Jean-Claude Bradley presents on "Open Notebook Science in Drug Discovery" at the Easing the Bottleneck in Drug Discovery Conference - Industry and Academia panel, on August 24, 2010 in Philadelphia.
Jean-Claude Bradley presented on "Open Notebook Science" at the Digital Science panel at the NSF IGERT meeting in Washington, D.C on May 24, 2010. This is an abbreviated version covering the need for more openness in scientific communication and some examples of how that can be done using wikis, Google Spreadsheets and other free hosted services.
Jean-Claude Bradley and Andrew Lang present on "Open Notebook Science for Research and Teaching" on February 18, 2010 at the National Institute for Technology in Liberal Education. A few examples of the use of ONS in chemistry are outlined followed by details of the Web2.0 tools implemented. The end of the presentation covers new work on how to archive Open Notebooks and all supporting documentation.
Jean-Claude Bradley presents on "The implications of Open Notebook Science and other new forms of scientific communication for Nanoinformatics" at the Nanoinformatics 2010 conference on November 3, 2010. The presentation first covers the use of the laboratory knowledge management system SMIRP for nanotechnology applications during the period of 1999-2001 at Drexel University. The exporting of single experiments from SMIRP and publication to the Chemistry Preprint Archive is then described followed by the evolution to Open Notebook Science in 2005. Abstraction of semantic structure from ONS projects in the areas of drug discovery and solubility is then detailed as an efficient mechanism to provide web services and machine readable data feeds.
Jean-Claude Bradley presents on "Open Education in Chemistry Research and Classroom" at the Philadelphia University of Sciences on January 11, 2011. The talk covers screencasting, wikis, chemical information validation, Open Notebook Science and smartphones.
Jean-Claude Bradley presents on "Technology and Students - Mix, Match or Miss?" at the Villanova Teaching and Learning Strategies Symposium on May 13, 2010. Topics covered include screencasting, wikis, games and Second Life, with a particular focus on student response to these technologies.
Jean-Claude Bradley presents on "Peer Review and Science2.0: blogs, wikis and social networking sites" as a guest lecturer for the “Peer Review Culture in Scholarly Publication and Grantmaking” course at Drexel University. The main thrust of the presentation is that peer review alone is not capable of coping with the increasing flood of scientific information being generated and shared. Arguments are made to show that providing sufficient proof for scientific findings does scale and weakens the tragedy of the trusted source cascade.
Jean-Claude Bradley presents an overview of Open Notebook Science at a Columbia panel on Open Science on February 19, 2009. The content of this presentation is targeted to a library services audience.
Jean-Claude Bradley's slides for the Science Online 2010 conference at RTP, NC on January 17, 2010. This session was run jointly with Steve Koch and Cameron Neylon.
Jean-Claude Bradley presented on "Open Notebook Science" at the Digital Science panel at the NSF IGERT meeting in Washington, D.C on May 24, 2010. This is an abbreviated version covering the need for more openness in scientific communication and some examples of how that can be done using wikis, Google Spreadsheets and other free hosted services.
Jean-Claude Bradley and Andrew Lang present on "Open Notebook Science for Research and Teaching" on February 18, 2010 at the National Institute for Technology in Liberal Education. A few examples of the use of ONS in chemistry are outlined followed by details of the Web2.0 tools implemented. The end of the presentation covers new work on how to archive Open Notebooks and all supporting documentation.
Jean-Claude Bradley presents on "The implications of Open Notebook Science and other new forms of scientific communication for Nanoinformatics" at the Nanoinformatics 2010 conference on November 3, 2010. The presentation first covers the use of the laboratory knowledge management system SMIRP for nanotechnology applications during the period of 1999-2001 at Drexel University. The exporting of single experiments from SMIRP and publication to the Chemistry Preprint Archive is then described followed by the evolution to Open Notebook Science in 2005. Abstraction of semantic structure from ONS projects in the areas of drug discovery and solubility is then detailed as an efficient mechanism to provide web services and machine readable data feeds.
