Slides from the Pecha Kucha on "The GoGeo Vision for Repositories" presented by Tony Mathys of EDINA on Thursday 1st August 2013 at Repository Fringe 2013.
Serving Ireland's Geospatial Information as Linked Data (ISWC 2016 Poster)Christophe Debruyne
Christophe Debruyne, Eamonn Clinton, Lorraine McNerney, Atul Nautiyal, Declan O'Sullivan:
Serving Ireland's Geospatial Information as Linked Data. International Semantic Web Conference (Posters & Demos) 2016
We present data.geohive.ie, which aims to provide an authoritative
platform for serving Ireland’s national geospatial data, including Linked Data. Currently, the platform provides information on Irish administrative boundaries and was designed to support two use cases: serving boundary data of geographic features at various level of detail and capturing the evolution of administrative boundaries. We report on the decisions taken for modeling and serving the data such as the adoption of an appropriate URI strategy, the development of necessary ontologies, and the use of (named) graphs to support aforementioned use cases.
http://ceur-ws.org/Vol-1690/paper14.pdf
Bob Jones, CERN & HNSciCloud Coordinator gives an update on the HNSciCloud Pre-Commercial Procurement which is now in its Solution Prototyping phase. The presentation includes also an overview of the prototypes under development.
This presentation, given by Bob Jones, CERN & HNSciCloud Coordinator, at the ESA-ESPI Workshop on “Space Data & Cloud Computing Infrastructures: Policies and Regulations”, describes what are the challenges and needs of the cloud users and explains how an hybrid cloud model can support them.
The MIMAS workshop discussed the RepositoryNet infrastructure and components including aggregation, text mining, search, benchmarking and statistics, registries, deposit tools, and metadata quality. It provided updates on components outside RepositoryNet like IRS Search and NAMES 2. A demonstration of IRUS showed its current functionality for benchmarking and statistics and future plans for funding, APIs, international scope, and business models. Developing service level agreements for RepNet services was also discussed.
This document discusses Bioschemas, which aims to enable findability and interoperability of life sciences data on the web. It defines schemas using Schema.org for different types of life sciences data, including datasets and data catalogs. Bioschemas has over 200 members across 35 organizations that have deployed Bioschemas markup. It has ongoing work to increase adoption of Bioschemas across different types of life sciences resources and provide training and events for the community.
EDINA is a national data center based at the University of Edinburgh that provides open access to scholarly resources and supports the UK education sector. It runs several geospatial services including GeoTagger for geotagging images, Cartogrammar for creating cartograms, GoGeo for discovering GIS resources and metadata, Unlock for georeferencing text, and ShareGeo and Openstream for mapping and sharing open geospatial data. EDINA also promotes open events and groups for geospatial topics.
Serving Ireland's Geospatial Information as Linked Data (ISWC 2016 Poster)Christophe Debruyne
Christophe Debruyne, Eamonn Clinton, Lorraine McNerney, Atul Nautiyal, Declan O'Sullivan:
Serving Ireland's Geospatial Information as Linked Data. International Semantic Web Conference (Posters & Demos) 2016
We present data.geohive.ie, which aims to provide an authoritative
platform for serving Ireland’s national geospatial data, including Linked Data. Currently, the platform provides information on Irish administrative boundaries and was designed to support two use cases: serving boundary data of geographic features at various level of detail and capturing the evolution of administrative boundaries. We report on the decisions taken for modeling and serving the data such as the adoption of an appropriate URI strategy, the development of necessary ontologies, and the use of (named) graphs to support aforementioned use cases.
http://ceur-ws.org/Vol-1690/paper14.pdf
Bob Jones, CERN & HNSciCloud Coordinator gives an update on the HNSciCloud Pre-Commercial Procurement which is now in its Solution Prototyping phase. The presentation includes also an overview of the prototypes under development.
This presentation, given by Bob Jones, CERN & HNSciCloud Coordinator, at the ESA-ESPI Workshop on “Space Data & Cloud Computing Infrastructures: Policies and Regulations”, describes what are the challenges and needs of the cloud users and explains how an hybrid cloud model can support them.
The MIMAS workshop discussed the RepositoryNet infrastructure and components including aggregation, text mining, search, benchmarking and statistics, registries, deposit tools, and metadata quality. It provided updates on components outside RepositoryNet like IRS Search and NAMES 2. A demonstration of IRUS showed its current functionality for benchmarking and statistics and future plans for funding, APIs, international scope, and business models. Developing service level agreements for RepNet services was also discussed.
This document discusses Bioschemas, which aims to enable findability and interoperability of life sciences data on the web. It defines schemas using Schema.org for different types of life sciences data, including datasets and data catalogs. Bioschemas has over 200 members across 35 organizations that have deployed Bioschemas markup. It has ongoing work to increase adoption of Bioschemas across different types of life sciences resources and provide training and events for the community.
EDINA is a national data center based at the University of Edinburgh that provides open access to scholarly resources and supports the UK education sector. It runs several geospatial services including GeoTagger for geotagging images, Cartogrammar for creating cartograms, GoGeo for discovering GIS resources and metadata, Unlock for georeferencing text, and ShareGeo and Openstream for mapping and sharing open geospatial data. EDINA also promotes open events and groups for geospatial topics.
