Presentation given at a workshop of Science Europe "Data on Research Activity: Towards Data Interoperability for Research Funding and Research Performing Org dfanisations" on 15.6.2016
Slides prepared for the Swiss-edu ID & ORCID Working Group Meeting, 16.10.2014
Describes the current identiy management of the Swiss National Science Foundation (SNSF) and possible scenarios with the swiss-edu ID and ORCID integration
Slides prepared for the Swiss-edu ID & ORCID Working Group Meeting, 16.10.2014
Describes the current identiy management of the Swiss National Science Foundation (SNSF) and possible scenarios with the swiss-edu ID and ORCID integration
If Scott Dual Language Magnet Elementary School in Topeka, Kansas, were to write a six-word memoir, it might sound like this: Blacklist to waitlist in two years; or, Built from strengths, success soon followed.
Verderflex Family of Liquid Handling PumpsVerder, Inc.
Verderflex® peristaltic hose pumps and tube pumps are the ideal solution for pumping liquids. Verderflex Peristaltic tube and hose pumps from Verder have gained worldwide prominence, particularly in dosing applications. These applications involve abrasive, highly corrosive, viscous, high density and shear sensitive products within industries such as water and waste water, food & beverage, chemical, biofuel, bioenergy, print & packaging and ceramics.
BE Inspired Client Reita Clanton is targeting community organizations that service youth; and the educators and coaches who work with them, for her Living from the Inside Out project. The venture, which has a primary goal of inspiring youth to connect with their unique potential, cultivates self-discovery, leadership, mindful thinking (putting the engine in drive) and creativity. Visit Reita Clanton on Linkedin for more information!
Reportaje de la Revista Estrategias (Abril 2010) sobre la situación actual del sector de los eventos en España, a partir de un conversatorio entre los siguientes participantes:
- Héctor Merodio (CEO VisualMente).
- Gonzalo Gordillo (Dtor. Gral. EDT Eventos).
- Nuria Abril (Grupo Alfasom).
- Begoña Villa (Dtra. Team Marketing).
- Manuel Berjón (AV Medios).
- Fernando López (Dtor. Gral. Divertia).
If Scott Dual Language Magnet Elementary School in Topeka, Kansas, were to write a six-word memoir, it might sound like this: Blacklist to waitlist in two years; or, Built from strengths, success soon followed.
Verderflex Family of Liquid Handling PumpsVerder, Inc.
Verderflex® peristaltic hose pumps and tube pumps are the ideal solution for pumping liquids. Verderflex Peristaltic tube and hose pumps from Verder have gained worldwide prominence, particularly in dosing applications. These applications involve abrasive, highly corrosive, viscous, high density and shear sensitive products within industries such as water and waste water, food & beverage, chemical, biofuel, bioenergy, print & packaging and ceramics.
BE Inspired Client Reita Clanton is targeting community organizations that service youth; and the educators and coaches who work with them, for her Living from the Inside Out project. The venture, which has a primary goal of inspiring youth to connect with their unique potential, cultivates self-discovery, leadership, mindful thinking (putting the engine in drive) and creativity. Visit Reita Clanton on Linkedin for more information!
Reportaje de la Revista Estrategias (Abril 2010) sobre la situación actual del sector de los eventos en España, a partir de un conversatorio entre los siguientes participantes:
- Héctor Merodio (CEO VisualMente).
- Gonzalo Gordillo (Dtor. Gral. EDT Eventos).
- Nuria Abril (Grupo Alfasom).
- Begoña Villa (Dtra. Team Marketing).
- Manuel Berjón (AV Medios).
- Fernando López (Dtor. Gral. Divertia).
ORCID for funders webinar - Josh Brown 8 March 2017ARDC
Funders play a critical role, along with universities and publishers, in building and supporting the infrastructure to support open research. Major funders, such as the European Commission, agree that persistent identifiers for people and works are necessary components of this infrastructure. ORCID provides researchers the tools to link their ORCID iD to their funding awards and a growing number of funders are integrating ORCID identifiers into grants application and post-award reporting workflows or are planning to do so. Using ORCID functionality helps to streamline reporting processes during grant application, and, after award, to enable outcomes reporting. This webinar is designed to connect funders who are integrating ORCID identifiers or are looking to do so.
