Presentation given by Kevin Long, Digital Archivist at Digital Repository of Ireland at the 2017 DRI Community Forum, reviewing current and upcoming DRI publications
Presentation given by Dr Natalie Harrower, Director of Digital Repository of Ireland at the 2017 DRI Community Forum, welcoming participating stakeholders and other attendees and providing an overview of the day.
Rebecca Grant, Kathryn Cassidy, Marta Bustillo - Implementing Orphan Works Le...dri_ireland
Presentation made by Rebecca Grant (Digital Repository of Ireland) Kathryn Cassidy (Digital Repository of Ireland) and Marta Bustillo (Trinity College Dublin) at Open Repositories, Dublin on 14 June 2016. The presentation gives an overview of the EU Orphan Works Directive and its implementation in Ireland, and discusses how the Digital Repository of Ireland adapted its workflows and UI to allow the publication of registered Orphan Works.
What are other universities doing to support RDM?Sarah Jones
Presentation given at an RDM workshop for support staff run with the ADMIRe project at Nottingham. The presentation covers what RDM support and services UK universities are developing.
A talk given at 'Taking the Long View: International Perspectives on E-Journal Archiving', a conference hosted by EDINA and ISSN IC at the University of Edinburgh, September 7th 2015.
A talk given at 'Taking the Long View: International Perspectives on E-Journal Archiving', a conference hosted by EDINA and ISSN IC at the University of Edinburgh, September 7th 2015.
Presentation given by Dr Natalie Harrower, Director of Digital Repository of Ireland at the 2017 DRI Community Forum, welcoming participating stakeholders and other attendees and providing an overview of the day.
Rebecca Grant, Kathryn Cassidy, Marta Bustillo - Implementing Orphan Works Le...dri_ireland
Presentation made by Rebecca Grant (Digital Repository of Ireland) Kathryn Cassidy (Digital Repository of Ireland) and Marta Bustillo (Trinity College Dublin) at Open Repositories, Dublin on 14 June 2016. The presentation gives an overview of the EU Orphan Works Directive and its implementation in Ireland, and discusses how the Digital Repository of Ireland adapted its workflows and UI to allow the publication of registered Orphan Works.
What are other universities doing to support RDM?Sarah Jones
Presentation given at an RDM workshop for support staff run with the ADMIRe project at Nottingham. The presentation covers what RDM support and services UK universities are developing.
A talk given at 'Taking the Long View: International Perspectives on E-Journal Archiving', a conference hosted by EDINA and ISSN IC at the University of Edinburgh, September 7th 2015.
A talk given at 'Taking the Long View: International Perspectives on E-Journal Archiving', a conference hosted by EDINA and ISSN IC at the University of Edinburgh, September 7th 2015.
Natalie Harrower - DRI, RDA and Irelanddri_ireland
From "A National Approach to Open Research Data in Ireland", a workshop held on 8 September 2017 in National Library of Ireland, organised by The National Library of Ireland, the Digital Repository of Ireland, the Research Data Alliance and Open Research Ireland.
This presentation was provided by Todd Carpenter during the NISO Annual Members Meeting and Standards Update," which was held at ALA Midwinter in Chicago, Illinois from January 7 - January 10, 2011. It provides an overview of NISO activities during the calendar year of 2010.
Introduction to PRELIDA Consolidation and Dissemination WorkshopPRELIDA Project
by Carlo Meghini (ISTI CNR, Pisa), presented at the 3rd PRELIDA Consolidation and Dissemination Workshop, Riva, Italy, October, 17, 2014. More information about the workshop at: prelida.eu
Dr Aileen O'Carroll delivered this presentation at the Stakeholders Advisory Group meeting on 14 April 2015. It provides and overview of the Digital Repository of Ireland membership model, outlining organisational roles for institutions depositing collections into the repository.
Presented at the Association of Moving Image Archivists' 2013 annual conference, this presentation describes Carnegie Hall's Digital Archives Project and includes information on processes related to its archival digitization, preservation, and digital asset management activities.
