Booz Allen Hamilton created the Field Guide to Data Science to help organizations and missions understand how to make use of data as a resource. The Second Edition of the Field Guide, updated with new features and content, delivers our latest insights in a fast-changing field. http://bit.ly/1O78U42
In this talk I review some of the early visions of the Semantic Web, some of the different views, and I follow through on a thread of how Semantic Web technology has been adopted in search engines (and other companies). I end with a challenge to the research community to keep pursuing this research, rather than letting industry take over the "low end" and keep new work from flourishing.
A dystopian view of our evolving knowledge infrastructure. Talk in session "Reproducibility in new digital scholarship – bigger, faster, better?" at the Alan Turing Institute Symposium on Reproducibility for Data Centric Research, St Hugh's, Oxford, 7th April 2016
Data Science For Social Scientists WorkshopIan Hopkinson
The slides from a Workshop presentation on Data Science and Big Data given to academic social scientists. Lots of links to sources, should be interesting to those outside the original target field.
On Beyond OWL: challenges for ontologies on the WebJames Hendler
The need for ontologies in the real world is manifest and increasing. On the Web, ontologies are everywhere — but OWL isn’t. In this talk, I look at some of the things that are not in OWL, but which are needed for the use of OWL in many Web domains. This talk explores some of the needs for ontologies on the Web in data integration, emerging technologies, and linked data applications – and asks where the features needed for these are in OWL. The talk ends with some challenges to the OWL, and greater ontology, community needed to see more eventual use of standard ontologies on the Web.
Booz Allen Hamilton created the Field Guide to Data Science to help organizations and missions understand how to make use of data as a resource. The Second Edition of the Field Guide, updated with new features and content, delivers our latest insights in a fast-changing field. http://bit.ly/1O78U42
In this talk I review some of the early visions of the Semantic Web, some of the different views, and I follow through on a thread of how Semantic Web technology has been adopted in search engines (and other companies). I end with a challenge to the research community to keep pursuing this research, rather than letting industry take over the "low end" and keep new work from flourishing.
A dystopian view of our evolving knowledge infrastructure. Talk in session "Reproducibility in new digital scholarship – bigger, faster, better?" at the Alan Turing Institute Symposium on Reproducibility for Data Centric Research, St Hugh's, Oxford, 7th April 2016
Data Science For Social Scientists WorkshopIan Hopkinson
The slides from a Workshop presentation on Data Science and Big Data given to academic social scientists. Lots of links to sources, should be interesting to those outside the original target field.
On Beyond OWL: challenges for ontologies on the WebJames Hendler
The need for ontologies in the real world is manifest and increasing. On the Web, ontologies are everywhere — but OWL isn’t. In this talk, I look at some of the things that are not in OWL, but which are needed for the use of OWL in many Web domains. This talk explores some of the needs for ontologies on the Web in data integration, emerging technologies, and linked data applications – and asks where the features needed for these are in OWL. The talk ends with some challenges to the OWL, and greater ontology, community needed to see more eventual use of standard ontologies on the Web.
Energy and Climate – Dynamic Decision Tool Catalog and Community of Practice: Current implementations, Gap AnalysisOpen EI and energy.data.gov, Robert Bectel, DOE
A panoply of data, models, visualizations, analyses, software and decision tools of all sort exist across the –Verse. The problem is that many of these are not accessible, transparent, “open”, distributable, mobile, location aware, up-to-date, or even licensed for use outside of their single use development environment. Developers of these solutions, whether they are a Government Agency, NGO, or other interested group insist on building their solution within their zone of control with visibility and access available only through their single destination site.
OpenEI.org is an open source wiki media platform that leverages crowd sourcing to build an ecosystem for the transmission, storage, analysis and distribution of energy data and information. The system provides mapping and other visualization tools to transform that raw data into understanding.
By building an open, crowd sourced catalog of highly interactive resources and an engaged community of solution providers, OpenEI and Data.gov bring powerful distribution engines for use by anyone. Capable of connecting to virtually any data or Content source and conveying that access to other destinations, they transform understanding and access to knowledge and resources which otherwise would be inaccessible or at best diffused across the –Verse in such a way as to be nearly impossible to find.