2016 urisa track: nhd hydro linked data registery by michael tinkerGIS in the Rockies
Michael Tinker presented on using ScienceBase and linked data to share hydrological event data beyond the standard USGS point event domains currently included in the National Hydrography Dataset (NHD). ScienceBase allows users to store and share hydro linked data in communities, generates web services, and honors FGDC-compliant metadata. A pilot project used ScienceBase to model a hydro linked data community for sharing events in the Lower Colorado River System beyond what is contained in the NHD. ScienceBase offers benefits like web services, metadata, and a place to store and share NHD hydro linked data with downstream applications.
Data management using GeoNetwork at NCI - Jingbo Wang, Kesley Druken (NCI)ARDC
Data management using GeoNetwork at NCI - Jingbo Wang, Kesley Druken (NCI)
Presented at the ANDS facilitated GeoNetwork Community of Practice on April 3rd, 2017 in Canberra.
A Research Data Catalogue supporting Blue Growth: the BlueBRIDGE caseBlue BRIDGE
Presentation by Massimiliano Assante, CNR-ISTI, Pisa, Italy
How the FAIR principles should manifest in reality is largely open to interpretation. In this presentation it is described the approach exploited in the context of the BlueBRIDGE EU project. This approach culminates in an open, flexible and rich catalogue where an ample set of research resources are expected to be seamlessly discovered and accessed by overcoming interoperability and reusability issues. Behind the catalogue there is a rich and powerful infrastructure (D4Science.org) that enacts the catalogue FAIRness by deploying and operating a set of service and facilities enabling to actually have access the catalogue items payload (beyond metadata). The presentation describes some of the prototypical patterns implemented to enable the collaborative production and publication of scientific output compliant with the Open Science and FAIR principles. More on BlueBRIDGE here www.bluebridge-vres.eu
ICOS: Integrated Carbon Observation System Open data to open our eyes to clim...Blue BRIDGE
Presentation by Harry Lankreijer, ICOS-Carbon Portal, Lund University, Sweden.
ICOS is a pan-European research infrastructure (RI) for observing and understanding the greenhouse gas (GHG) balance of Europe and its adjacent regions. The major task of ICOS is to collect and make available in a transparent manner, the high-quality observational data from its state-of-the-art measurement stations. These ICOS data – from atmosphere, ecosystem and ocean stations – will contribute to research aiming to describe and understand the present state of the global carbon cycle. The Carbon Portal will be the virtual data center that present the data products and make it available. This presentation will briefly present the work of ICOS and the Carbon Portal towards open data with FAIR principles. ICOS has an open data policy with free use, requesting the user to give appropriate credit (Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 ). The Carbon Portal is developing a data catalogue using an ontology based on a semantic metadata description. This will make it possible to integrate ICOS observations with data from other RI’s as well with data of global networks. For integration, the Carbon Portal is actively following the developments of international standards for eg. metadata and data citation.
Edinburgh DataShare is a digital repository hosted by the University of Edinburgh's Data Library that stores and shares multi-disciplinary research datasets. It was developed using DSpace software with customizations to support different file types and metadata standards for various research domains. The Data Library engages with researchers through training, reference support, and projects to understand their data needs and improve data management, sharing and preservation services.
NCI Cancer Research Data Commons - Overviewimgcommcall
The NCI Cancer Research Data Commons aims to enable sharing of diverse cancer research data across institutions by providing easy access to data stored in domain-specific repositories through a common authentication and authorization mechanism. It utilizes a framework of reusable components including data nodes, a cancer data aggregator, and cloud resources to integrate genomic, imaging, proteomic, and other data types while controlling access. The goals are to facilitate discovery and analysis tools as well as sustainably sharing data publicly to advance cancer research.
Imaging Data Commons (IDC) - Introduction and intital approachimgcommcall
The document introduces the Imaging Data Commons (IDC) which will connect researchers to cancer image collections, metadata, and tools for searching, viewing, and analyzing imaging data and related data types. The IDC will build on existing technologies and collaborations, with an initial focus on radiology and pathology images stored in DICOM format. It will utilize public cancer image collections from the Cancer Imaging Archive and integrate with other nodes in the Cancer Research Data Commons. The team has experience with open-source imaging tools, cloud infrastructure, and standards development. The initial implementation phases will focus on defining the data model and use cases, evaluating existing tools, and developing a minimal viable product hosted on the Google Cloud platform.
ShareGeo is a spatially enabled data repository that allows users to search, view, and download geospatial data. It currently hosts 99 datasets and has had over 3,000 unique users and downloads since 2009. To encourage more deposits, it plans to offer an open deposit plugin and open access versions of datasets. Future improvements include visualizing datasets, adding formats like web services, and implementing user annotations and ratings.
Research Data Australia and the national research data landscapeRichard Ferrers
A presentation to RMIT Researcher Training week; 9 Oct 2018.
For Australian Research Data Commons (ARDC.edu.au).
Research Data Australia is the Australian national research data catalogue, managed by ARDC.
eROSA Stakeholder WS1: Challenges in making data FAIR – An Agronomic and Envi...e-ROSA
This document discusses challenges in making agronomic and environmental science data FAIR (Findable, Accessible, Interoperable, Reusable). It describes a case study combining weather, soil, and yield data from two sources to query weather data at yield locations. Key challenges identified include choosing appropriate ontologies, transforming internal databases and assigning identifiers, resolving data use limitations, developing interoperability standards, lack of semantics in agronomy, and the need for location-based linked data approaches and prepared spatial things with URIs. The document advocates preparing data for reuse through description, an open world view, REST APIs, and multichannel distribution.