The Canadian Linked Data Initiative: Charting a Path to a Linked Data FutureNASIG
As libraries prepare to shift away from MARC to a linked data framework, new convergences in the metadata production activities of our libraries' technical services units, special collections, and digital libraries are becoming possible. In September 2015, the Canadian Linked Data Initiative (CLDI) was formed to leverage the existing collaboration between the Technical Services departments of Canada’s top 5 research libraries and the Library and Archives of Canada. Working cooperatively, our objective is to provide a path to linked data readiness for our institutions and leadership for the adoption of linked data by libraries across Canada. To achieve this goal, partner libraries are working across departments and institutions to create new workflows and tools and adapt to a new conceptual understanding of descriptive metadata. This presentation is a preliminary report on the progress made in five key areas of interest: digital collections, education and training, MARC record enhancement, evaluation of linked data tools and vendor supplied metadata. Building on existing initiatives, the CLDI is investigating the potential of integrating linked data elements into digitized collections, as well as MARC-based bibliographic and authority records, with the aim of fostering new and interesting pathways for resource discovery. To strengthen and expand the professional knowledge of staff, partner institutions are collaborating in the production of educational and training materials related to linked data principles and practices. The evaluation and potential development of linked data tools is another area of concentration. Finally, with the goal of changing workflows upstream, the CLDI is working to engage publishers and vendors in the linked data conversation. In addition to reporting on the work undertaken in the first year of the project, this presentation will also cover lessons learned and outline some of the new opportunities gained from working on a collaborative project that spans across multiple boundaries.
Marlene van Ballegooie, Metadata Librarian,
University of Toronto
Juliya Borie, University of Toronto Libraries
Andrew Senior, Coordinator,
E-Resources and Serials, McGill University
Rebecca Grant, Sharon Webb - Preserving Ireland's Digital Cultural Identity T...dri_ireland
Presentation given by Rebecca Grant (DRI) and Dr. Sharon Webb (University of Sussex) at the Digital Humanities conference in Krakow, Poland on 14 July 2016. The presentation describes the Decade of Centenaries Digital Preservation awards project which was undertaken in 2015 with support from the Irish Research Council.
Natalie Harrower - DRI, RDA and Irelanddri_ireland
From "A National Approach to Open Research Data in Ireland", a workshop held on 8 September 2017 in National Library of Ireland, organised by The National Library of Ireland, the Digital Repository of Ireland, the Research Data Alliance and Open Research Ireland.
This presentation was provided by Todd Carpenter during the NISO Annual Members Meeting and Standards Update," which was held at ALA Midwinter in Chicago, Illinois from January 7 - January 10, 2011. It provides an overview of NISO activities during the calendar year of 2010.
Introduction to PRELIDA Consolidation and Dissemination WorkshopPRELIDA Project
by Carlo Meghini (ISTI CNR, Pisa), presented at the 3rd PRELIDA Consolidation and Dissemination Workshop, Riva, Italy, October, 17, 2014. More information about the workshop at: prelida.eu
Dr Aileen O'Carroll delivered this presentation at the Stakeholders Advisory Group meeting on 14 April 2015. It provides and overview of the Digital Repository of Ireland membership model, outlining organisational roles for institutions depositing collections into the repository.
Presented at the Association of Moving Image Archivists' 2013 annual conference, this presentation describes Carnegie Hall's Digital Archives Project and includes information on processes related to its archival digitization, preservation, and digital asset management activities.
The Canadian Linked Data Initiative: Charting a Path to a Linked Data FutureNASIG
As libraries prepare to shift away from MARC to a linked data framework, new convergences in the metadata production activities of our libraries' technical services units, special collections, and digital libraries are becoming possible. In September 2015, the Canadian Linked Data Initiative (CLDI) was formed to leverage the existing collaboration between the Technical Services departments of Canada’s top 5 research libraries and the Library and Archives of Canada. Working cooperatively, our objective is to provide a path to linked data readiness for our institutions and leadership for the adoption of linked data by libraries across Canada. To achieve this goal, partner libraries are working across departments and institutions to create new workflows and tools and adapt to a new conceptual understanding of descriptive metadata. This presentation is a preliminary report on the progress made in five key areas of interest: digital collections, education and training, MARC record enhancement, evaluation of linked data tools and vendor supplied metadata. Building on existing initiatives, the CLDI is investigating the potential of integrating linked data elements into digitized collections, as well as MARC-based bibliographic and authority records, with the aim of fostering new and interesting pathways for resource discovery. To strengthen and expand the professional knowledge of staff, partner institutions are collaborating in the production of educational and training materials related to linked data principles and practices. The evaluation and potential development of linked data tools is another area of concentration. Finally, with the goal of changing workflows upstream, the CLDI is working to engage publishers and vendors in the linked data conversation. In addition to reporting on the work undertaken in the first year of the project, this presentation will also cover lessons learned and outline some of the new opportunities gained from working on a collaborative project that spans across multiple boundaries.