This interactive conversation will focus on why we need to build open source, transparent and highly distributable solution sets; What value we can derive from the use of distribution accelerators like OpenEI and Data.Gov and; What the continued development of single destination sites based on the outdated theory of “If I build it they will come” means for those individuals, groups or Agencies attempting to assess the risks associated with energy related projects.
Opening talk at the "Interdisciplinary Data Resources to Address the Challenges of Urban Living” Workshop at the Urban Big Data Centre, University of Glasgow, 4 April 2016
Better, faster and cheaper can be exactly the wrong thing to do when fundamentally different models are enabled and compelled by the revolutions of social connection, mobile connection and big-data discovery. Annual end-of-summer address to joint meeting of L.A. chapters of ACM and AITP, 19 September 2013
From "mobile last" to "mobile first” -- a Pragmatic Approach to Responsive De...Tatjana Salcedo
Responsive web design is taking higher ed web development by storm. This session will cover how the University of Vermont recently converted their existing fixed-width web design into a responsive one using a mobile-first strategy. We'll discuss both the advantages (and disadvantages) of the mobile first approach as well as tips and techniques used to create a nimble foundation for rapidly converting fixed width sites to responsive ones throughout the institution. In addition, we'll reveal a post launch assessment of the effectiveness and performance of the responsive design.
The Unreasonable Effectiveness of MetadataJames Hendler
Invited talk at VIVO 2017 conference - explores the view of the semantic web as enriched metadata, and how that kind of information can be used in new and interesting ways.
Facilitating Web Science Collaboration through Semantic MarkupJames Hendler
These are the slides that accompanied the paper "Dominic DiFranzo, John S. Erickson, Marie Joan Kristine T. Gloria, Joanne S. Luciano, Deborah McGuinness, & James Hendler, The Web Observatory Extension: Facilitating Web Science Collaboration through Semantic Markup, Proc. WWW 2014 (Web Science Track), Seoul, Korea, 2014." They describe an extension to schema.org that can be used for sharing Web-related datasets and projects.
Hiring data scientists and deploying Hadoop is not enough. Your company needs a data driven culture, based on values such as honesty, democracy, creativity and strategy. Your company also needs good data engineering and good experimentation practices.
Making the invisible visible. Managing the digital footprint of development p...UNDP Eurasia
Thanks to new technologies, now accessible also in remote places, development work - and development workers - have an increasing digital footprint. Quite litterally, what was invisible can now become visible, with major implications for aid effectiveness, transparency and fundraising. Being able to manage such footprint effectively and analyse it to identify emerging trends is going to be a differentiating skill in the Development 2.0 world. This presentations illustrates some key concepts, examples and tools that development organisations can use ti analyse and manager their digital footprint.
Talk given at Los Alamos National Labs in Fall 2015.
As research becomes more data-intensive and platforms become more heterogeneous, we need to shift focus from performance to productivity.
Inspirational talk on AI (artificial intelligence) and machine learning, i.e., how to give birth to an AI. Introductory and intentionally kept simple for non experts and non technical executives. Care should be taken not too over interpret some of the intentional simplified statements in the presentation.
Presentation given at the Linguistic Data Consortium (LDC), University of Pennsylvania, April 2019. Based on presentations at the 6th ACM Collective Intelligence Conference, 2018 and the 6th AAAI Conference on Human Computation & Crowdsourcing (HCOMP), 2018. Blog post: https://blog.humancomputation.com/?p=9932.
In this session we'll dive into the journey that Google chooses to take in order focus on AI: what was the mindset, what were the challenges and what is the direction for the future.
Lessons from Software for Synthetic BiologyTim O'Reilly
In my November 4, 2015 keynote at the SynBioBeta conference, I talk about lessons from open source software and the internet that should shape our thinking about the bio revolution. Licenses are only part of the open source story. The architecture of interoperability may matter even more.
Energy and Climate – Dynamic Decision Tool Catalog and Community of Practice: Current implementations, Gap AnalysisOpen EI and energy.data.gov, Robert Bectel, DOE
A panoply of data, models, visualizations, analyses, software and decision tools of all sort exist across the –Verse. The problem is that many of these are not accessible, transparent, “open”, distributable, mobile, location aware, up-to-date, or even licensed for use outside of their single use development environment. Developers of these solutions, whether they are a Government Agency, NGO, or other interested group insist on building their solution within their zone of control with visibility and access available only through their single destination site.