Presentation by Daniele Bailo, INGV, Italy
EPOS has been designed with the vision of creating a pan-European infrastructure for solid Earth science to support a safe and sustainable society. In accordance with this scientific vision, the EPOS mission is to integrate the diverse and advanced European Research Infrastructures for solid Earth science relying on new e-science opportunities to monitor and unravel the dynamic and complex Earth System. EPOS will enable innovative multidisciplinary research for a better understanding of the Earth’s physical and chemical processes that control earthquakes, volcanic eruptions, ground instability and tsunami as well as the processes driving tectonics and Earth’s surface dynamics. To accomplish its mission, EPOS is engaging different stakeholders, not limited to scientists, to allow the Earth sciences to open new horizons in our understanding of the planet. Through integration of data, models and facilities, EPOS will allow the Earth science community to make a step change in developing new concepts and tools for key answers to scientific and socio-economic questions concerning geo-hazards and geo-resources as well as Earth sciences applications to the environment and human welfare.
The document provides information about Minesoft, a company that provides patent search and analysis solutions. It summarizes Minesoft's products and services, including its PatBase database which contains over 60 million patent family records from 106 patent authorities. The document also provides details on the data coverage and sources within PatBase, as well as the search, analytics, and visualization tools it offers users to analyze patent data.
Presentation reporting the current situation and projected requirements for the University of Bristol, delivered at the Jisc, Janet and the Digital Curation Centre (DCC) workshop on universities' Research Data Management Storage Requirements, February 2013, London.
This document summarizes Dr. Kai Simon's work on large-scale patent classification at the European Patent Office. It discusses how Averbis was selected in 2015 to use text mining to pre-classify unpublished patents and re-classify published patents if the classification system changes. The process involves classifying patents into over 250,000 classification codes across 250 departments, presenting a big data and fast response time challenge that text mining can help address.
Getting to the Repository of the Future Round TableRepository Fringe
Slides from the Getting to the Repository of the Future Round Table held on Thursday 2nd August 2013 at Repository Fringe 2013. The Round Table was chaired by Chris Awre, University of Hull, and Balviar Notay, JISC.
2016 urisa track: nhd hydro linked data registery by michael tinkerGIS in the Rockies
Michael Tinker presented on using ScienceBase and linked data to share hydrological event data beyond the standard USGS point event domains currently included in the National Hydrography Dataset (NHD). ScienceBase allows users to store and share hydro linked data in communities, generates web services, and honors FGDC-compliant metadata. A pilot project used ScienceBase to model a hydro linked data community for sharing events in the Lower Colorado River System beyond what is contained in the NHD. ScienceBase offers benefits like web services, metadata, and a place to store and share NHD hydro linked data with downstream applications.
Data management using GeoNetwork at NCI - Jingbo Wang, Kesley Druken (NCI)ARDC
Data management using GeoNetwork at NCI - Jingbo Wang, Kesley Druken (NCI)
Presented at the ANDS facilitated GeoNetwork Community of Practice on April 3rd, 2017 in Canberra.
A Research Data Catalogue supporting Blue Growth: the BlueBRIDGE caseBlue BRIDGE
Presentation by Massimiliano Assante, CNR-ISTI, Pisa, Italy
How the FAIR principles should manifest in reality is largely open to interpretation. In this presentation it is described the approach exploited in the context of the BlueBRIDGE EU project. This approach culminates in an open, flexible and rich catalogue where an ample set of research resources are expected to be seamlessly discovered and accessed by overcoming interoperability and reusability issues. Behind the catalogue there is a rich and powerful infrastructure (D4Science.org) that enacts the catalogue FAIRness by deploying and operating a set of service and facilities enabling to actually have access the catalogue items payload (beyond metadata). The presentation describes some of the prototypical patterns implemented to enable the collaborative production and publication of scientific output compliant with the Open Science and FAIR principles. More on BlueBRIDGE here www.bluebridge-vres.eu
ICOS: Integrated Carbon Observation System Open data to open our eyes to clim...Blue BRIDGE
Presentation by Harry Lankreijer, ICOS-Carbon Portal, Lund University, Sweden.
ICOS is a pan-European research infrastructure (RI) for observing and understanding the greenhouse gas (GHG) balance of Europe and its adjacent regions. The major task of ICOS is to collect and make available in a transparent manner, the high-quality observational data from its state-of-the-art measurement stations. These ICOS data – from atmosphere, ecosystem and ocean stations – will contribute to research aiming to describe and understand the present state of the global carbon cycle. The Carbon Portal will be the virtual data center that present the data products and make it available. This presentation will briefly present the work of ICOS and the Carbon Portal towards open data with FAIR principles. ICOS has an open data policy with free use, requesting the user to give appropriate credit (Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 ). The Carbon Portal is developing a data catalogue using an ontology based on a semantic metadata description. This will make it possible to integrate ICOS observations with data from other RI’s as well with data of global networks. For integration, the Carbon Portal is actively following the developments of international standards for eg. metadata and data citation.