Jean-Claude Bradley presents on "Open Education in Chemistry Research and Classroom" at the Philadelphia University of Sciences on January 11, 2011. The talk covers screencasting, wikis, chemical information validation, Open Notebook Science and smartphones.
Jean-Claude Bradley presents on "Technology and Students - Mix, Match or Miss?" at the Villanova Teaching and Learning Strategies Symposium on May 13, 2010. Topics covered include screencasting, wikis, games and Second Life, with a particular focus on student response to these technologies.
Jean-Claude Bradley presents on "Peer Review and Science2.0: blogs, wikis and social networking sites" as a guest lecturer for the “Peer Review Culture in Scholarly Publication and Grantmaking” course at Drexel University. The main thrust of the presentation is that peer review alone is not capable of coping with the increasing flood of scientific information being generated and shared. Arguments are made to show that providing sufficient proof for scientific findings does scale and weakens the tragedy of the trusted source cascade.
Jean-Claude Bradley presents an overview of Open Notebook Science at a Columbia panel on Open Science on February 19, 2009. The content of this presentation is targeted to a library services audience.
Jean-Claude Bradley's slides for the Science Online 2010 conference at RTP, NC on January 17, 2010. This session was run jointly with Steve Koch and Cameron Neylon.
Jean-Claude Bradley and Andrew Lang present to Columbia University on May 21, 2009 in an effort to explore what role libraries could play in archiving Open Notebook Science projects and other forms of digital scholarship.
Jean-Claude Bradley presents on The Role of Openness in Scientific Automation: a case for Open Notebook Science at the IJCAI'09 Workshop on Abductive and Inductive Knowledge Development in Pasadena, CA on July 12, 2009.
Jean-Claude Bradley presents at the American Chemical Society on August 16, 2009. The talk starts with highlighting how Open Notebook Science has been used to shed light on the recent report of using sodium hydride (NaH) as an oxidant. Next the Open Notebook Science Challenge is described, where ONS coupled to crowdsourcing is used to measure and share non-aqueous solubility data. Recent developments in using bots to contribute to the scientific process and applications to the Ugi reaction are mentioned.
This talk covers Open Notebook Science from an information technology perspective . Although solubility measurements and chemical reactions are mentioned the focus is more on how information is stored, retrieved and used using free and hosted services such as Blogger, GoogleDocs, Wikispaces, ChemSpider, CDD and others. The UsefulChem project and the Open Notebook Science Challenge are highlighted.
Jean-Claude Bradley presented on Open Notebook Science at the NIST Social Media Day on December 11, 2008. The talks starts with an overview of ONS and how it is being used to assess solubility measurements being crowdsourced in the ONS Challenge and Submeta Awards. The use of wikis, blogs, Google Spreadsheets, YouTube, Flickr, ChemSpider and other free hosted Web2.0 tools is highlighted. The UsefulChem project, involving the synthesis of anti-malarial agents, is then briefly covered. Finally, a very recent application of using Google Spreadsheets to automatically call web services to calculate volumes and weights of chemicals needed in reactions is demonstrated (code by Rajarshi Guha).
Jean-Claude Bradley presented at a panel on New Forms of Scholarly Communication in Science at the Special Libraries Association meeting on June 15, 2011. The talk covered the role of trust in science, with a focus on the validation of melting point data. Where the literature was unable to reconcile measurements, Open Notebook Science was used to clarify. The collection of an Open Dataset of melting point measurements for 20,000 compounds was described as well as ongoing curation efforts and corresponding web services. (collaborators Andrew Lang and Antony Williams)
Scott Edmunds talk at G3 (Great GigaScience & Galaxy) workshop: Open Data: th...GigaScience, BGI Hong Kong
Scott Edmunds talk at G3 (Great GigaScience & Galaxy) workshop: Open Data: the reproducibility crisis, and the need for transparency. Melbourne University 19th September 2014
Presented at Drexel University on Oct 10, 2008 in the chemistry department faculty mini-symposium. A quick summary of Open Notebook Science and its application to drug discovery.