OpenEI.org is an open source wiki media platform that leverages crowd sourcing to build an ecosystem for the transmission, storage, analysis and distribution of energy data and information. The system provides mapping and other visualization tools to transform that raw data into understanding.
By building an open, crowd sourced catalog of highly interactive resources and an engaged community of solution providers, OpenEI and Data.gov bring powerful distribution engines for use by anyone. Capable of connecting to virtually any data or Content source and conveying that access to other destinations, they transform understanding and access to knowledge and resources which otherwise would be inaccessible or at best diffused across the –Verse in such a way as to be nearly impossible to find.
This interactive conversation will focus on why we need to build open source, transparent and highly distributable solution sets; What value we can derive from the use of distribution accelerators like OpenEI and Data.Gov and; What the continued development of single destination sites based on the outdated theory of “If I build it they will come” means for those individuals, groups or Agencies attempting to assess the risks associated with energy related projects.
Opening talk at the "Interdisciplinary Data Resources to Address the Challenges of Urban Living” Workshop at the Urban Big Data Centre, University of Glasgow, 4 April 2016
Better, faster and cheaper can be exactly the wrong thing to do when fundamentally different models are enabled and compelled by the revolutions of social connection, mobile connection and big-data discovery. Annual end-of-summer address to joint meeting of L.A. chapters of ACM and AITP, 19 September 2013
From "mobile last" to "mobile first” -- a Pragmatic Approach to Responsive De...Tatjana Salcedo
Responsive web design is taking higher ed web development by storm. This session will cover how the University of Vermont recently converted their existing fixed-width web design into a responsive one using a mobile-first strategy. We'll discuss both the advantages (and disadvantages) of the mobile first approach as well as tips and techniques used to create a nimble foundation for rapidly converting fixed width sites to responsive ones throughout the institution. In addition, we'll reveal a post launch assessment of the effectiveness and performance of the responsive design.
The Unreasonable Effectiveness of MetadataJames Hendler
Invited talk at VIVO 2017 conference - explores the view of the semantic web as enriched metadata, and how that kind of information can be used in new and interesting ways.
Facilitating Web Science Collaboration through Semantic MarkupJames Hendler
These are the slides that accompanied the paper "Dominic DiFranzo, John S. Erickson, Marie Joan Kristine T. Gloria, Joanne S. Luciano, Deborah McGuinness, & James Hendler, The Web Observatory Extension: Facilitating Web Science Collaboration through Semantic Markup, Proc. WWW 2014 (Web Science Track), Seoul, Korea, 2014." They describe an extension to schema.org that can be used for sharing Web-related datasets and projects.
Hiring data scientists and deploying Hadoop is not enough. Your company needs a data driven culture, based on values such as honesty, democracy, creativity and strategy. Your company also needs good data engineering and good experimentation practices.
Making the invisible visible. Managing the digital footprint of development p...UNDP Eurasia
Thanks to new technologies, now accessible also in remote places, development work - and development workers - have an increasing digital footprint. Quite litterally, what was invisible can now become visible, with major implications for aid effectiveness, transparency and fundraising. Being able to manage such footprint effectively and analyse it to identify emerging trends is going to be a differentiating skill in the Development 2.0 world. This presentations illustrates some key concepts, examples and tools that development organisations can use ti analyse and manager their digital footprint.
Talk given at Los Alamos National Labs in Fall 2015.
As research becomes more data-intensive and platforms become more heterogeneous, we need to shift focus from performance to productivity.
Inspirational talk on AI (artificial intelligence) and machine learning, i.e., how to give birth to an AI. Introductory and intentionally kept simple for non experts and non technical executives. Care should be taken not too over interpret some of the intentional simplified statements in the presentation.
Presentation given at the Linguistic Data Consortium (LDC), University of Pennsylvania, April 2019. Based on presentations at the 6th ACM Collective Intelligence Conference, 2018 and the 6th AAAI Conference on Human Computation & Crowdsourcing (HCOMP), 2018. Blog post: https://blog.humancomputation.com/?p=9932.