Edinburgh DataShare is a digital repository hosted by the University of Edinburgh's Data Library that stores and shares multi-disciplinary research datasets. It was developed using DSpace software with customizations to support different file types and metadata standards for various research domains. The Data Library engages with researchers through training, reference support, and projects to understand their data needs and improve data management, sharing and preservation services.
NCI Cancer Research Data Commons - Overviewimgcommcall
The NCI Cancer Research Data Commons aims to enable sharing of diverse cancer research data across institutions by providing easy access to data stored in domain-specific repositories through a common authentication and authorization mechanism. It utilizes a framework of reusable components including data nodes, a cancer data aggregator, and cloud resources to integrate genomic, imaging, proteomic, and other data types while controlling access. The goals are to facilitate discovery and analysis tools as well as sustainably sharing data publicly to advance cancer research.
Imaging Data Commons (IDC) - Introduction and intital approachimgcommcall
The document introduces the Imaging Data Commons (IDC) which will connect researchers to cancer image collections, metadata, and tools for searching, viewing, and analyzing imaging data and related data types. The IDC will build on existing technologies and collaborations, with an initial focus on radiology and pathology images stored in DICOM format. It will utilize public cancer image collections from the Cancer Imaging Archive and integrate with other nodes in the Cancer Research Data Commons. The team has experience with open-source imaging tools, cloud infrastructure, and standards development. The initial implementation phases will focus on defining the data model and use cases, evaluating existing tools, and developing a minimal viable product hosted on the Google Cloud platform.
ShareGeo is a spatially enabled data repository that allows users to search, view, and download geospatial data. It currently hosts 99 datasets and has had over 3,000 unique users and downloads since 2009. To encourage more deposits, it plans to offer an open deposit plugin and open access versions of datasets. Future improvements include visualizing datasets, adding formats like web services, and implementing user annotations and ratings.
Research Data Australia and the national research data landscapeRichard Ferrers
A presentation to RMIT Researcher Training week; 9 Oct 2018.
For Australian Research Data Commons (ARDC.edu.au).
Research Data Australia is the Australian national research data catalogue, managed by ARDC.
eROSA Stakeholder WS1: Challenges in making data FAIR – An Agronomic and Envi...e-ROSA
This document discusses challenges in making agronomic and environmental science data FAIR (Findable, Accessible, Interoperable, Reusable). It describes a case study combining weather, soil, and yield data from two sources to query weather data at yield locations. Key challenges identified include choosing appropriate ontologies, transforming internal databases and assigning identifiers, resolving data use limitations, developing interoperability standards, lack of semantics in agronomy, and the need for location-based linked data approaches and prepared spatial things with URIs. The document advocates preparing data for reuse through description, an open world view, REST APIs, and multichannel distribution.
Presentation by Daniele Bailo, INGV, Italy
EPOS has been designed with the vision of creating a pan-European infrastructure for solid Earth science to support a safe and sustainable society. In accordance with this scientific vision, the EPOS mission is to integrate the diverse and advanced European Research Infrastructures for solid Earth science relying on new e-science opportunities to monitor and unravel the dynamic and complex Earth System. EPOS will enable innovative multidisciplinary research for a better understanding of the Earth’s physical and chemical processes that control earthquakes, volcanic eruptions, ground instability and tsunami as well as the processes driving tectonics and Earth’s surface dynamics. To accomplish its mission, EPOS is engaging different stakeholders, not limited to scientists, to allow the Earth sciences to open new horizons in our understanding of the planet. Through integration of data, models and facilities, EPOS will allow the Earth science community to make a step change in developing new concepts and tools for key answers to scientific and socio-economic questions concerning geo-hazards and geo-resources as well as Earth sciences applications to the environment and human welfare.
The document provides information about Minesoft, a company that provides patent search and analysis solutions. It summarizes Minesoft's products and services, including its PatBase database which contains over 60 million patent family records from 106 patent authorities. The document also provides details on the data coverage and sources within PatBase, as well as the search, analytics, and visualization tools it offers users to analyze patent data.
Presentation reporting the current situation and projected requirements for the University of Bristol, delivered at the Jisc, Janet and the Digital Curation Centre (DCC) workshop on universities' Research Data Management Storage Requirements, February 2013, London.
This document summarizes Dr. Kai Simon's work on large-scale patent classification at the European Patent Office. It discusses how Averbis was selected in 2015 to use text mining to pre-classify unpublished patents and re-classify published patents if the classification system changes. The process involves classifying patents into over 250,000 classification codes across 250 departments, presenting a big data and fast response time challenge that text mining can help address.
Getting to the Repository of the Future Round TableRepository Fringe
Slides from the Getting to the Repository of the Future Round Table held on Thursday 2nd August 2013 at Repository Fringe 2013. The Round Table was chaired by Chris Awre, University of Hull, and Balviar Notay, JISC.
The STARS Shared Initiative - Pablo de Castro and Jackie ProvenRepository Fringe
The STARS Shared Initiative is a joint initiative between the University of St Andrews, RepositoryNet, and SDL to enhance the university's CRIS/IR research information management system. The initiative will test RepositoryNet's repository service catalogue by implementing services like SWORD, IRUS-UK, OpenAIRE, and ORCID in both the university's Pure CRIS and DSpace-based institutional repository. This will provide an example of delivering repository services in a complex higher education repository landscape and reinforce the University of St Andrews' research information priorities.
