Talk on PhD-Day 2016, September 16th 2016
Together with an overview of the worldwide ranking of universities, plus an insight in the “battle” for the researcher, you will get 30+ tips on how to possibly improve your research impact.
The tips will involve practical actions to be taken before ánd after publishing your research. Scientific communication does not stop áfter publishing your research paper. Many strategies can be used to draw attention to your research, to try and improve the reach, and possibly even, the impact of it long-term. Innovations in scholarly communications, like the use of alternative (web)tools, are changing the research environment. It needs an open and more pro-active role of the researcher.
The use of research profiles, author identifiers, open access & data, social media and altmetrics, are just a few topics that will be addressed in this talk.
30+ Tips how to improve your research impact : (presentation Scientific Writing course GSMS 2017)
Together with an overview of the worldwide ranking of universities, plus an insight in the “battle” for the researcher, you will get 30+ tips on how to possibly improve your research impact.
The tips will involve practical actions to be taken before ánd after publishing your research.
Scientific communication does not stop áfter publishing your research paper. Many strategies can be used to draw attention to your research, to try and improve the reach, and possibly even, the impact of it longterm. Innovations in scholarly communications, like the use of alternative (web)tools, are changing the research environment. It needs an open and more pro-active role of the researcher.
The use of research profiles, author identifiers, open access & data, social media and altmetrics, are just a few topics that will be addressed in this talk.
Keeping up to date & comparing journal apps. the stockholm workshop 2016Guus van den Brekel
Workshop 1: Comparing journal apps and Keeping up to date
Beskrivning: The aim of this workshop is an extensive update of the numerous possibilities for librarians and medical professionals to keep up to date about medical scientific publications and news. The latest developments of content aggregation and curation offer opportunities for librarians to not just keep up to date, but also to share and publish the acquired knowledge among colleagues and patrons.
After this workshop, participants will be able to keep up to date more efficiently and have a broad knowledge of a wide range of tools for advising patrons. Supporting and facilitating medical professionals in education, patient-care and research is the main focus for medical and health librarians. We constantly have to attempt to make their workflow more efficient and easier. To be able to advise patrons about efficient ways of keeping up to date, we have to know ourselves what tools are out there. Because if we do not advise them, they will (have to) find out themselves, with a risk of missing out on relevant resources or possibilities. No one tool fits all. It is all about knowing in detail what a patron wants and match it with tools that can facilitate that requirement most efficiently. And the options for them to choose from are almost limitless either for free or via commercial parties.
In this workshop we will go more into more detail on these possibilities. I will cover the scope of common practices and possibilities as completely as possible, showcased by various licensed and free web tools. Email alerts, Saved search, RSS and Readers, Table of Contents, Apps by Publishers and content providers will be discussed, but Journal Apps plus Web Media content aggregation and curation will take the main part of this course.
Inför workshoppen: No prior knowledge required. Bringing your own mobile device(s) will enhance the hands-on learning effect.
Workshopledare: Guus van den Brekel
Tid & lokal: 8.30 - 12.00 Strix, von Eulers väg 4 b
Antal deltagare: 30
30+ Tips how to improve your research impact : (presentation Kolff days 2016)
Together with an overview of the worldwide ranking of universities, plus an insight in the “battle” for the researcher, you will get 30+ tips on how to possibly improve your research impact.
The tips will involve practical actions to be taken before ánd after publishing your research.
Scientific communication does not stop áfter publishing your research paper. Many strategies can be used to draw attention to your research, to try and improve the reach, and possibly even, the impact of it longterm. Innovations in scholarly communications, like the use of alternative (web)tools, are changing the research environment. It needs an open and more pro-active role of the researcher.
The use of research profiles, author identifiers, open access & data, social media and altmetrics, are just a few topics that will be addressed in this talk.
Championing open science as an early career researcherJonathan Tennant
Presentation given at the Conference on Open Science in the European Research Area, Ljubljana, Slovania, November 2016. https://www.uni-lj.si/research_and_development/open_science/
I am not an expert, but UCSF asked me to spout wisdom on Twitter, especially for the health, research, and academic community, so here's a slide deck I presented on September 10, 2019.
30+ Tips how to improve your research impact : (presentation Scientific Writing course GSMS 2017)
Together with an overview of the worldwide ranking of universities, plus an insight in the “battle” for the researcher, you will get 30+ tips on how to possibly improve your research impact.
The tips will involve practical actions to be taken before ánd after publishing your research.
Scientific communication does not stop áfter publishing your research paper. Many strategies can be used to draw attention to your research, to try and improve the reach, and possibly even, the impact of it longterm. Innovations in scholarly communications, like the use of alternative (web)tools, are changing the research environment. It needs an open and more pro-active role of the researcher.
The use of research profiles, author identifiers, open access & data, social media and altmetrics, are just a few topics that will be addressed in this talk.