Jean-Claude Bradley presents a 15 minute overview of the research in his laboratory as part of the Drexel Chemistry department Fall 09 MiniSymposium on October 1, 2009. The talk is entitled: The synthesis of anti-malarial compounds using the Ugi reaction and Collaboration using social software.
Jean-Claude Bradley presents on "Open Notebook Science for Malaria Drug Discovery and Solubility Modeling" in the Chemistry Department at Drexel University on September 30, 2010. This is a brief overview of the research going on in the Bradley laboratory.
Can machines understand the scientific literaturepetermurrayrust
With over 5000 scientific articles per day we need machines to help us understand the content. This material is to be used at an interactive session for the Science Society at Trinity College Cambridge UK
Asking the scientific literature to tell us about metabolismpetermurrayrust
Talk at Lhasa (https://www.lhasalimited.org/) a leading organization for "in silico prediction and database systems for use in metabolism, toxicology and related sciences". ContentMine software can extract data from papers on compound metabolism in reusable semantic form, including metabolic pathways, pharmacokinetic data.
Why study Data Sharing? (+ why share your data)Heather Piwowar
A presentation to the DBMI department at the University of Pittsburgh about data sharing and reuse: what this means, why it is important, some of what we’ve learned, and what we still don’t know.
Jean-Claude Bradley presents the first class of CHEM367/767 2010 Chemical Information Retrieval at Drexel University on September 23, 2010. The challenge of finding chemical information is highlighted. Tools and techniques, which will be covered over the course, pertaining Science1.0, Science2.0 and Science3.0 are introduced.
Jean-Claude Bradley presents a talk on Open Notebook Science at the Association of College and Research Libraries on Feb 17, 2009. This presentation includes all of the relevant work up to this date, including the Spectra Game, the ONS solubility challenge and the main data viewers developed by Andy Lang and Rajarshi Guha for the web and Second Life.
Jean-Claude Bradley and Andrew Lang present to Columbia University on May 21, 2009 in an effort to explore what role libraries could play in archiving Open Notebook Science projects and other forms of digital scholarship.
Jean-Claude Bradley presents on The Role of Openness in Scientific Automation: a case for Open Notebook Science at the IJCAI'09 Workshop on Abductive and Inductive Knowledge Development in Pasadena, CA on July 12, 2009.
Jean-Claude Bradley presents at the American Chemical Society on August 16, 2009. The talk starts with highlighting how Open Notebook Science has been used to shed light on the recent report of using sodium hydride (NaH) as an oxidant. Next the Open Notebook Science Challenge is described, where ONS coupled to crowdsourcing is used to measure and share non-aqueous solubility data. Recent developments in using bots to contribute to the scientific process and applications to the Ugi reaction are mentioned.
This talk covers Open Notebook Science from an information technology perspective . Although solubility measurements and chemical reactions are mentioned the focus is more on how information is stored, retrieved and used using free and hosted services such as Blogger, GoogleDocs, Wikispaces, ChemSpider, CDD and others. The UsefulChem project and the Open Notebook Science Challenge are highlighted.
Jean-Claude Bradley presented on Open Notebook Science at the NIST Social Media Day on December 11, 2008. The talks starts with an overview of ONS and how it is being used to assess solubility measurements being crowdsourced in the ONS Challenge and Submeta Awards. The use of wikis, blogs, Google Spreadsheets, YouTube, Flickr, ChemSpider and other free hosted Web2.0 tools is highlighted. The UsefulChem project, involving the synthesis of anti-malarial agents, is then briefly covered. Finally, a very recent application of using Google Spreadsheets to automatically call web services to calculate volumes and weights of chemicals needed in reactions is demonstrated (code by Rajarshi Guha).