This 3 sentence document thanks sponsors for supporting the Repository Fringe event organized by the Digital Curation Centre, EDINA, the University of Edinburgh Library, and University Collections. The event took place on Friday, August 2nd, 2013. The organizers express gratitude to sponsors for their support of the Repository Fringe event in 2013.
The document discusses the role of libraries in providing access to research data and introduces DataCite, a global consortium focused on improving infrastructure for research datasets. Key points:
- Scientific information now includes non-textual data, requiring libraries to provide access to datasets in addition to publications.
- DataCite provides DOIs and standards to help data repositories and publishers improve identification, citation and discovery of datasets.
- DataCite has over 15 member institutions worldwide and has registered over 800,000 datasets with DOIs to help connect publications to underlying research data.
Presentation given by Angus Whyte as part of the Digital Curation Centre's Round Table: "How can other stakeholders support repositories on research data", which was led by Anna Clements, University of St Andrews; Angus Whyte, Digital Curation Centre; Robin Rice, University of Edinburgh; Sarah Jones, Digital Curation Centre. The Round Table took place on Friday 2nd August 2013 at Repository Fringe 2013
Now we are six: Integrating Edinburgh DataShare into local and internet in...Robin Rice
#iassist40 presentation, Toronto, 6/6/2014.
Abstract:
Edinburgh DataShare, an institutional data repository, is six years old. It was built as a demonstrator in DSpace by EDINA and Data Library and has been given new life by the University of Edinburgh’s Research Data Management initiative. Following testing by pilot users in various departments last year, DataShare is confirmed as a key RDM service. Since 2008 much external infrastructure has grown around data sharing, and software developers, publishers and librarians are creating new innovations around the sharing and re-use of data daily. How can DataShare be shaped to fit in to this ever-more-sophisticated environment? A number of ongoing developments are helping us integrate the repository in the global context. DataShare is being indexed in Thomson-Reuter’s Data Citation Index. We aspire to attain the Data Seal of Approval for DataShare, a badge that confers trustworthiness through peer review. It is listed in re3data.org and databib registries of data repositories. We offer via extension, peer review of datasets to our depositors by listing journals that publish ‘data papers’ such as F1000 Research. Locally, as Information Services builds new data services such as the Data Store, [private data] Vault and the [metadata-only] Register, we can focus DataShare on its named purpose.
Closing Keynote: Prof. Gary Hall (Coventry University) Repository Fringe
The document discusses topics related to open access publishing and cultural theory. It lists several open access initiatives including an online archive for cultural studies, an open access press, a series of digital books, and an open university. It also mentions several books published through an open access digital book series.
Presented by Tony Mathys at a Current Issues and Applications of the Geospatial Technologies Lecture, Department of Geography and Environment, Aberdeen University, 24 February 2012
The document summarizes a workshop on geospatial metadata and spatial data. It discusses the importance of metadata for discovering and managing spatial datasets. It introduces geospatial metadata standards like FGDC, ISO 19115, and INSPIRE. It also describes the UK AGMAP profile, Geodoc metadata editor tool, GoGeo portal, and ShareGeo open data repository for sharing spatial resources in academia. Hands-on sessions demonstrate creating metadata and accessing datasets.
This document provides information about a geospatial metadata and spatial data workshop. The workshop will include a presentation session on metadata standards and application profiles, as well as a demonstration session using the Geodoc Metadata Editor tool and Go-Geo! portal. The document also provides background information on geospatial metadata, standards such as INSPIRE and UK AGMAP 2, and resources available for metadata creation and publication including the Geodoc tool and Go-Geo! portal.
This document provides an overview of a geospatial metadata and spatial data workshop held at the University of Oxford. The workshop covered topics such as metadata standards, application profiles, geospatial metadata tools and portals for sharing spatial data and metadata. Hands-on sessions demonstrated how to create metadata using the Geodoc Metadata Editor tool and access spatial data repositories through the Go-Geo portal and ShareGeo open data portal.
This document provides an overview of a geospatial metadata and spatial data workshop. It discusses the importance of metadata for discovering and managing spatial datasets. It introduces common geospatial metadata standards like FGDC, ISO 19115, and INSPIRE and the concept of application profiles. The document outlines tools and resources for UK academics to create and publish metadata, including the UK AGMAP profile, Geodoc editor, GoGeo portal, and ShareGeo repository. Hands-on sessions demonstrate using these resources to generate metadata and access open spatial data.
The document summarizes a workshop on geospatial metadata and spatial data. It discusses the importance of metadata for managing and sharing spatial datasets, providing key information about the data. It also covers metadata standards like FGDC, ISO 19115, and application profiles. The workshop includes presentations on the UK Academic Geospatial Metadata Application Profile and tools for creating metadata like the Geodoc Metadata Editor and Go-Geo portal.
The document summarizes a workshop on geospatial metadata and spatial data. The workshop includes presentations on metadata standards and application profiles, as well as demonstrations of metadata editing and spatial data repository tools. The document provides background on the importance of metadata for discovering, managing, and sharing spatial data across different sources and applications.
This document summarizes a geospatial metadata and spatial data workshop. The workshop included presentations on metadata standards and application profiles, demonstrations of metadata tools like the Geodoc Metadata Editor, and hands-on sessions with metadata tools and repositories. The goal of the workshop was to promote best practices for documenting and sharing geospatial data through metadata.