Keeping up to date & comparing journal apps. the stockholm workshop 2016Guus van den Brekel
Workshop 1: Comparing journal apps and Keeping up to date
Beskrivning: The aim of this workshop is an extensive update of the numerous possibilities for librarians and medical professionals to keep up to date about medical scientific publications and news. The latest developments of content aggregation and curation offer opportunities for librarians to not just keep up to date, but also to share and publish the acquired knowledge among colleagues and patrons.
After this workshop, participants will be able to keep up to date more efficiently and have a broad knowledge of a wide range of tools for advising patrons. Supporting and facilitating medical professionals in education, patient-care and research is the main focus for medical and health librarians. We constantly have to attempt to make their workflow more efficient and easier. To be able to advise patrons about efficient ways of keeping up to date, we have to know ourselves what tools are out there. Because if we do not advise them, they will (have to) find out themselves, with a risk of missing out on relevant resources or possibilities. No one tool fits all. It is all about knowing in detail what a patron wants and match it with tools that can facilitate that requirement most efficiently. And the options for them to choose from are almost limitless either for free or via commercial parties.
In this workshop we will go more into more detail on these possibilities. I will cover the scope of common practices and possibilities as completely as possible, showcased by various licensed and free web tools. Email alerts, Saved search, RSS and Readers, Table of Contents, Apps by Publishers and content providers will be discussed, but Journal Apps plus Web Media content aggregation and curation will take the main part of this course.
Inför workshoppen: No prior knowledge required. Bringing your own mobile device(s) will enhance the hands-on learning effect.
Workshopledare: Guus van den Brekel
Tid & lokal: 8.30 - 12.00 Strix, von Eulers väg 4 b
Antal deltagare: 30
30+ Tips how to improve your research impact : (presentation Kolff days 2016)
Together with an overview of the worldwide ranking of universities, plus an insight in the “battle” for the researcher, you will get 30+ tips on how to possibly improve your research impact.
The tips will involve practical actions to be taken before ánd after publishing your research.
Scientific communication does not stop áfter publishing your research paper. Many strategies can be used to draw attention to your research, to try and improve the reach, and possibly even, the impact of it longterm. Innovations in scholarly communications, like the use of alternative (web)tools, are changing the research environment. It needs an open and more pro-active role of the researcher.
The use of research profiles, author identifiers, open access & data, social media and altmetrics, are just a few topics that will be addressed in this talk.
Championing open science as an early career researcherJonathan Tennant
Presentation given at the Conference on Open Science in the European Research Area, Ljubljana, Slovania, November 2016. https://www.uni-lj.si/research_and_development/open_science/
I am not an expert, but UCSF asked me to spout wisdom on Twitter, especially for the health, research, and academic community, so here's a slide deck I presented on September 10, 2019.
Presentation given at the ISMTE European meeting in Brussels, November 2016. The theme is Open Communication in scholarly publishing. More details here: http://www.ismte.org/page/2016EuroConference
Workshop designed for graduate students as an introduction to Academic Twitter as a means to increase the visibility of your work, share your work with the general public and connect with like-minded scientists. Designed by Isabelle Simard for the Academic Skills Club at the University of Ontario Institute of Technology (UOIT).
Publishing your research: Open Access (introduction & overview)Jamie Bisset
Open Access: what is it and what do I need to do? (November 2013) slides. Delivered as part of the Durham University Researcher Development Programme. Further Training available at https://www.dur.ac.uk/library/research/training/
Internationalising your research without going abroadJaviera Atenas
Internationalising your research without going abroad: Opening your research to the world
Dutch Graduate School of Philosophy (OZSW),:
PhD seminar May 24, 2013 at the Erasmus University
Presentation given at the ISMTE European meeting in Brussels, November 2016. The theme is Open Communication in scholarly publishing. More details here: http://www.ismte.org/page/2016EuroConference
Workshop designed for graduate students as an introduction to Academic Twitter as a means to increase the visibility of your work, share your work with the general public and connect with like-minded scientists. Designed by Isabelle Simard for the Academic Skills Club at the University of Ontario Institute of Technology (UOIT).
Publishing your research: Open Access (introduction & overview)Jamie Bisset
Open Access: what is it and what do I need to do? (November 2013) slides. Delivered as part of the Durham University Researcher Development Programme. Further Training available at https://www.dur.ac.uk/library/research/training/
Internationalising your research without going abroadJaviera Atenas
Internationalising your research without going abroad: Opening your research to the world
Dutch Graduate School of Philosophy (OZSW),:
PhD seminar May 24, 2013 at the Erasmus University
What is ‘research impact’ in an interconnected world?Danny Kingsley
This talk looks at what researchers need to do to ensure their research is widely disseminated and reaches the largest audience possible. In summary: Publishing a paper is the beginning not the end; Making work open access does not mean it is accessible; Writing in plain language is translating, not dumbing it down; Sharing work involves peer networks and publishing platforms and If you don't take control of your online presence someone/something else will. The presentation was originally given as part of the Cambridge University Alumni Festival on 27 September 2015.