Jean-Claude Bradley presented at a panel on New Forms of Scholarly Communication in Science at the Special Libraries Association meeting on June 15, 2011. The talk covered the role of trust in science, with a focus on the validation of melting point data. Where the literature was unable to reconcile measurements, Open Notebook Science was used to clarify. The collection of an Open Dataset of melting point measurements for 20,000 compounds was described as well as ongoing curation efforts and corresponding web services. (collaborators Andrew Lang and Antony Williams)
Scott Edmunds talk at G3 (Great GigaScience & Galaxy) workshop: Open Data: th...GigaScience, BGI Hong Kong
Scott Edmunds talk at G3 (Great GigaScience & Galaxy) workshop: Open Data: the reproducibility crisis, and the need for transparency. Melbourne University 19th September 2014
Presented at Drexel University on Oct 10, 2008 in the chemistry department faculty mini-symposium. A quick summary of Open Notebook Science and its application to drug discovery.
Jean-Claude Bradley presents a 15 minute overview of the research in his laboratory as part of the Drexel Chemistry department Fall 09 MiniSymposium on October 1, 2009. The talk is entitled: The synthesis of anti-malarial compounds using the Ugi reaction and Collaboration using social software.
Jean-Claude Bradley presents on "Open Notebook Science for Malaria Drug Discovery and Solubility Modeling" in the Chemistry Department at Drexel University on September 30, 2010. This is a brief overview of the research going on in the Bradley laboratory.
Can machines understand the scientific literaturepetermurrayrust
With over 5000 scientific articles per day we need machines to help us understand the content. This material is to be used at an interactive session for the Science Society at Trinity College Cambridge UK
Asking the scientific literature to tell us about metabolismpetermurrayrust
Talk at Lhasa (https://www.lhasalimited.org/) a leading organization for "in silico prediction and database systems for use in metabolism, toxicology and related sciences". ContentMine software can extract data from papers on compound metabolism in reusable semantic form, including metabolic pathways, pharmacokinetic data.
Why study Data Sharing? (+ why share your data)Heather Piwowar
A presentation to the DBMI department at the University of Pittsburgh about data sharing and reuse: what this means, why it is important, some of what we’ve learned, and what we still don’t know.
Jean-Claude Bradley presents the first class of CHEM367/767 2010 Chemical Information Retrieval at Drexel University on September 23, 2010. The challenge of finding chemical information is highlighted. Tools and techniques, which will be covered over the course, pertaining Science1.0, Science2.0 and Science3.0 are introduced.
Jean-Claude Bradley presents a talk on Open Notebook Science at the Association of College and Research Libraries on Feb 17, 2009. This presentation includes all of the relevant work up to this date, including the Spectra Game, the ONS solubility challenge and the main data viewers developed by Andy Lang and Rajarshi Guha for the web and Second Life.
Jean-Claude Bradley presents "Accelerating Discovery by Sharing: a case for Open Notebook Science" at the National Breast Cancer Coalition Annual Advocacy Conference in Arlington, VA on May 1, 2011.
This is my April 16, 2008 presentation at the Scholar2Scholar conference at Drexel University. I introduce Web2.0 then show how developing anti-malarial agents can be done on blogs and wikis.
Jean-Claude Bradley discusses Open Notebook Science on April 15, 2009 at the NASA Goddard Space Flight Center. This includes recent material such as ONS logos, the ChemTiles and Spectral Games, automated backup of Google Spreadsheets and automated solubility determinations using web services called from within Google Spreadsheets.
Open Notebook Science and Preliminary Falcipain-2 ResultsJean-Claude Bradley
This talk was presented by Jean-Claude Bradley at the American Chemical Society meeting in Philadelphia on August 20, 2008. An introduction to Open Notebook Science is presented followed by an illustration of how ONS can be used in drug discovery. New data relating to the anti-malarial activity of Ugi products on 2 falcipain-2 docking sites is detailed. The docking calculations were provided by Rajarshi Guha and the enzyme and in vitro assays on Plasmodium falciparum were provided by Phil Rosenthal and Jiri Gut. Most of the syntheses were carried out by Khalid Mirza in the Bradley group.
My presentation to Chemists Without Borders on September 6, 2007. I introduce the basics of the UsefulChem project and Open Notebook Science and why malaria is a particularly good target for Open Science. This includes the CombiUgi project and our collaborations with ChemSpider, Rajarshi Guha, Phil Rosenthal, Dan Zaharevitz and Tsu-Soo Tan. The final slide shows the presentation of our work on Second Life at a SciFoo Lives On session.