This document summarizes a geospatial metadata and spatial data workshop. The workshop included presentations on metadata standards and application profiles, demonstrations of metadata editing and portal tools, and discussions of current and future activities to support the use and sharing of geospatial data and metadata in UK academia.
Overview of the world of geospatial metadata, and the role of the EDINA service GoGeo in creating, saving, and discovering it. Presented on 19 June 2014 by Tony Mathys in Aberdeen, Scotland.
The Go-Geo! Spatial Data Portal provides a discovery and research tool for UK academics to find geospatial resources. It includes over 2,820 searchable geospatial datasets and metadata records. Go-Geo! also provides geospatial metadata best practices and guidelines, metadata editing and publishing tools, workshops and training to support the use and sharing of spatial data across UK academia.
Exposing EO Linked (meta-)Data from OpenSearch CatalogueRaul Palma
This document discusses exposing Earth observation (EO) linked (meta-)data from OpenSearch catalogues. It provides background on linked data principles and publishing EO data as linked data. It proposes an approach to generate linked data from EO product metadata by implementing wrappers around APIs to transform requests and results into RDF in real-time. This allows querying REST APIs with SPARQL and exposing the results through a SPARQL endpoint without needing to store the data physically. The FedEO system provides a specific use case, federating access to multiple EO catalogues through its OpenSearch interface.
GBIF is an intergovernmental organization that facilitates open access to biodiversity data worldwide via the internet. It provides three main types of infrastructure: physical infrastructure including data workflows and datasets; information infrastructure such as data portals and products; and capability infrastructure like knowledge management and standard development. GBIF aims to make biodiversity data freely available under common standards to support scientific research, conservation, and sustainable development. It currently hosts over 400 million data records from more than 10,000 datasets contributed by its 52 member countries and 36 international organizations.
Publication of INSPIRE-based agricultural linked dataRaul Palma
Results of the publication of linked data from the agriculture sector within DATABio project, based on the agriculture data model developed in FOODIE project
Cloud Computing Needs for Earth Observation Data Analysis: EGI and EOSC-hubBjörn Backeberg
This presentation was given during the Japan Geosciences Union 2019. Session details can be found at http://www.jpgu.org/meeting_e2019/SessionList_en/detail/M-GI31.htm
GeoSolutions has been involved into a number of projects, ranging from local administrations to global institutions, involving GeoNode deployments, customizations and enhancements. A gallery of projects and use cases will showcase the versatility and effectiveness of GeoNode, both as a standalone application and as a service component, for building secured geodata catalogs and web mapping services. Lastly, ongoing and future developments will be presented ranging from the upcoming integration with MapStore to the monitoring and analytics dashboard or the support for time series data.
Researchers require infrastructures that ensure a maximum of accessibility, stability and reliability to facilitate working with and sharing of research data. Such infrastructures are being increasingly summarised under the term Research Data Repositories (RDR). The project re3data.org – Registry of Research Data Repositories – began to index research data repositories in 2012 and offers researchers, funding organisations, libraries and publishers an overview of the heterogeneous research data repository landscape. In December 2014 re3data.org listed more than 1,030 research data repositories, which are described in detail using the re3data.org schema (http://dx.doi.org/10.2312/re3.003). Information icons help researchers to identify easily an adequate repository for the storage and reuse of their data. This talk describes the heterogeneous RDR landscape and presents a typology of institutional, disciplinary, multidisciplinary and project-specific RDR. Further, it outlines the features of re3data. org and it shows current developments for integration into data management planning tools and other services.
By the end of 2015 re3data.org and Databib (Purdue University, USA) will merge their services, which will then be managed under the auspices of DataCite. The aim of this merger is to reduce duplication of effort and to serve the research community better with a single, sustainable registry of research data repositories. The talk will present this organisational development as a best practice example for the development of international research information services.
This document summarizes the COBWEB project, AIP-6, and how federated access management could help meet their goals. COBWEB aims to crowdsource environmental data while ensuring data quality and privacy. AIP-6 will set up a federation of organizations to enable single sign-on for the GEOSS system. The document discusses how federated access control could authenticate users while protecting sensitive data sources. COBWEB and AIP-6 plan to demonstrate how federations can help with these tasks and inform future work on authorization and commerce.
Similar to The GoGeo Vision for Repositories (Pecha Kucha) - Tony Mathys (20)
Unlocking Thesis Data - Stephen Grace, University of East LondonRepository Fringe
This document discusses unlocking thesis data by making it openly available online. It notes the benefits of doing so for students, funders, institutions, and researchers. It also provides examples of case studies from several universities that have assigned digital object identifiers (DOIs) to student theses to make them easily identifiable and citable. The document seeks feedback on what systems can be used to create and use persistent identifiers for thesis data and what type of data should or could be deposited online.
Open Access workshop at Repository Fringe 2015 - Valerie McCutcheonRepository Fringe
This document discusses an open access workshop and various topics related to open access publishing. It mentions notifying papers, choosing an item type, uploading documents and licenses, using Sherpa to inform open access routes, filling publication fields and adding open access information. It also discusses RCUK and REF compliance using RIOXX profiles, exporting to funders, and breakout groups on routing publications, Sherpa services, open access metadata, and installing/configuring RIOXX and REF profiles.