Marlene van Ballegooie, Metadata Librarian,
University of Toronto
Juliya Borie, University of Toronto Libraries
Andrew Senior, Coordinator,
E-Resources and Serials, McGill University
Rebecca Grant, Sharon Webb - Preserving Ireland's Digital Cultural Identity T...dri_ireland
Presentation given by Rebecca Grant (DRI) and Dr. Sharon Webb (University of Sussex) at the Digital Humanities conference in Krakow, Poland on 14 July 2016. The presentation describes the Decade of Centenaries Digital Preservation awards project which was undertaken in 2015 with support from the Irish Research Council.
Archive service accreditation digital developments for ARA Conference 2016Melinda Haunton
Joint paper with William Kilbride, Digital Preservation Coalition, introducing the digital repository standards landscape and how this will lead to development of Archive Service Accreditation standard and application approach
3-27-12 Preservation & Archiving Highlights from ADR - Presentation SlidesDuraSpace
Hot Topics: The DuraSpace Community Webinar Series
“Knowledge Futures: Digital Preservation Planning”
Curated by Liz Bishoff
Webinar 3: Preservation & Archiving Highlights from the Alliance Digital Repository
Presented by Robin Dean & George Machovec, Colorado Alliance of Research Libraries
ICONUK 2015: Files, files everywhere! Do you know where your organisations do...Femke Goedhart
As delivered on Sept 21st in London at ICONUK
session abstract: The good old 'document' might not be sexy anymore, it is still often the work horse of the organization. Containing most of our business information and knowledge and often being the preferred way of distribution by users, customers and partners alike. Traditionally we used formal document management tools and the 'good old' file share for storing documents but with collaboration tools like teamrooms, discussion databases and Quickr, the rise of Enterprise social Networking tools like IBM Connections and the ease with which users can get external tools like OneDrive, Dropbox and many others, a lot of that has become muddled. I will take you through some of the scenario's of modern document management, talk about the struggles of migration and give you tools and insights that can help you device a strategy to keep both your users as well as auditors happy.
Talk for ISWC 2014 (Industry Track) by Tony Hammond and Michele Pasin on October 22, 2014 at Riva del Garda, Italy:
'Linked data experience at Macmillan:
Building discovery services for scientific and scholarly content on top of a semantic data model'
Seldom do aspiring librarians predict that they will be the ones managing the intricacies of electronic resources. Yet, many are charged with complicated and unique tasks, like having to align resources in vendor knowledgebases. This can often be a confusing and frustrating process for librarians. This session will provide a brief overview of the KBART standard, its place in the electronic resource workflows, trends, and how librarians can avoid some common knowledgebase issues
Do Serials have a Place in the Institutional Digital Repository?NASIG
Monographic resources such as journal articles, book chapters, and dissertations all have a place in the institutional repository, but what about serials such as newsletters, newspapers, and magazines? This program will look at the challenges of accessioning, describing, and providing meaningful access to serial digital objects in an institutional repository. Participants are encouraged to share their successes or less-than-successes from their own digital repositories.
Kay Teel, Metadata Librarian, Stanford University Libraries
A summary of DBpedia's History and a detailed analysis of challenges and solutions.
We show how the Linked Data Cloud evolved around DBpedia and also what problems we and other data projects encountered. We included a section on the new solutions that will lead DBpedia into a bright future.