A summary of the research work of Jean-Claude Bradley at Drexel University September 2007. A few slides on the CombiUgi project and malaria then some screenshots of the Open Notebook Science project UsefulChem.
Doing more with less resources used to be a situation common just for academic scientists. This is unfortunately still true for academics but we are seeing others facing many of the same challenges. With the squeeze on budgets and cost cutting resulting from recent worldwide economic challenges, the failure of many drugs to make it through the pipeline to the market, and the increasing costs associated with the drug development process, we are now seeing in the pharmaceutical industry a dramatic shift, perhaps belatedly, to have to accommodate similar challenges of doing more with less
Jean-Claude Bradley presents on "Open Notebook Science and other Science2.0 Approaches to Communicate Research" at the University of Pennsylvania Library.
This is a presentation by Jean-Claude Bradley at the Biennial Conference for Chemical Education (BCCE) on July 29, 2008. The talk starts with an overview of Open Notebook Science using a wiki as a public lab notebook. An example of the usefulness of publishing failed experiments is detailed, showing how the version history of the wiki can be used to track the evolution of an organic chemistry experiment. Near the end of the talk an example of using automation to optimize a Ugi reaction is mentioned.
Jean-Claude Bradley presents at the Science Commons Symposium on Feb 20, 2010 at the Microsoft Campus in Redmond. The talk covers doing Open Notebook Science using free and hosted tools, including new archiving protocols developed with Andrew Lang.
Leveraging Transparency and Crowdsourcing in Chemistry Using Open Notebook Sc...Jean-Claude Bradley
Jean-Claude Bradley presents on October 9, 2009 at the Northeastern Regional Meeting of the American Chemical Society in Hartford. This talk, entitled "Leveraging Transparency and Crowdsourcing in Chemistry Using Open Notebook Science", was part of a symposium on Publishing and Promoting Chemistry in the Internet Age. It consists of an overview of Open Notebook Science with some new content on solubility prediction algorithms written by Andrew Lang and a few example of students taking a Chemical Information Retrieval class at Drexel University using research logs on a wiki to flesh out their projects.
The Open Drug Discovery Teams (ODDT) project provides a mobile app primarily intended as a research topic aggregator of predominantly open science data collected from various sources on the internet. It exists to facilitate interdisciplinary teamwork and to relieve the user from data overload, delivering access to information that is highly relevant and focused on their topic areas of interest. Research topics include areas of chemistry and adjacent molecule-oriented biomedical sciences, with an emphasis on those which are most amenable to open research at present. These include rare and neglected diseases, and precompetitive and public-good initiatives such as green chemistry.
The ODDT project uses a free mobile app as user entry point. The app has a magazine-like interface, and server-side infrastructure for hosting chemistry-related data as well as value added services. The project is open to participation from anyone and provides the ability for users to make annotations and assertions, thereby contributing to the collective value of the data to the engaged community. Much of the content is derived from public sources, but the platform is also amenable to commercial data input. The technology could also be readily used in-house by organizations as a research aggregator that could integrate internal and external science and discussion. The infrastructure for the app is currently based upon the Twitter API as a useful proof of concept for a real time source of publicly generated content. This could be extended further by accessing other APIs providing news and data feeds of relevance to a particular area of interest. As the project evolves, social networking features will be developed for organizing participants into teams, with various forms of communication and content management possible.
A brief description of the Chemical Rediscovery Survey and Open Chemistry in ...Jean-Claude Bradley
Jean-Claude Bradley provides examples of how detailed monitoring of chemical mixing can be advantageous for new discoveries and Green Chemistry. The role of openness to successfully accomplish this goal is also discussed.
Jean-Claude Bradley (Drexel University), Matthew McBride (Drexel University) and Andrew Lang (Oral Roberts University) presented at the White House Open Science Poster Session on June 20, 2013. Open Notebook Science examples of melting point, solubility and recrystallization Open Data and Open Modeling were presented.