Repositories for OA, RDM and Beyond - Rory McNichollRepository Fringe
This document summarizes the history and services of the University of London Computer Centre (ULCC), including its Digital Archives & Research Technologies (DART) service. DART provides open access repositories, research data repositories, and archival storage using platforms like EPrints, OJS, and Arkivum. It works with the research community to meet open access and research data management requirements. The presentation concludes by discussing potential future directions like preservation as a service and moving back through the full research lifecycle.
The document discusses interest from researchers at other universities in Edinburgh's integration of electronic lab notebooks (ELNs) with research data management systems (RDMS). It summarizes the key benefits of RSpace, Edinburgh's ELN and RDMS, including its ability to capture, organize, and share data and files. It connects to Edinburgh's data storage systems and is integrated with their data repository and archive. This provides researchers an integrated research data management workflow.
This document summarizes a presentation on building data networks between authors, repositories, and journals. It discusses why researchers should work with data journals, the general criteria data journals require of repositories, and introduces the Journal of Open Research Software and initiatives like DataCite UK and BioSharing that aim to improve data sharing and reuse through standards and databases.
Building data networks: exploring trust and interoperability between authoris...Repository Fringe
Building data networks: exploring trust and interoperability between authoris, repositories and journals. Varsha Khodiyar , Scientific Data; Neil Chue Hong, Journal of Open Research Software; Rachael Kotarski, DataCite, Peter McQuilton, BioSharing; Reza Salek, Metabolights. At Repository Fringe 2015
Jisc on repositories unleashing data - Daniela DucaRepository Fringe
Jisc aims to make the UK the most digitally advanced education and research nation. It supports research through developing shared infrastructure, providing input to funders and publishers, and supporting standards. It is working on two relevant projects: the UK Research Data Discovery Service, which aims to make research data more discoverable by evaluating metadata models from Australia and Canada; and Research Data Metrics, which is scoping a tool to assess data usage and management systems through a proof of concept using the IRUS dataset.
IRUS-UK is a national aggregation service that collects usage statistics from UK institutional repositories. It processes raw download data into COUNTER-compliant statistics. A small piece of code is added to repository software to gather basic data for each download and send it to the IRUS-UK server. This data is then displayed through a web interface, SUSHI service, and API. Future priorities for IRUS-UK include increasing participating repositories, implementing the tracker for more software, expanding reports, leveraging additional metadata, and international collaboration.
Open Data and Sharing Science - Graham Steel, ContentmineRepository Fringe
This document contains information about Graham Steel, including his work with open knowledge and science groups in Scotland. It lists his blog and social media profiles, as well as links to resources on open data repositories, open notebook science, and content mining. The document promotes open sharing of research outputs and information.
The document discusses the benefits of exercise for mental health. Regular physical activity can help reduce anxiety and depression and improve mood and cognitive function. Exercise causes chemical changes in the brain that may help protect against mental illness and improve symptoms for those who already suffer from conditions like anxiety and depression.
Jisc is developing REF and Monitor tools to support open access compliance. The REF plugin will build on the previous version and institutions must install the RIOXX plugin. Jisc is also investigating a plugin for DSpace. Monitor tools include Monitor Local for institutions to track open access outputs and funding, and Monitor UK which aggregates data at a national level for analytics and sharing gold OA cost information.
Jisc is working to support funder compliance with metadata standards for research outputs. They have developed the RIOXX metadata application profile and guidelines in collaboration with RCUK and HEFCE. Implementing RIOXX will facilitate consistency in metadata fields, interoperability between systems, and reporting of research outputs from institutions to funders. Jisc is providing plugins, patches, and support to help institutional repositories implement RIOXX as recommended by RCUK.
Linking Software: citations, roles, references and moreRepository Fringe
This document discusses issues around properly attributing and citing software in research. It notes that current practices do not sufficiently reward those who create and reuse high-quality software and data. The document proposes treating software and data as first-class research outputs by publishing papers about software and data to allow them to be properly referenced and credited. It also discusses challenges around identifying citable elements of software, versioning, defining authorship and roles, and ensuring proper linking of metadata.
The document discusses Jisc Publications Router, which helps institutions capture research outputs by routing publication metadata from various sources to institutional repositories. Router 1.0 demonstrated a viable prototype routing metadata from Europe PMC and Nature, and full text from Europe PMC and eLife. Router 2.0 is now being developed to provide a pilot service, migrating existing participants and adding new content providers with the goal of becoming a full service by August 2016. It will have a new architecture and aim to capture more content and integrate better with other Jisc open access services.
This document discusses linking research outputs to enable reproducibility and acknowledgement through citation. It notes that not all research outputs are as easily identified as articles. Data citation allows research to be linked through identifiers for data, authors, and other research artifacts like theses, papers, and monographs. Technical and human infrastructure is needed for open research that integrates these linked objects and identifiers. Outreach and sustainability are also addressed.
HHuLO Access – Hull, Huddersfield and Lincoln explore open access good practi...Repository Fringe
HHuLO Access – Hull, Huddersfield and Lincoln explore open access good practice - Chris Awre, University of Hull. This presentation was part of Repository Fringe 2014, which took place from 30th to 31st July 2014 in Edinburgh.