Persistent Identifiers (PIDs) are an increasingly important tool and technology that enable new services for research. They are attached to outputs, grant funding, people and more. They provide a way to connect data, improve accuracy, and help the flow of information. Researchers can benefit from time savings, and more accurate attribution (think better citation data…) and institutions can gain efficiency savings and a better understanding of their research portfolio.
This webinar will provide an overview of the current PID landscape and will offer guidance on how PIDs for people (ORCID iDs) can be integrated in your systems, helping your researchers to take advantage of new and emerging services.
Building Open Research Infrastructure with PIDsETH-Bibliothek
Learn more about ORCID, how it enables connections between persistent identifiers to increase transparency and trust in research information and how to get involved.
Spreading the ORCID word: ORCID communications webinar (June 2016)ORCID, Inc
Slides: Spreading the ORCID word: ORCID communications webinar
14 June 2016 (Asia Pacific). A video of the webinar is available at Vimeo: https://vimeo.com/171054069
ORCID: Connecting Research and ResearchersORCID, Inc
Webinar presentation by Laurel Haak to Stellenbosch University on ORCID, its current adoption by researchers and integrations by research community members.
FundRef on the AAP/PSP panel: CHORUS: A Collaborative Approach to Public AccessCrossref
Carol Anne Meyer presents an overview and status of CrossRef's FundRef funder identification service including the FundRef Registry and how it serves as the infrastructure for CHORUS and other public access initiatives.
How to Calculate OA APC Spend for Your UniversityHeather Piwowar
Universities are hungry to know how much they spend on Open Access fees. This data is important to planning transformative and read and publish agreements, forming library strategy, and understanding scholarly communication on your campus. Unfortunately, it hasn’t been easy to calculate how much your university is spending on Open Access.
Learn how recent developments in data sources and tools have made this easier during this webinar. We will discuss the underlying concepts behind calculating OA article-processing fee (APC) spend, and provide you with paths to calculate the Open Access fees paid by your institution. ALCTS webinar.
Presentation given at the OpenCon, Switzerland, 21.09.2018
https://openconswiss.github.io/ - #OpenConSwitzerland.
From the old vision of Open Access to the latest latest event about the National Strategy and Plan S.
Wissenschaftliche Publikationen zwischen überteuerten Verlagslizenzen und Ope...Christian Gutknecht
Präsentation vom 27.April 2015 an der UZH, Bibliotheken Standort Nord.
Belohnung für den Crowdfunding Beitrag einiger engagierten InstitutsbibliothekarInnen. Herzlichen Dank!
Open Access and der Universität Zürich: Auf dem Weg von der Lizenz- zur Publi...Christian Gutknecht
Präsentation über Green- und Golden Road Open Access an der Universität Zürich, gehalten an der Jahrestagung der Arbeitsgemeinschaft für medizinisches Bibliothekswesen (AGMB) am 26.09.2012 in Aachen.
Abstract: http://dx.doi.org/10.3205/12agmb05
Präsentation anlässlich eines Thementreffs der Hauptbibliothek Universität Zürich zum Thema "Neue Open Access-Themen mit Bedeutung für wissenschaftliche Bibliotheken" am 23.7.2012
Deep Behavioral Phenotyping in Systems Neuroscience for Functional Atlasing a...Ana Luísa Pinho
Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI) provides means to characterize brain activations in response to behavior. However, cognitive neuroscience has been limited to group-level effects referring to the performance of specific tasks. To obtain the functional profile of elementary cognitive mechanisms, the combination of brain responses to many tasks is required. Yet, to date, both structural atlases and parcellation-based activations do not fully account for cognitive function and still present several limitations. Further, they do not adapt overall to individual characteristics. In this talk, I will give an account of deep-behavioral phenotyping strategies, namely data-driven methods in large task-fMRI datasets, to optimize functional brain-data collection and improve inference of effects-of-interest related to mental processes. Key to this approach is the employment of fast multi-functional paradigms rich on features that can be well parametrized and, consequently, facilitate the creation of psycho-physiological constructs to be modelled with imaging data. Particular emphasis will be given to music stimuli when studying high-order cognitive mechanisms, due to their ecological nature and quality to enable complex behavior compounded by discrete entities. I will also discuss how deep-behavioral phenotyping and individualized models applied to neuroimaging data can better account for the subject-specific organization of domain-general cognitive systems in the human brain. Finally, the accumulation of functional brain signatures brings the possibility to clarify relationships among tasks and create a univocal link between brain systems and mental functions through: (1) the development of ontologies proposing an organization of cognitive processes; and (2) brain-network taxonomies describing functional specialization. To this end, tools to improve commensurability in cognitive science are necessary, such as public repositories, ontology-based platforms and automated meta-analysis tools. I will thus discuss some brain-atlasing resources currently under development, and their applicability in cognitive as well as clinical neuroscience.