In this session we'll dive into the journey that Google chooses to take in order focus on AI: what was the mindset, what were the challenges and what is the direction for the future.
Lessons from Software for Synthetic BiologyTim O'Reilly
In my November 4, 2015 keynote at the SynBioBeta conference, I talk about lessons from open source software and the internet that should shape our thinking about the bio revolution. Licenses are only part of the open source story. The architecture of interoperability may matter even more.
Top 10 Interesting Facts About Solar SystemTenfact
Astronomer Clyde Tombaugh had discovered Pluto in 1930, while he was looking for objects farther out in space than Uranus, that were creating anomalies in Uranus’s orbit which were discovered earlier in the 18th and 17th century.
Being inside a certain star’s gravitational force is like being a part of it and acting as it does in its journey. Technically, this means we live inside the Sun. Interesting…
Pluto is believed to be smaller than the country USA.
‘’My Very Educated Mother Just Showed Us Nine Planets.’’ How you remember 9 planets.
The sun does burns and gives heat/light through a basic and efficient process of nuclear fusion.
One of the most talked about theories is that so many of these so-called icy comets collided with earth and have formed the Earth’s oceans.
mercury is not the planet with the highest of temperatures in our solar system although it is the one closest to the sun.
Saturn’s density is not even 70 percent that of water. So it will float on water like wood on water.
If Earth’s core is where hell is, then moon Lo is where the devil resides
One day on Mercury equals to 58 days on Earth
Check the full article here: http://tenfact.com/top-10-facts-solar-system/
2015 SF Exploratorium Lecture: "Corn: Diversity and Origins"jrossibarra
Public lecture at the San Francisco Exploratorium on corn. Part of their Science of Food series http://www.exploratorium.edu/press-office/press-releases/science-food-series-launches-exploratorium
Think you can easily spot a sociopath? Think again. Sociopaths aren’t always the stereotypical “serial killer type” you might be thinking of. These individuals come in all shapes and sizes.
Your best friend, significant other, roommate, or family member could be hiding a dark secret. Instant Checkmate compiled the 11 signs of a sneaky sociopath. Ready to learn more? Run a background check on them today at www.InstantCheckmate.com!
Gold Standard Physiological Measurements and Novel Drug Delivery Methods - Se...InsideScientific
A 2-part webinar for scientists interested in novel drug delivery methods for basic research, drug discovery and development. Learn about novel infusion technologies and how challenges in physiological monitoring and drug delivery are being overcome by implantable and programmable devices.
Session 2: Synthetic, Structural, and Mechanistic Investigations of Vitamin B12 Conjugates of the Anorectic Peptide PYY3-36
Presenter: Dr. Robert Doyle, Syracuse University & SUNY, Upstate Medical University
Dr. Robert Doyle talks about how vitamin B12 conjugation of Peptide YY3-16 decreases food intake compared to native Peptide – YY3-36 in male rats. Learn how challenges to peptide-based therapies, such as rapid clearance, ready degradation by hydrolysis/proteolysis and poor intestinal uptake and/or a need for blood brain barrier transport can be overcome by using vitamin B12 in the subcutaneously administered drug delivery device iPrecio.
Here is a very simple three step guide on how to create a professional Twitter cover photo in PowerPoint. Use this strategy for your business, personal brand or whatever you want in order to bring traffic to your other sites.
What Does Customer Service Mean? - Slide deck from webinar - 20 JAN 2016Lora Cecere
Organizations often think they understand their customers, and engage with them in a manner they believe will provide a valuable service. However, through conversations with customers and customer research, we’ve learned that many firms miss the mark. On January 20th, 2016 we spoke with Lora Cecere, Founder of Supply Chain Insights, Keith Holliday, Director of Supply Chain at Sonoco Products, and Dale McClung, Senior Supply Chain Manager, Innovations at BDP International who discussed the definition of customer service, how to understand customer needs, and how to design a customer service program that will deepen relationships with your customers. Their advice is illustrated through case studies and real life examples of improving customer service.
Catch the highlights from MWC16 in this quick recap. Learn about everything that happened at Mobile World Congress, including new virtual reality devices, the latest developments in IoT, and much, much more.