Want to know how to maximize your academic potential via social media? See the full blog series to accompany these slides here -> https://healthystaff4healthypatients.wordpress.com/
O SIBiUSP em parceria com a American Journal Experts - AJE (empresa especializada em ajudar pesquisadores à eliminar as barreiras linguísticas e ter seu trabalho publicado nas revistas de mais alto impacto) traz para a comunidade científica de São Paulo o "Workshop de Publicação Científica - AJE", apresentado pela Gerente de Parcerias Estratégicas do Square Research, Amy Beisel.
Maximising your communication impact – making altmetrics workssCiarán Quinn
Presented as part of 3U INNOVEDIATE is an advanced summer programme that provides PhD students and postdoctoral researchers with skills and techniques to enable them to negotiate this media-intense world and to become effective communicators of their research and interests. http://3u.ie/3u-innovediate/
This is a presentation that I gave during a UK tour in Sept/Oct 2014 at a number of UK universities
Many of us nowadays invest significant amounts of time in sharing our activities and opinions with friends and family via social networking tools. However, despite the availability of many platforms for scientists to connect and share with their peers in the scientific community the majority do not make use of these tools, despite their promise and potential impact and influence on our future careers. We are being indexed and exposed on the internet via our publications, presentations and data. We also have many more ways to contribute to science, to annotate and curate data, to “publish” in new ways, and many of these activities are as part of a growing crowdsourcing network. This presentation will provide an overview of the various types of networking and collaborative sites available to scientists and ways to expose your scientific activities online. Many of these can ultimately contribute to the developing measures of you as a scientist as identified in the new world of alternative metrics. Participating offers a great opportunity to develop a scientific profile within the community and may ultimately be very beneficial, especially to scientists early in their career.
Publication Strategy: Helping Academics to Increase the Impact of their Res...Fintan Bracken
This presentation was given at the CONUL / ANLTC Seminar "Supporting the activities of your research community – issues and initiatives" Royal Irish Academy, Dublin in December 2014.The talk looked at methods of helping researchers to improve the impact of their research.
What do you want from your online presence? Do you want increased citations, to foster a network of scholars, to get more famous? Developing an online identity or persona is not something you can do overnight. It takes, time, commitment, and consistency, but the rewards can be well worth it.
A presentation to early-career health services researchers about working with institutional communicators, interacting with the media, and using social media to advance their professional careers.
Workshop “Hoe kom ik nu aan de full-text?”
Dankzij het hybride werken is lang niet iedereen elke dag meer te vinden “on campus”, maar ook voor mensen thuis moet de toegang tot wetenschappelijke informatie en bibliotheekdiensten goed geregeld zijn. De bibliotheek heeft hierin een taak om bronnen zo bereikbaar mogelijk te houden, waar onze gebruikers ook werken. Daarnaast is de opkomst van open access publiceren de laatste jaren ook in een stroomversnelling geraakt. Dat een groot deel van het wetenschappelijk werk nu open access beschikbaar is, is natuurlijk erg mooi, maar de open access-artikelen zijn her en der verspreid over het web. Wat is de meest efficiënte manier om deze publicaties te vinden?
Ook niet onbelangrijk is dat toegang tot tijdschriften erg prijzig is en veel instituten hebben niet de middelen om een licentie op alle bronnen te nemen. Vooral organisaties buiten de academische wereld worstelen met toegang tot onderzoek. Bovendien moeten de organisaties met toegang de vraag stellen, wat zullen we doen als we plotseling de toegang tot een reeks tijdschriften verliezen om het abonnement is geannuleerd? Als de bibliotheek een artikel niet kan leveren, dan weten we dat onze gebruikers andere manieren zullen gebruiken om de pdf te krijgen. Echter, deze andere manieren bespreken we bijna nooit. Hoeveel verschillende manieren zijn er precies? Hoe werken ze?
Deelnemers van de workshop leren over alle mogelijke manieren, hulpmiddelen en krijgen tips om de full-tekst te vinden van wetenschappelijke publicaties. We bespreken “best practices” van bibliotheek-tools en diensten (Linkresolvers, Discovery, LeanLibrary, LibX, Apps, etc.) en testen we vooral alle alternatieve tools zoals EndNote Click (voorheen Kopernio), Unpaywall, CORE Discovery, OpenAccess-Button, LibKey Nomad, Google Scholar-Button en andere extensies of bookmarklets.
De tools die we willen laten zien zijn maar beperkt beschikbaar op smartphones of tablets. Neem daarom als het kan een laptop mee waarop in Edge, Chrome of FireFox extensies geïnstalleerd mogen worden.
The Trail of the Data : Why the library should be the central pivot bringing ...Guus van den Brekel
The purpose of this talk is to explain, emphasize and discuss the growing importance of being abled to identify, track, record and analyse all research related data inside ánd outside the academic hospital environment. The goal is to aim for better insight of the data trail, contributing to research integrity, research impact and societal relevance. The medical library plays a crucial role as partner in collaboration with key stakeholders inside the hospital, and within the university research community. Because of it's unique wide and overall perspective, it has the opportunity to see new possibilities and needs to grasp these new tasks and set new relationships with partners that were previously out of scope.