UK RepositoryNet+ Round Table Presentation on Lessons Learnt - Andrew Doward ...Repository Fringe
Presentation shared as part of the Shared Repository Services Round Table which took place on Friday 2nd August 2013. The session was chaired by Andrew Doward and Pablo de Castro of the UK RepositoryNet+ project.
EDF2013: Selected Talk Josep-L. Larriba-Pey: The Linked Data Benchmark Counci...European Data Forum
Selected talk of Josep-L. Larriba-Pey, DAMA-UPC, Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya, BarcelonaTech, Director, at the European Data Forum 2013, 9 April 2013 in Dublin, Ireland: The Linked Data Benchmark Council, benchmarking RDF and Graph technologies.
Lightning Talk Session 2: Achieving 100% Open Access to Research Publications
Students as Scholars – Participation in Open Research and Publishing Practices: The Case of the Communications Undergraduate Journal at Dublin City University
presented by Ronan Cox, Dublin City University;
5 Years of HRB Open Research in 5 Minutes
presented by Hannah Wilson, F1000;
National Open Access Repositories: Strengthen and Align Ireland’s Network of Open Access Repositories
presented by Christopher Loughnane, University of Galway;
The National Open Access Monitor Project
presented by Catherine Ferris, IReL.
NORFest 2023: Early Career Researcher Panel on Research Assessmentdri_ireland
Panel talk on November 3, 2023 at the National Open Research Festival 2023 which took place at the Royal Irish Academy in Dublin, Ireland.
Panel moderator: Yensi Flores Bueso
Slides from early career researchers:
Noémie Aubert Bonn, Postdoctoral Researcher at Hasselt University, Belgium, and the University of Manchester, UK;
Melissa Sharp, Senior Postdoctoral Fellow and Honorary Lecturer, Royal College of Surgeons Ireland;
Erzsébet Tóth Czifra Head of Programme at the Coalition for Advancing Research Assessment (CoARA);
Stefan Müller, Assistant Professor and Ad Astra Fellow in the School of Politics and International Relations at University College Dublin, Member of the Young Academy of Ireland;
Irene Castellano, Horizon Europe Health Cluster National Contact Point (NCP) for Ireland and Chair of the Ireland Chapter of the Marie Curie Alumni Association (MCAA).
NORFest 2023: National Open Research Fund 2023, Projects Launchdri_ireland
Launch of the NORF Open Research Fund 2023 Projects
introduced by Daniel Bangert, National Open Research Coordinator, Digital Repository of Ireland.
The NORF Open Research Fund 2023 is funding 13 research projects designed to support and advance Open Research in Ireland. This session featured presentations from a selection of the Project Leads of these projects. Speakers include Sally Smith (TCD), Jo-Hanna Ivers (TCD), Armin Straube (UL), Eoin O’Dell (TCD), Patrick Healy (UL), Ian Marder (MU), and Gemma Moore and Laura Rooney Ferris (HSE).
NORFest 2023 Lightning Talks Session Three dri_ireland
Lightning Talk Session 3: Enabling FAIR Research Data and Other Outputs
The Irish ORCID Consortium
presented by Catherine Ferris, IReL;
Exploring Large-Scale Open Data: The Curatr Platform
presented by Derek Greene, University College Dublin;
A Workflow for Research Data Management (RDM): Aligning the Management of Research Data
presented by Gail Birkbeck, University College Dublin;
Making Cultural Heritage Data FAIR: Developing Recommendations for the WorldFAIR Project at the Digital Repository of Ireland
presented by Joan Murphy, Digital Repository of Ireland.
Lightning Talk Session 1: Establishing a Culture of Open Research
Agape – Building an Open Science Practising Community
presented by Cassandra Murphy, Agape Open Science/Maynooth University;
Open Research Practices for Research Integrity
presented by Lai Ma, University College Dublin;
Research Assessment and Incentivising Open Research Practices
presented by David O’Connell, University College Cork
Keynote address 'Opening Science' at NORFest 2023 on November 2, 2023 at the Royal Irish Academy in Dublin Ireland. Keynote speaker: Chelle Gentemann, science lead for NASA’s Transform to Open Science Mission and co-chair of the U.S. White House Office for Science and Technology and Policy (OSTP) Sub-working group on the Year of Open Science
The Archiving Reproductive Health project as a FAIR data resource for humanit...dri_ireland
This presentation describes how the Archiving Reproductive Health project at the Digital Repository of Ireland can be used as a FAIR data resource for humanities researchers. It summarises the project progress to date and explain how ARH's digital collections can be used by researchers to build databases or data tools, can be searched using standardised vocabularies, and its outputs shared as openly licensed publications.