Presentation by Jessica S. Banthin, CBO’s Deputy Assistant Director for Health, Retirement, and Long-Term Analysis, to the Association for Public Policy Analysis and Management.
This presentation reviews CBO’s original and more recent projections of enrollment in health insurance policies through the exchanges established under the Affordable Care Act and the subsidies (including both premium tax credits and cost-sharing subsidies) provided to those enrollees, illustrating how the estimates have changed over time. CBO’s projections of 2014 exchange enrollment and subsidies are also compared with the actual enrollment and subsidies paid in that year.
Data Science: History repeated? – The heritage of the Free and Open Source GI...Peter Löwe
Data Science is described as the process of knowledge extraction from large data sets by means of scientific
methods. The discipline draws heavily from techniques and theories from many fields, which are jointly used to
furthermore develop information retrieval on structured or unstructured very large datasets. While the term Data
Science was already coined in 1960, the current perception of this field places is still in the first section of the hype cycle according to Gartner, being well en route from the technology trigger stage to the peak of inflated
expectations.
In our view the future development of Data Science could benefit from the analysis of experiences from
related evolutionary processes. One predecessor is the area of Geographic Information Systems (GIS). The
intrinsic scope of GIS is the integration and storage of spatial information from often heterogeneous sources, data
analysis, sharing of reconstructed or aggregated results in visual form or via data transfer. GIS is successfully
applied to process and analyse spatially referenced content in a wide and still expanding range of science
areas, spanning from human and social sciences like archeology, politics and architecture to environmental and
geoscientific applications, even including planetology.
This paper presents proven patterns for innovation and organisation derived from the evolution of GIS,
which can be ported to Data Science. Within the GIS landscape, three strategic interacting tiers can be denoted: i) Standardisation, ii) applications based on closed-source software, without the option of access to and analysis of the implemented algorithms, and iii) Free and Open Source Software (FOSS) based on freely accessible program code enabling analysis, education and ,improvement by everyone. This paper focuses on patterns gained from the synthesis of three decades of FOSS development. We identified best-practices which evolved from long term FOSS projects, describe the role of community-driven global umbrella organisations such as OSGeo, as well as the standardization of innovative services. The main driver is the acknowledgement of a meritocratic attitude.
These patterns follow evolutionary processes of establishing and maintaining a web-based democratic culture
spawning new kinds of communication and projects. This culture transcends the established compartmentation and
stratification of science by creating mutual benefits for the participants, irrespective of their respective research
interest and standing. Adopting these best practices will enable
Metadata and Semantics Research Conference, Manchester, UK 2015
Research Objects: why, what and how,
In practice the exchange, reuse and reproduction of scientific experiments is hard, dependent on bundling and exchanging the experimental methods, computational codes, data, algorithms, workflows and so on along with the narrative. These "Research Objects" are not fixed, just as research is not “finished”: codes fork, data is updated, algorithms are revised, workflows break, service updates are released. Neither should they be viewed just as second-class artifacts tethered to publications, but the focus of research outcomes in their own right: articles clustered around datasets, methods with citation profiles. Many funders and publishers have come to acknowledge this, moving to data sharing policies and provisioning e-infrastructure platforms. Many researchers recognise the importance of working with Research Objects. The term has become widespread. However. What is a Research Object? How do you mint one, exchange one, build a platform to support one, curate one? How do we introduce them in a lightweight way that platform developers can migrate to? What is the practical impact of a Research Object Commons on training, stewardship, scholarship, sharing? How do we address the scholarly and technological debt of making and maintaining Research Objects? Are there any examples
I’ll present our practical experiences of the why, what and how of Research Objects.
Open Research: Manchester leading and learningCarole Goble
Open and FAIR science has an international momentum. Large scale communities are striving to make and manage the digital infrastructure needed for scientists to be open as possible, closed as necessary, as expected by the NIH, OECD, UNESCO and the EC. ELIXIR is such a research infrastructure in Europe for Life Sciences. This talk will highlight two of ELIXIR's Open Science resources built by Open Science communities to enable life science researchers to be open, and led by Manchester. And how can we learn from these and bring these practices to Manchester?