Latest developments in Hydra-land - Chris Awre, University of HullRepository Fringe
Latest developments in Hydra-land - Chris Awre, University of Hull. This presentation was part of Repository Fringe 2014, which took place from 30th to 31st July 2014, in Edinburgh.
ArchivesSpace - Scott Renton, University of EdinburghRepository Fringe
ArchivesSpace - Scott Renton, University of Edinburgh. This presentation was part of Repository Fringe 2014, which took place from 30th to 31st July 2014 in Edinburgh.
Gender and Mental Health - Counselling and Family Therapy Applications and In...PsychoTech Services
A proprietary approach developed by bringing together the best of learning theories from Psychology, design principles from the world of visualization, and pedagogical methods from over a decade of training experience, that enables you to: Learn better, faster!
This document provides an overview of wound healing, its functions, stages, mechanisms, factors affecting it, and complications.
A wound is a break in the integrity of the skin or tissues, which may be associated with disruption of the structure and function.
Healing is the body’s response to injury in an attempt to restore normal structure and functions.
Healing can occur in two ways: Regeneration and Repair
There are 4 phases of wound healing: hemostasis, inflammation, proliferation, and remodeling. This document also describes the mechanism of wound healing. Factors that affect healing include infection, uncontrolled diabetes, poor nutrition, age, anemia, the presence of foreign bodies, etc.
Complications of wound healing like infection, hyperpigmentation of scar, contractures, and keloid formation.
How to Download & Install Module From the Odoo App Store in Odoo 17Celine George
Custom modules offer the flexibility to extend Odoo's capabilities, address unique requirements, and optimize workflows to align seamlessly with your organization's processes. By leveraging custom modules, businesses can unlock greater efficiency, productivity, and innovation, empowering them to stay competitive in today's dynamic market landscape. In this tutorial, we'll guide you step by step on how to easily download and install modules from the Odoo App Store.
🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥
إضغ بين إيديكم من أقوى الملازم التي صممتها
ملزمة تشريح الجهاز الهيكلي (نظري 3)
💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀
تتميز هذهِ الملزمة بعِدة مُميزات :
1- مُترجمة ترجمة تُناسب جميع المستويات
2- تحتوي على 78 رسم توضيحي لكل كلمة موجودة بالملزمة (لكل كلمة !!!!)
#فهم_ماكو_درخ
3- دقة الكتابة والصور عالية جداً جداً جداً
4- هُنالك بعض المعلومات تم توضيحها بشكل تفصيلي جداً (تُعتبر لدى الطالب أو الطالبة بإنها معلومات مُبهمة ومع ذلك تم توضيح هذهِ المعلومات المُبهمة بشكل تفصيلي جداً
5- الملزمة تشرح نفسها ب نفسها بس تكلك تعال اقراني
6- تحتوي الملزمة في اول سلايد على خارطة تتضمن جميع تفرُعات معلومات الجهاز الهيكلي المذكورة في هذهِ الملزمة
واخيراً هذهِ الملزمة حلالٌ عليكم وإتمنى منكم إن تدعولي بالخير والصحة والعافية فقط
كل التوفيق زملائي وزميلاتي ، زميلكم محمد الذهبي 💊💊
🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥
2. 2
three decades of geographical
(spatial) data digitisation and capture
numerous academic disciplines
use Geographic Info System (GIS)
software for research and teaching
* 2006 spatial data audit conducted
at four universities yielded:
+500 datasets
100s of orphan datasets
considerable cost and time
invested in spatial data creation
Requires a spatial data management, discovery and sharing
solution delivered through metadata and infrastructure.
Background
4. 4
• AGMAP supports the specific
needs of UK H&FE
• Comprises elements from
ISO 19115, UK GEMINI and
INSPIRE
• Supports documentation of
datasets and geo-services
(discovery and descriptive)
• AGMAP elements mapped to
FGDC, Dublin Core and
Data Documentation Initiative
(DDI)
• 250 pp. of AGMAP guidelines
UK Academic Geospatial Metadata
Application Profile (UK AGMAP)
11. 11
2007-2013 Geodoc usage
Users affiliated with 49
UK academic institutions
3,130 logins
2,319 metadata records created
only 230 records published
most of these 230 records
published on the GoGeo Portal’s
private, institutional nodes
12. 12
* Intellectual Property Rights (IPR);
* legacy data;
* trust, liability fears, privacy and security;
* residual licensed data rights for derived data;
* concerns over data quality (data creator and user);
* revisions to metadata standards; and
* confusion about standards compliance and which standard to use.
time and cost for the following:
- updating metadata records (descriptive);
- creating anonymised data for release;
- delivery (normalise, transform and harmonise data); and
- short and long-term investment in infrastructure and data and
software archiving.
Nature Journal, 2013
Reasons
16. 16
* Built with Dspace to deposit and download spatial data
* 216 datasets deposited (30% external contributors)
* 3,000 downloads a month
Share Geo Open Data Repository
18. University X
Vision I: awareness and data management
Repository
*Metadata Workshops
*GoGeo Institutional Nodes
ShareGeo
Open Data
Repository
GoGeo Open
Portal
19. 19
University X ShareGeo
Open Data
Repository
Spatial
Data User
Repository
*Metadata Workshops
*GoGeo Institutional Nodes
GoGeo Open
Portal
Vision II: data sharing