It was created by Clare Lanigan, Preetam Singhvi and Dr Lorraine Grimes of the ARH project and delivered by Clare Lanigan at the DARIAH Annual Event 2023 (https://annualevent.dariah.eu/) in Budapest on 8 June 2023.
Developing a self-care protocol for working with potentially traumatic data: ...dri_ireland
This presentation was given by Dr Lorraine Grimes and Clare Lanigan of the Archiving Reproductive Health project at the Digital Repository of Ireland at the conference 'Care for People in the Archives' held by the Archives Society of Alberta in Edmonton on 25 -27 May 2023. The presentation gives an overview of the ARH project and the process by which the Self-Care Protocol was developed and implemented.
The Digital Repository of Ireland Digital Preservation and Research Sustainab...dri_ireland
This presentation was delivered by DRI interim director Dr. Lisa Griffith as part of Love Data Week in University College Dublin (UCD) research community on 15th February 2023.
DRI's role in WorldFAIR: Cultural Heritage / Image Sharingdri_ireland
The WorldFAIR project is funded by Horizon Europe for 2 years to improve FAIR outputs through 13 disciplinary case studies. The Digital Repository of Ireland is leading the work package on the sharing of images in the cultural heritage sector. Presentation by DRI Director Dr. Natalie Harrower from SciDataCon 2022 at International Data Week, 20 June 2022 in Seoul, South Korea.
Introduction to research data managementdri_ireland
An Introduction to Research Data Management: slides from a presentation given online on May 12 2022, by Beth Knazook, Project Manager, Research Data. Covers topics such as: what are research data; why share research data; why DMPs are important; and where should you share your data?
These slides are from a presentation delivered by Dr James Louis Smith, postdoctoral fellow at University College Cork for the Ports, Past and Present project, delivered on 17 Sept 2021 as part of ‘Dublin in the Archives: Digital collections exploring the city and county’, a webinar hosted by the Digital Repository of Ireland as part of the Culture Night 2021 programme of events.
These slides are from a presentation delivered by Joe Lee, independent film and video maker, delivered on 17 Sept 2021 as part of ‘Dublin in the Archives: Digital collections exploring the city and county’, a webinar hosted by the Digital Repository of Ireland as part of the Culture Night 2021 programme of events.
These slides are from a presentation delivered by Karen De Lacey, county archivist at Fingal County Council, delivered on 17 Sept 2021 as part of ‘Dublin in the Archives: Digital collections exploring the city and county’, a webinar hosted by the Digital Repository of Ireland as part of the Culture Night 2021 programme of events.
These slides are from a presentation delivered by Emma Clarke, founder of Dublin Ghost Signs, delivered on 17 Sept 2021 as part of ‘Dublin in the Archives: Digital collections exploring the city and county’, a webinar hosted by the Digital Repository of Ireland as part of the Culture Night 2021 programme of events.
This presentation was delivered by Liz Miller, Professor in Communication Studies, Concordia University, as part of ‘Engaging Communities with Archives: Video as a tool for activism, advocacy, and archival work’, a collaborative online event hosted by the Digital Repository of Ireland (DRI) and the Public Record Office of Northern Ireland (PRONI) on 7 Sept 2021. The webinar focused on archival initiatives and participatory projects that aim to train or support community groups in using video to tell personal stories, bring about social change, or archive and preserve activism and advocacy work.
The presentation focuses on Mapping Memories, a participatory media initiative that offered over a hundred young individuals the opportunity to recount their stories of refugee experiences on their own terms.