Background:
The use and development of various research- or healthcare-related datasystems is growing exponentially over the last years. Technical innovations make it possible to much more easily either integrate data systems or create live interacton and data-exchange with sources inside and outside the University Medical Center Groningen (UMCG). The medical library is trying to pro-actively initiate more awareness, discussion, procedures plus guidelines.
Summary and activities:
From the perspective of the medical library in it's role of managing and facilitating the current research information systems (CRIS, in our case “Pure”), combined with the growing expertise in research analytics and impact, we clearly see the urgency of bringing together healthcare data-systems in the hospital with other research-related systems. This is needed in order to be able to comply to research integrity, legal and ethical requirements, but also to enable better use of the research data for analytical purposes to support various processes in academic career development and research assessment.
Identifying relations between research output and healthcare data is one thing, but actually creating and registering these relationships in the research information systems is a task where the library can take a leading role.
In the UMCG it is mandatory to register each scientific project in which (new or existing) data and/or biomaterials of human subjects (patients and/or healthy volunteers) are involved. The library has been involved –together with many other stakeholders- in the development of this internal "Research Register" and the UMCG data catalogue, with the main focus to make integration possible with Pure for research output and authors.
In order to improve visibility and findability in general, the library advised in creating publishing guidelines for several UMCG affiliations including the Cohort and Biobank Coordination Hub (with 150+ UMCG Cohorts & Biobanks) with focus on making relations and connection possible between the data systems, research output and other research-related items.
The library is co-admin for the UMCG for all clinical trials registered at ClinicalTrials.gov. Together with Research Office we are working on research
Into The User Environment 2022! EAHIL2022 plenary presentationGuus van den Brekel
“ Into the User Environment Now!» was the title of my first plenary presentation at an EAHIL conference.
It pictured how -back in 2006- how users and the information landscape changed rapidly, and what we needed to do about it as medical libraries, to keep up the pace, to not loose the connection with the user.
Technologies to embrace, actions to take…
This update pictures where things went right, wrong or very different! And it discusses where we are now in 2022, with a peek into possible futures, from the perspective of a medical library in a Dutch academic hospital, facilitating patient care, education ánd research support.
Biography and Bibliography
Guus van den Brekel is medical information specialist at the Central Medical Library of the University Medical Center Groningen (UMCG), in north of the Netherlands. His work includes developing, maintaining of library services and tools for staff and students, as well as innovation. As such he is also the ‘go-between’ for the IT-departments regarding library systems and services. Research Impact and Support is his major focus currently. He is coordinator for the UMCG’s current research information system (PURE). In general, he is always on the lookout for tools & services that make the workflow of hospital staff, researchers, teachers and students easier and more efficient. #eahil2022
Workshop “Hoe kom ik nu aan de full-text? – Actueler dan ooit, met het huidig...Guus van den Brekel
VOGIN-IP Workshop 2022
Thuiswerken en off-campus toegang tot wetenschappelijk informatie en bibliotheekdiensten is crucialer dan ooit door Corona. Daarnaast is toegang tot tijdschriften erg prijzig en veel instituten hebben niet de middelen om een licentie op alles te nemen. Vooral organisaties buiten de academische wereld worstelen met toegang tot onderzoek. Bovendien moeten de organisaties met toegang de vraag stellen, wat zullen we doen als we plotseling de toegang tot een reeks tijdschriften verliezen omdat het abonnement is geannuleerd? Als de bibliotheek een artikel niet kan leveren, weten we dat onze gebruikers andere manieren zullen gebruiken om de pdf te krijgen. Echter, deze andere manieren bespreken we bijna nooit. Hoeveel verschillende manieren zijn er precies? Hoe werken ze? Hoe kan ik het groeiende aantal open access-artikelen -die her en der verspreid zijn over het web- op de meest efficiënte manier vinden?
Deelnemers aan de workshop leren over alle mogelijke manieren en hulpmiddelen en krijgen tips om de full-tekst te vinden van wetenschappelijke publicaties. We bespreken “best practices” van bibliotheek-tools en diensten (Linkresolvers, Discovery, LeanLibrary, LibX, Apps, etc.) en testen vooral alle alternatieve tools zoals EndNote Click (voorheen Kopernio), Unpaywall, CORE Discovery, OpenAccess-Button, LibKey Nomad, Google Scholar-Button en andere extensies of bookmarklets.
Breng laptops, smartphones en/of tablets mee en zorg dat in ieder geval Chrome, Edge en/of Firefox beschikbaar is.
VOGIN IP 2021 Workshop “Hoe kom ik nu aan de full-text? – Actueler dan ooit, ...Guus van den Brekel
Thuiswerken en off-campus toegang tot wetenschappelijk informatie en bibliotheekdiensten is crucialer dan ooit door Corona. Daarnaast is toegang tot tijdschriften erg prijzig en veel instituten hebben niet de middelen om een licentie op alles te nemen. Vooral organisaties buiten de academische wereld worstelen met toegang tot onderzoek. Bovendien moeten de organisaties met toegang de vraag stellen, wat zullen we doen als we plotseling de toegang tot een reeks tijdschriften verliezen omdat het abonnement is geannuleerd? Als de bibliotheek een artikel niet kan leveren, weten we dat onze gebruikers andere manieren zullen gebruiken om de pdf te krijgen. Echter, deze andere manieren bespreken we bijna nooit. Hoeveel verschillende manieren zijn er precies? Hoe werken ze? Hoe kan ik het groeiende aantal open access-artikelen -die her en der verspreid zijn over het web- op de meest efficiënte manier vinden?