Jean-Claude Bradley presents at the University of Delaware Tuesday Tech Talks on February 12, 2013. The aim is to make a compelling case that openness is valuable to the educational process and augmenting scientific knowledge. Specific examples in chemistry relating to solubility, melting point and recrystallization will be detailed, as well as the technical solutions that have proved most useful.
Nuit de la Liberté - Science Ouverte avec Jean-Claude Bradley Jean-Claude Bradley
Jean-Claude Bradley présente a la nuit de la liberté au musée de la civilisation a l'université Laval le 8 novembre 2012. Cette présentation de 10 minutes discute des façons de partager la Science Ouverte en général et la Science par Cahier de Laboratoire Ouvert en particulier.
Jean-Claude Bradley presents on Open Notebook Science: Transparency in Research on October 23, 2012 at Georgia Tech for Open Access Week. Topics include solubility, melting points, a recrystallization app, the Chemical Information Retrieval class at Drexel University and the Open Chemical Property Matrix (OCPM). YouTube recording here: http://youtu.be/XpRyfdNuMrQ
Jean-Claude Bradley presents at the American Chemical Society meeting on August 20, 2012. Examples are first presented to demonstrate how access to Open Notebooks can provide critical information not usually shared in the traditional publication process. The use of Google App Scripts to look up chemical properties allows for the use of Google Spreadsheets as a self-contained dashboard to plan and analyze chemical reactions. The concept of the Open Chemical Property Matrix (OCPM) is introduced and a smartphone app to suggest recrystallization solvents is then presented.
Jean-Claude Bradley presents at the Opal Events 3rd Annual Drug Discovery Partnership: Filling the Pipeline on Pre-competitive Collaboration: Sharing Data to Increase Predictability
Jean-Claude Bradley presents a 15 minute summary of current research in his lab on September 29, 2011 at the Drexel University Department of Chemistry Faculty Mini-Symposium. The main project discussed is the Open Melting Point Collection done in collaboration with Andrew Lang and Antony Williams. Work by Evan Curtin is also shown, demonstrating the application of melting point and solubility in reaction design
Jean-Claude Bradley presents the introductory lecture for Chemical Information Retrieval at Drexel University for Fall 2011 on September 23, 2011. Examples are given to demonstrate how difficult it can be to find and assess chemical information such as melting points. An overview of the class wiki is then given
The final exam for the Chemical Information Retrieval course CHEM367/767 in 2009 by Jean-Claude Bradley at Drexel University.
http://cheminfo2010.wikispaces.com
The collection, curation and modeling of Open Melting Point measurementsJean-Claude Bradley
Jean-Claude Bradley and Andrew Lang present at the 5th Meeting on U.S. Government Chemical Databases and Open Chemistry on August 26, 2011 about "The collection, curation and modeling of Open Melting Point measurements". The talk also covers the role of Open Notebook Science and Google Apps Scripts in this effort.
Don Hagen presented at the Special Libraries Association meeting on June 15, 2011 as part of a panel on New Forms of Scholarly Communications in the Sciences. His talk was entitled "NTIS Focus on Science and Data: Open and Sustainable Models for Science Information Discovery"
Lawrence Souder from Drexel University presented on June 14, 2011 at a panel on "International Year of Chemistry: Perils and Promises of Modern Communication in the Sciences" at the Special Libraries Association meeting. His talk covered Trust in Science and Science by Blogging, using as an example the NASA press release on arsenic in bacteria and subsequent controversy taking place in the blogosphere
Jean-Claude Bradley presents at the Special Libraries Association meeting on June 14, 2011 on the "International Year of Chemistry: Perils and Promises of Modern Communication in the Sciences- The Role of Trust". The talk mainly covers the problems with a trusted source based model for melting point data and demonstrates that an Open Data model including Open Notebook Science when necessary can be very helpful in curating datasets. Web services for experimental and predicted melting points are then reviewed.