Launch: Manchester Office for Open Research, 4th April 2022
https://www.openresearch.manchester.ac.uk/
What is Open Science / Open Research?; Initiative of the European Union (EU); Elements of Open Science: open research process / cycle; open access (open repositories); open data; open source software; open notebook / lab book; open workflows; open reputation systems; citizen science; relationship between open research and e-research; open science in Africa and South Africa
Scott Edmunds slides for class 8 from the HKU Data Curation (module MLIM7350 from the Faculty of Education) course covering science data, medical data and ethics, and the FAIR data principles.
This pdf is about the Schizophrenia.
For more details visit on YouTube; @SELF-EXPLANATORY;
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCAiarMZDNhe1A3Rnpr_WkzA/videos
Thanks...!
This presentation explores a brief idea about the structural and functional attributes of nucleotides, the structure and function of genetic materials along with the impact of UV rays and pH upon them.
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.
(May 29th, 2024) Advancements in Intravital Microscopy- Insights for Preclini...Scintica Instrumentation
Intravital microscopy (IVM) is a powerful tool utilized to study cellular behavior over time and space in vivo. Much of our understanding of cell biology has been accomplished using various in vitro and ex vivo methods; however, these studies do not necessarily reflect the natural dynamics of biological processes. Unlike traditional cell culture or fixed tissue imaging, IVM allows for the ultra-fast high-resolution imaging of cellular processes over time and space and were studied in its natural environment. Real-time visualization of biological processes in the context of an intact organism helps maintain physiological relevance and provide insights into the progression of disease, response to treatments or developmental processes.
In this webinar we give an overview of advanced applications of the IVM system in preclinical research. IVIM technology is a provider of all-in-one intravital microscopy systems and solutions optimized for in vivo imaging of live animal models at sub-micron resolution. The system’s unique features and user-friendly software enables researchers to probe fast dynamic biological processes such as immune cell tracking, cell-cell interaction as well as vascularization and tumor metastasis with exceptional detail. This webinar will also give an overview of IVM being utilized in drug development, offering a view into the intricate interaction between drugs/nanoparticles and tissues in vivo and allows for the evaluation of therapeutic intervention in a variety of tissues and organs. This interdisciplinary collaboration continues to drive the advancements of novel therapeutic strategies.
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.
Seminar of U.V. Spectroscopy by SAMIR PANDASAMIR PANDA
Spectroscopy is a branch of science dealing the study of interaction of electromagnetic radiation with matter.
Ultraviolet-visible spectroscopy refers to absorption spectroscopy or reflect spectroscopy in the UV-VIS spectral region.
Ultraviolet-visible spectroscopy is an analytical method that can measure the amount of light received by the analyte.
17. http://bit.ly/1MEcOmD
An example of a false-positive in the field of Solar—Terrestrial research: A Purported
relationship between Neutron monitor changes and extremes of the Indian Monsoon
Dr. Benjamin A. Laken, Department of Geosciences, University of Oslo, Norway
18. What Des-Cartes did was a good step.
You have added much several ways, &
especially in taking ye colours of thin
plates into philosophical consideration.
If I have seen further it is by standing on ye
shoulders of Giants.
- Isaac Newton, 1676
“
“
... that this is good job advice:
22. learning from (+ through)
open source
development
examples of “science like the web”
in practice
23.
24. http://bit.ly/1MEcOmD
An example of a false-positive in the field of Solar—Terrestrial research: A Purported
relationship between Neutron monitor changes and extremes of the Indian Monsoon
Dr. Benjamin A. Laken, Department of Geosciences, University of Oslo, Norway
25. code as a research object
what’s needed to reuse ?
http://bit.ly/mozfiggit
45. - access to content, data, code, materials.
- emergence of “web-native” tools.
- rewards for openness, interoperability, collaboration, sharing.
- push for ROI, reuse, recomputability, transparency.
“web-enabled research”
46. putting open ideals into practice
(+ paying it forward)
https://commonspace.wordpress.com/2015/07/15/web-literacy-and-leadership/
47. service learning: n. hands-
on, experiential learning
where people develop skills
by working on a project in
service of a bigger goal.
http://bit.ly/1JTMBSb
48.
49. how do we amplify within
research?
(... and beyond software
development?)