Deelnemers aan de workshop leren over alle mogelijke manieren en hulpmiddelen en krijgen tips om de full-tekst te vinden van wetenschappelijke publicaties. We bespreken “best practices” van bibliotheek-tools en diensten (Linkresolvers, Discovery, LeanLibrary, LibX, Apps, etc.) en testen vooral alle alternatieve tools zoals EndNote Click (voorheen Kopernio), Unpaywall, CORE Discovery, OpenAccess-Button, LibKey Nomad, Google Scholar-Button en andere extensies of bookmarklets.
ALLE MANIEREN OM DE FULL-TEXT TE VINDEN VAN WETENSCHAPPELIJKE ARTIKELEN
(MÉT OF ZÓNDER HULP VAN EEN BIBLIOTHEEK! )
Het bespreken van alternatieve manieren om aan een pdf te komen van een wetenschappelijk artikel
buiten de goed-bedoelde diensten van de bibliotheek om, is een mooi voorbeeld van de
spreekwoordelijke “olifant in de kamer”! We wéten dat onze gebruikers andere opties gebruiken als wij (de
bibliotheek) ze de gewenste artikelen niet kunnen leveren, maar dat laten we eigenlijk vaak onbesproken.
Hoeveel manieren zijn er nu eigenlijk en hoe werken ze? En welke tools bieden we als bibiotheek onze
klanten nu aan?
google doc: bit.ly/FULL-TEXT Guus van den Brekel & Robin Ottjes, CMB UMCG 21 maart 2019
How to get the pdf? : with ór without the help of your libraryGuus van den Brekel
Presentation at UiT Library, October 15th 2018
All possible ways, tools and tips for users to find the full-text of scientific publications, including an overview of (licensed) access tools used by libraries worldwide.
Tools included (but not limited to): LeanLibrary, Kopernio, Open Access Button, AnywhereAccess, KeyLib, Easyproxy, Unpaywall, Google Scholar button
Alternative OA databases: Dimensions, 1Findr, BASE, CORE, DOAJ, OpenDOAR, OSF Preprints, Zenodo, BioRxiv etc.
The University Library and the Central Medical Library are testing a new tool: Lean Library. You can install this tool in your browser. It provides quick and easy access to databases, e-journals and ebooks, and to articles in open access. The library in your browser...! You can download this browser extension for off-campus library access for free (not yet available for mobile devices).
Slides: https://lnkd.in/gTKY9qQ
Info: https://lnkd.in/gW6tdsM
download: https://lnkd.in/eGHkNwq
How to get the PDF-file inside and outside the collection of the library
ALL OPTIONS
(Download the PDF to make use of the clickable LINKS and IMAGES in the Infographic!)
ALLE MANIEREN OM DE FULL-TEXT TE VINDEN VAN WETENSCHAPPELIJKE ARTIKELEN
(MÉT OF ZÓNDER HULP VAN EEN BIBLIOTHEEK! )
Het bespreken van alternatieve manieren om aan een PDF te komen van een wetenschappelijk artikel buiten de talrijke diensten van de bibliotheek om, is een mooi voorbeeld van de spreekwoordelijke “olifant in de kamer”! We wéten dat onze gebruikers andere opties gebruiken, als wij (de bibliotheek) ze de gewenste artikelen niet kunnen leveren via de bibliotheeksystemen of -tools, maar dat laten we eigenlijk vaak onbesproken. Hoeveel manieren zijn er nu eigenlijk en hoe werken ze?
In deze workshop bespreken we “best practices” van bibliotheek-tools en diensten (Linkresolvers, Discovery, LeanLibrary, LibX, Apps, etc.) en testen we vooral alle alternatieve tools zoals Kopernio, Unpaywall, OpenAccess-Button, Scholar-Button en andere extenties of bookmarklets.
Breng laptops, smartphones en/of tablets mee en zorg dat in ieder geval Chrome en/of Firefox beschikbaar is.
ALLE MANIEREN OM DE FULL-TEKST TE VINDEN VAN WETENSCHAPPELIJKE ARTIKELEN (MET OF ZONDER HULP VAN DE BIBLIOTHEEK…)
KNVI 2017 congres Track 3.3
#knvi, #knvi17, #knvi2017, cmbumcg, kopernio, leanlibrary, oa_button, openaccess, pdf, scholar button, umcg, unpaywall
Visibility and societal impact : UMCG research output, Altmetric and PureGuus van den Brekel
Pilot project on Altmetrics in UMCG, by Central Medical Library, UMCG. Presentation at Seminar Altmetrics for research evaluation… or not?
