to subscribe
2. Make each option fair and affordable
25. 2014 subscription prices:
Company subscriptions (based on size of company):
• Over $5B annual sales: $25,000/year
• Under $5B annual sales: $5,000/year
Institutional subscriptions (based on institution-wide usage):
• Tier 1 (over 5000 visits/year): $7500/year
• Tier 2 (2501-5000 visits/year):$5000/year
• Tier 3 (1001-2500 visits/year): $2500/year
• Tier 4 (less than 1000 visits/year): $500/year
Lab/individual subscriptions ($85/$95 per person, single seat)
Free subscriptions for students enrolled in a course using TAIR
Free subscriptions for countries with lowest GDP
26. Metered access – allows infrequent
users to access TAIR without paying
Free pages:
• Home
• Search pages
• ABRC stock and ordering
• News
Metered pages:
• Locus page
• Analysis tools
Pages requiring subscription:
• View job postings
• Data download
Limited number of
pages per month
What else can we do to ensure everyone has access?
31. Progress on subscriptions – excellent!
Large companies:
5 subscribed
1 declined
Academic institutions:
~ 110 academic institutions have subscribed, mainly via the library
All academic institutions in China via NSTL (National Science and
Technology Library)
Large consortium subscriptions being pursued for other countries
Thanks, not the usual research talk. Rather than research into a biological question, this can be thought of as research into how long term archives of biological knowledge can be maintained. I’m working to make sure the results of your work will be available 50 or 100 years from now. In a way this is part of your legacy, what will persist after all of us are gone. Phoenix not only overcomes adversity but also lives forever.
----- Meeting Notes (7/23/14 14:30) -----
Imprtance of TAIR
What is the source of this type of information? 1) Research articles
and 2) large datasets that have been analyzed and interpreted
You have to have the information in a consistent computable format before you do these other things…
This part of what we do is not very visible but it is the most important.
Data flows from TAIR to other databases
AIP: no literature curation
Sun – solar array – battery - socket
Have shown what we do and why it’s important. What is the best way to support this important role for the long term?
Other (SwissProt, KEGG)
----- Meeting Notes (7/23/14 14:30) -----
usage level rather than quality of service, does not necessarily reflect community needs
Add boc around nonprofit option
Maintenance rather than efficiency
Policy decision no support of curation
Other (SwissProt, KEGG)
----- Meeting Notes (7/23/14 14:30) -----
usage level rather than quality of service, does not necessarily reflect community needs
Add boc around nonprofit option
Maintenance rather than efficiency
Policy decision no support of curation
New institutional home
Mission and vision, overview of what it means to be a nonprofit (controlled by a board, resources only go to other nonprofits)
----- Meeting Notes (7/23/14 14:53) -----
Add director photos
Mission and vision, overview of what it means to be a nonprofit (controlled by a board, resources only go to other nonprofits)
----- Meeting Notes (7/23/14 14:53) -----
Add director photos
----- Meeting Notes (7/23/14 14:30) -----
Imprtance of TAIR
Ways to mitigate loss of access
Ways to mitigate inhibition of data sharing
-principle: widest availability possible while supporting the work
- how we came up with price structure
institution size not workable
had good usage statistics
- why metered paywall and how it will work
First goal – make the price within reach of most people
----- Meeting Notes (7/23/14 14:53) -----
remove company names
Replace with or add slide of institutional subscribers (poster graphic)