Cette présentation couvrira des méthodes et des outils utilisés pour rassembler, enregistrer et disséminer l'information chimique utilisant la Science par Cahier de Laboratoire Ouvert, la pratique de rendre un cahier de laboratoire et tous données brutes associées disponibles publiquement aussitôt que possible. Des mesures de solubilité et les réactions de chimie organique sont manipulées de cette façon. L'enregistrement des données de laboratoire est manipulé principalement utilisant des centres serveurs libres et tels que Wikispaces et Feuilles de Calcul de Google. L'information est rendue découvrable utilisant les voies de transmission superflues, y compris Google, Wikipedia et d'autres véhicules. L'abstraction des éléments clé des mesures de solubilité et des réactions chimiques permet la consommation automatisée de l’information. Les implications pour le futur de l'automation du processus scientifique basé sur des données ouvertes et des services ouverts seront discutées.
Jean-Claude Bradley presents "Open Notebook Science as an efficient means for transparency in science" on April 15, 2011 at the Drexel Nanotechnology Institute IGERT Meeting.
The use of non-aqueous solubility to control reaction outcomesJean-Claude Bradley
Evan Curtin from the Bradley Research Group at Drexel University presented a poster at the Research Day for the College of Arts and Sciences on April 5, 2011. The project involves the synthesis of aromatic imines and the measurement of their solubility to select an optimal solvent for their formation.
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Acetabularia Information For Class 9 .docxvaibhavrinwa19
Acetabularia acetabulum is a single-celled green alga that in its vegetative state is morphologically differentiated into a basal rhizoid and an axially elongated stalk, which bears whorls of branching hairs. The single diploid nucleus resides in the rhizoid.
A Strategic Approach: GenAI in EducationPeter Windle
Artificial Intelligence (AI) technologies such as Generative AI, Image Generators and Large Language Models have had a dramatic impact on teaching, learning and assessment over the past 18 months. The most immediate threat AI posed was to Academic Integrity with Higher Education Institutes (HEIs) focusing their efforts on combating the use of GenAI in assessment. Guidelines were developed for staff and students, policies put in place too. Innovative educators have forged paths in the use of Generative AI for teaching, learning and assessments leading to pockets of transformation springing up across HEIs, often with little or no top-down guidance, support or direction.
This Gasta posits a strategic approach to integrating AI into HEIs to prepare staff, students and the curriculum for an evolving world and workplace. We will highlight the advantages of working with these technologies beyond the realm of teaching, learning and assessment by considering prompt engineering skills, industry impact, curriculum changes, and the need for staff upskilling. In contrast, not engaging strategically with Generative AI poses risks, including falling behind peers, missed opportunities and failing to ensure our graduates remain employable. The rapid evolution of AI technologies necessitates a proactive and strategic approach if we are to remain relevant.
Model Attribute Check Company Auto PropertyCeline George
In Odoo, the multi-company feature allows you to manage multiple companies within a single Odoo database instance. Each company can have its own configurations while still sharing common resources such as products, customers, and suppliers.
Normal Labour/ Stages of Labour/ Mechanism of LabourWasim Ak
Normal labor is also termed spontaneous labor, defined as the natural physiological process through which the fetus, placenta, and membranes are expelled from the uterus through the birth canal at term (37 to 42 weeks
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.
Unit 8 - Information and Communication Technology (Paper I).pdfThiyagu K
This slides describes the basic concepts of ICT, basics of Email, Emerging Technology and Digital Initiatives in Education. This presentations aligns with the UGC Paper I syllabus.
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.
1. Open Notebook Science in Drug Discovery Jean-Claude Bradley August 24, 2010 Drug Discovery: Easing the Bottleneck Associate Professor of Chemistry Drexel University Industry and Academia Panel
7. Open Primary Research in Drug Design using Web2.0 tools (blogs, wikis, Second Life, mailing lists) Docking Synthesis Testing Rajarshi Guha Indiana U JC Bradley Drexel U Phil Rosenthal UCSF (malaria) Dan Zaharevitz NCI (tumors) Tsu-Soo Tan Nanyang Inst.