Date: 16 NOV 2016
Wednesday November 16th 2016, experts in altmetrics will gather to discuss about this topic and how altmetrics can support Open Science. Several providers with different kind of altmetric tools will provide practical solutions and present use cases.
https://www.surf.nl/en/agenda/2016/11/seminar-altmetrics-for-research-evaluation...-or-not/index.html
We want to:
explore the benefits of implementing altmetric data in the hospital,
map all stakeholders and interested parties
increase awareness of additional methods of measuring impact tools,
Increase awareness of tools to influence visibility of the umcg research & it's output
discuss current use of bibliometrics in evaluations including the growing interest in measuring/visualising the "societal impact" of scientific research.
Social Media, Keeping up to date, Pure and more : The Leiden talkGuus van den Brekel
Talk for a group of colleagues of Walaeus Library of the Leiden University Medical Center and others.
November 5th 2015 14:30-17:00
PIctures: https://www.facebook.com/digicmb/media_set?set=a.10156217814035603.1073741882.868270602
Earliest Galaxies in the JADES Origins Field: Luminosity Function and Cosmic ...Sérgio Sacani
We characterize the earliest galaxy population in the JADES Origins Field (JOF), the deepest
imaging field observed with JWST. We make use of the ancillary Hubble optical images (5 filters
spanning 0.4−0.9µm) and novel JWST images with 14 filters spanning 0.8−5µm, including 7 mediumband filters, and reaching total exposure times of up to 46 hours per filter. We combine all our data
at > 2.3µm to construct an ultradeep image, reaching as deep as ≈ 31.4 AB mag in the stack and
30.3-31.0 AB mag (5σ, r = 0.1” circular aperture) in individual filters. We measure photometric
redshifts and use robust selection criteria to identify a sample of eight galaxy candidates at redshifts
z = 11.5 − 15. These objects show compact half-light radii of R1/2 ∼ 50 − 200pc, stellar masses of
M⋆ ∼ 107−108M⊙, and star-formation rates of SFR ∼ 0.1−1 M⊙ yr−1
. Our search finds no candidates
at 15 < z < 20, placing upper limits at these redshifts. We develop a forward modeling approach to
infer the properties of the evolving luminosity function without binning in redshift or luminosity that
marginalizes over the photometric redshift uncertainty of our candidate galaxies and incorporates the
impact of non-detections. We find a z = 12 luminosity function in good agreement with prior results,
and that the luminosity function normalization and UV luminosity density decline by a factor of ∼ 2.5
from z = 12 to z = 14. We discuss the possible implications of our results in the context of theoretical
models for evolution of the dark matter halo mass function.
Richard's aventures in two entangled wonderlandsRichard Gill
Since the loophole-free Bell experiments of 2020 and the Nobel prizes in physics of 2022, critics of Bell's work have retreated to the fortress of super-determinism. Now, super-determinism is a derogatory word - it just means "determinism". Palmer, Hance and Hossenfelder argue that quantum mechanics and determinism are not incompatible, using a sophisticated mathematical construction based on a subtle thinning of allowed states and measurements in quantum mechanics, such that what is left appears to make Bell's argument fail, without altering the empirical predictions of quantum mechanics. I think however that it is a smoke screen, and the slogan "lost in math" comes to my mind. I will discuss some other recent disproofs of Bell's theorem using the language of causality based on causal graphs. Causal thinking is also central to law and justice. I will mention surprising connections to my work on serial killer nurse cases, in particular the Dutch case of Lucia de Berk and the current UK case of Lucy Letby.
Comparing Evolved Extractive Text Summary Scores of Bidirectional Encoder Rep...University of Maribor
Slides from:
11th International Conference on Electrical, Electronics and Computer Engineering (IcETRAN), Niš, 3-6 June 2024
Track: Artificial Intelligence
https://www.etran.rs/2024/en/home-english/
Cancer cell metabolism: special Reference to Lactate PathwayAADYARAJPANDEY1
Normal Cell Metabolism:
Cellular respiration describes the series of steps that cells use to break down sugar and other chemicals to get the energy we need to function.
Energy is stored in the bonds of glucose and when glucose is broken down, much of that energy is released.
Cell utilize energy in the form of ATP.
The first step of respiration is called glycolysis. In a series of steps, glycolysis breaks glucose into two smaller molecules - a chemical called pyruvate. A small amount of ATP is formed during this process.
Most healthy cells continue the breakdown in a second process, called the Kreb's cycle. The Kreb's cycle allows cells to “burn” the pyruvates made in glycolysis to get more ATP.
The last step in the breakdown of glucose is called oxidative phosphorylation (Ox-Phos).
It takes place in specialized cell structures called mitochondria. This process produces a large amount of ATP. Importantly, cells need oxygen to complete oxidative phosphorylation.
If a cell completes only glycolysis, only 2 molecules of ATP are made per glucose. However, if the cell completes the entire respiration process (glycolysis - Kreb's - oxidative phosphorylation), about 36 molecules of ATP are created, giving it much more energy to use.