Supporting Activists to Preserve Video Documentation dri_ireland
This presentation was delivered by Yvonne Ng, Archives Manager at WITNESS, as part of ‘Engaging Communities with Archives: Video as a tool for activism, advocacy, and archival work’, a collaborative online event hosted by the Digital Repository of Ireland (DRI) and the Public Record Office of Northern Ireland (PRONI) on 7 Sept 2021. The webinar focused on archival initiatives and participatory projects that aim to train or support community groups in using video to tell personal stories, bring about social change, or archive and preserve activism and advocacy work.
The presentation focuses on WITNESS’s work and how they support people to use video as a tool for activism and advocacy.
This presentation was delivered by Lynsey Gillespie, Archivist at PRONI, as part of ‘Engaging Communities with Archives: Video as a tool for activism, advocacy, and archival work’, a collaborative online event hosted by the Digital Repository of Ireland (DRI) and the Public Record Office of Northern Ireland (PRONI) on 7 Sept 2021. The webinar focused on archival initiatives and participatory projects that aim to train or support community groups in using video to tell personal stories, bring about social change, or archive and preserve activism and advocacy work.
The presentation focuses on Making the Future, a cross-border cultural programme that aims to empower people to use museum collections and archives to explore the past and create a powerful vision for future change.
As Europe's leading economic powerhouse and the fourth-largest hashtag#economy globally, Germany stands at the forefront of innovation and industrial might. Renowned for its precision engineering and high-tech sectors, Germany's economic structure is heavily supported by a robust service industry, accounting for approximately 68% of its GDP. This economic clout and strategic geopolitical stance position Germany as a focal point in the global cyber threat landscape.
In the face of escalating global tensions, particularly those emanating from geopolitical disputes with nations like hashtag#Russia and hashtag#China, hashtag#Germany has witnessed a significant uptick in targeted cyber operations. Our analysis indicates a marked increase in hashtag#cyberattack sophistication aimed at critical infrastructure and key industrial sectors. These attacks range from ransomware campaigns to hashtag#AdvancedPersistentThreats (hashtag#APTs), threatening national security and business integrity.
🔑 Key findings include:
🔍 Increased frequency and complexity of cyber threats.
🔍 Escalation of state-sponsored and criminally motivated cyber operations.
🔍 Active dark web exchanges of malicious tools and tactics.
Our comprehensive report delves into these challenges, using a blend of open-source and proprietary data collection techniques. By monitoring activity on critical networks and analyzing attack patterns, our team provides a detailed overview of the threats facing German entities.
This report aims to equip stakeholders across public and private sectors with the knowledge to enhance their defensive strategies, reduce exposure to cyber risks, and reinforce Germany's resilience against cyber threats.
Chatty Kathy - UNC Bootcamp Final Project Presentation - Final Version - 5.23...John Andrews
SlideShare Description for "Chatty Kathy - UNC Bootcamp Final Project Presentation"
Title: Chatty Kathy: Enhancing Physical Activity Among Older Adults
Description:
Discover how Chatty Kathy, an innovative project developed at the UNC Bootcamp, aims to tackle the challenge of low physical activity among older adults. Our AI-driven solution uses peer interaction to boost and sustain exercise levels, significantly improving health outcomes. This presentation covers our problem statement, the rationale behind Chatty Kathy, synthetic data and persona creation, model performance metrics, a visual demonstration of the project, and potential future developments. Join us for an insightful Q&A session to explore the potential of this groundbreaking project.
Project Team: Jay Requarth, Jana Avery, John Andrews, Dr. Dick Davis II, Nee Buntoum, Nam Yeongjin & Mat Nicholas
2. DRI Presentation
Publications
•Technical information for ingesting into the repository
•Reports on DRI activity
•Dissemination of best practice
•Lessons learned, frequently asked questions,
presentation slides
6. DRI Presentation
Upcoming Publications
•MARCXML
- to be published September 2017
•A/V formats factsheet
- updated guidelines on open source and optimal preservation formats
- considerations for digitised vs. born-digital materials
•Orphan Works – practical guidance
- Based on DRI’s own experience with the Inspiring Ireland Project
- Practical guidance for assessing copyright, particularly for institutions with limited
resources
- Full paper to follow