IN CANCER CELL:
Unlike healthy cells that "burn" the entire molecule of sugar to capture a large amount of energy as ATP, cancer cells are wasteful.
Cancer cells only partially break down sugar molecules. They overuse the first step of respiration, glycolysis. They frequently do not complete the second step, oxidative phosphorylation.
This results in only 2 molecules of ATP per each glucose molecule instead of the 36 or so ATPs healthy cells gain. As a result, cancer cells need to use a lot more sugar molecules to get enough energy to survive.
Unlike healthy cells that "burn" the entire molecule of sugar to capture a large amount of energy as ATP, cancer cells are wasteful.
Cancer cells only partially break down sugar molecules. They overuse the first step of respiration, glycolysis. They frequently do not complete the second step, oxidative phosphorylation.
This results in only 2 molecules of ATP per each glucose molecule instead of the 36 or so ATPs healthy cells gain. As a result, cancer cells need to use a lot more sugar molecules to get enough energy to survive.
introduction to WARBERG PHENOMENA:
WARBURG EFFECT Usually, cancer cells are highly glycolytic (glucose addiction) and take up more glucose than do normal cells from outside.
Otto Heinrich Warburg (; 8 October 1883 – 1 August 1970) In 1931 was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physiology for his "discovery of the nature and mode of action of the respiratory enzyme.
WARNBURG EFFECT : cancer cells under aerobic (well-oxygenated) conditions to metabolize glucose to lactate (aerobic glycolysis) is known as the Warburg effect. Warburg made the observation that tumor slices consume glucose and secrete lactate at a higher rate than normal tissues.
Observation of Io’s Resurfacing via Plume Deposition Using Ground-based Adapt...Sérgio Sacani
Since volcanic activity was first discovered on Io from Voyager images in 1979, changes
on Io’s surface have been monitored from both spacecraft and ground-based telescopes.
Here, we present the highest spatial resolution images of Io ever obtained from a groundbased telescope. These images, acquired by the SHARK-VIS instrument on the Large
Binocular Telescope, show evidence of a major resurfacing event on Io’s trailing hemisphere. When compared to the most recent spacecraft images, the SHARK-VIS images
show that a plume deposit from a powerful eruption at Pillan Patera has covered part
of the long-lived Pele plume deposit. Although this type of resurfacing event may be common on Io, few have been detected due to the rarity of spacecraft visits and the previously low spatial resolution available from Earth-based telescopes. The SHARK-VIS instrument ushers in a new era of high resolution imaging of Io’s surface using adaptive
optics at visible wavelengths.
THE IMPORTANCE OF MARTIAN ATMOSPHERE SAMPLE RETURN.Sérgio Sacani
The return of a sample of near-surface atmosphere from Mars would facilitate answers to several first-order science questions surrounding the formation and evolution of the planet. One of the important aspects of terrestrial planet formation in general is the role that primary atmospheres played in influencing the chemistry and structure of the planets and their antecedents. Studies of the martian atmosphere can be used to investigate the role of a primary atmosphere in its history. Atmosphere samples would also inform our understanding of the near-surface chemistry of the planet, and ultimately the prospects for life. High-precision isotopic analyses of constituent gases are needed to address these questions, requiring that the analyses are made on returned samples rather than in situ.
Nutraceutical market, scope and growth: Herbal drug technologyLokesh Patil
As consumer awareness of health and wellness rises, the nutraceutical market—which includes goods like functional meals, drinks, and dietary supplements that provide health advantages beyond basic nutrition—is growing significantly. As healthcare expenses rise, the population ages, and people want natural and preventative health solutions more and more, this industry is increasing quickly. Further driving market expansion are product formulation innovations and the use of cutting-edge technology for customized nutrition. With its worldwide reach, the nutraceutical industry is expected to keep growing and provide significant chances for research and investment in a number of categories, including vitamins, minerals, probiotics, and herbal supplements.
Professional air quality monitoring systems provide immediate, on-site data for analysis, compliance, and decision-making.
Monitor common gases, weather parameters, particulates.
3. PROMOTEFORIMPACT!
H O W T O I M P R O V E Y O U R R E S E A R C H I M P A C T : 3 0 + T I P S
Guus van den Brekel
Central Medical Library,
University Medical Center
Groningen
PhD Day 2016
September 16th
4. W H Y ?
• Performance funding policy
UMCG
• The "Worldwide Race on
Ranking of Universities"
• The "Universal Battle for the
Researchers" (and their
citations)
5. H O W T O I M P R O V E Y O U R R E S E A R C H C I T A T I O N S : 3 0 + T I P S
• BEFORE Publishing
• AFTER Publishing
6. B E F O R E P U B L I S H I N G ( W H I L E
W R I T I N G )
• WHAT to INCLUDE in article?
• WHAT to publish
• WHERE to publish
• HOW to publish
• WHO to publish with
7. WHAT to INCLUDE in article
• Use unique name ( if possible), and consistently throughout your career
• Use the standardized institutional affiliation, using no abbreviations ( "University of
Groningen, University Medical Center Groningen")
• Repeat key phrases in the abstract while writing naturally
• Assign keywords to the manuscript ( MESH, Web of Science ...)
• Use more references
• Publish a longer paper
• Papers with a larger number of "callouts" are likely to get a higher number of citations
• Avoid using a question type of title
• Get an ORCID ID, connect it to PURE and use it consistantly in all articles
B E F O R E P U B L I S H I N G ( W H I L E W R I T I N G )
http://orcid.org http://pure.rug.nl/admin http://www.rug.nl/umcg/library
8. "Numbers are meaningless in
themselves; they are windows
into exploring article
reception"
Kathy Christian on #altmetrics:
#ISMTE2016
9. WHAT to publish
• Write a review paper
• Present a working paper ( before & after articles are
published)
B E F O R E P U B L I S H I N G ( W H I L E
W R I T I N G )
10. WHERE to publish
• Publish in a journal with high impact
• Publish across disciplines
• Publish in journals everyone in your discipline reads
• Publish in a journal that is included in many
abstracting & indexing services
B E F O R E P U B L I S H I N G ( W H I L E W R I T I N G )
Web of Science, Journal Citation Reports, InCites
http://www.rug.nl/umcg/library
11. HOW to publish
I N C R E A S E S C I T A T I O N R A T E S
B E F O R E P U B L I S H I N G ( W H I L E
W R I T I N G )
http://libguides.rug.nl/umcg/openaccess/home
http://libguides.rug.nl/researchers_guide
• The Open Access Citation Advantage Service
http://sparceurope.org/oaca/
12. WHO to publish with
• publish with international authors across multiple institutions
• Team-authored articles get cited more
• Publish papers with Nobel laureates ;-)
• Collaborate with corporate sector
B E F O R E P U B L I S H I N G ( W H I L E
W R I T I N G )
13. S C H O L A R L Y C O M M U N I C A T I O N
D O E S N O T S T O P A F T E R
P U B L I S H I N G Y O U R A R T I C L E
15. P R O F I L E
• Make a unique phrase that reflects your research interest & use
it throughout your career
• Keep your corporate & professional profile pages & publication
lists up to date
• Get an ORCID ID, connect it to PURE and use it consistantly in
all articles
• Use online CV option in PURE
• Use academic social networking sites ( ResearchGate,
Academia, Mendeley, Google Scholar, ImpactStory...
16. D I S S E M I N A T E
• Self-archive articles and research output
(PURE, post-print, pdf, open access repository)
• Share your research data ( open data)
• Publicize yourself ( link your latest articles to your
email signature)
17. P R O M O T E
• Start a blog ( Wordpress, Blogger are extremely good indexed in major
search engines
• Use Linkedin to promote
• Use SEO techniques on corporate & institute websites
• Contribute to Wikipedia
• Create a podcast, screencast or video and publish on YouTube, Vimeo
...
• Use Twitter & Other social media to share your findings
• Use DOI's in all communications
18. T R A C K A N D E N G A G E
• Set alerts on new citations
• Track "mentions" about your articles on the Web
(Altmetrics)
• Engage in discussions on the web and in
• Post publication peer review sites
20. P O S T P U B L I C A T I O N P E E R
R E V I E W
• Pubmed Commons http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmedcommons
• PubPeer https://pubpeer.com
• Frontiers http://www.frontiersin.org/SearchData.aspx?sq=Groningen&ht=1
• Open Review (ResearchGate)
https://www.researchgate.net/publicliterature.OpenReviewInfo.html
• publons.com https://publons.com/institution/5963/
21. 101 Innovations in Scholarly Communication
https://101innovations.wordpress.com
25. U S E D
S O U R C E S
• The Open Access Citation Advantage
Service http://sparceurope.org/oaca/
• Effective Strategies for Increasing Citation
Frequency by Nader Ale Ebrahim
http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/Papers.cfm?abstr
act_id=2344585
• https://library.leeds.ac.uk/researcher-citations
• 101 Innovations in scholary communications
:survey
• Elsevier "Effective strategies for increasing
citation"
http://dx.doi.org/10.5539/ies.v6n11p93
26. Researcher Guide startpage
profile
- Pure & MyUniversity
- ORCID & id's
- Scholar
-Rebelmouse Social Media Frontpage
journal & category choice, collaborations
open access
- Open Access Start page CMB
- JCR
-Web of Science
-InCites /Essential Science Indicators
Social Media
-Twitter
-Linkedin
-Rebelmouse
-Slideshare
-Figshare
-Mendeley
Keywords & categories
- MESH
- WoS/ JCR
- PubMed Reminer?
track citations
- Web of Science
-Scholar alerts
- Publish or Perish
Altmetrics
-lookup DOI's Kolff
- Bookmarklet
Post publication peer review
-Pubmed Commons
Blogging
-WordPress
101 innovations in scholarly communications
-workflow
-Dissemination
-Open Science & Data
W O R K S H O P
" P O W E R F U L T O O L S T O R A I S E Y O U R C I T A T I O N S "