Cancer cell metabolism: special Reference to Lactate PathwayAADYARAJPANDEY1
Normal Cell Metabolism:
Cellular respiration describes the series of steps that cells use to break down sugar and other chemicals to get the energy we need to function.
Energy is stored in the bonds of glucose and when glucose is broken down, much of that energy is released.
Cell utilize energy in the form of ATP.
The first step of respiration is called glycolysis. In a series of steps, glycolysis breaks glucose into two smaller molecules - a chemical called pyruvate. A small amount of ATP is formed during this process.
Most healthy cells continue the breakdown in a second process, called the Kreb's cycle. The Kreb's cycle allows cells to “burn” the pyruvates made in glycolysis to get more ATP.
The last step in the breakdown of glucose is called oxidative phosphorylation (Ox-Phos).
It takes place in specialized cell structures called mitochondria. This process produces a large amount of ATP. Importantly, cells need oxygen to complete oxidative phosphorylation.
If a cell completes only glycolysis, only 2 molecules of ATP are made per glucose. However, if the cell completes the entire respiration process (glycolysis - Kreb's - oxidative phosphorylation), about 36 molecules of ATP are created, giving it much more energy to use.
IN CANCER CELL:
Unlike healthy cells that "burn" the entire molecule of sugar to capture a large amount of energy as ATP, cancer cells are wasteful.
Cancer cells only partially break down sugar molecules. They overuse the first step of respiration, glycolysis. They frequently do not complete the second step, oxidative phosphorylation.
This results in only 2 molecules of ATP per each glucose molecule instead of the 36 or so ATPs healthy cells gain. As a result, cancer cells need to use a lot more sugar molecules to get enough energy to survive.
Unlike healthy cells that "burn" the entire molecule of sugar to capture a large amount of energy as ATP, cancer cells are wasteful.
Cancer cells only partially break down sugar molecules. They overuse the first step of respiration, glycolysis. They frequently do not complete the second step, oxidative phosphorylation.
This results in only 2 molecules of ATP per each glucose molecule instead of the 36 or so ATPs healthy cells gain. As a result, cancer cells need to use a lot more sugar molecules to get enough energy to survive.
introduction to WARBERG PHENOMENA:
WARBURG EFFECT Usually, cancer cells are highly glycolytic (glucose addiction) and take up more glucose than do normal cells from outside.
Otto Heinrich Warburg (; 8 October 1883 – 1 August 1970) In 1931 was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physiology for his "discovery of the nature and mode of action of the respiratory enzyme.
WARNBURG EFFECT : cancer cells under aerobic (well-oxygenated) conditions to metabolize glucose to lactate (aerobic glycolysis) is known as the Warburg effect. Warburg made the observation that tumor slices consume glucose and secrete lactate at a higher rate than normal tissues.
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.
Nutraceutical market, scope and growth: Herbal drug technologyLokesh Patil
As consumer awareness of health and wellness rises, the nutraceutical market—which includes goods like functional meals, drinks, and dietary supplements that provide health advantages beyond basic nutrition—is growing significantly. As healthcare expenses rise, the population ages, and people want natural and preventative health solutions more and more, this industry is increasing quickly. Further driving market expansion are product formulation innovations and the use of cutting-edge technology for customized nutrition. With its worldwide reach, the nutraceutical industry is expected to keep growing and provide significant chances for research and investment in a number of categories, including vitamins, minerals, probiotics, and herbal supplements.
This pdf is about the Schizophrenia.
For more details visit on YouTube; @SELF-EXPLANATORY;
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCAiarMZDNhe1A3Rnpr_WkzA/videos
Thanks...!
Earliest Galaxies in the JADES Origins Field: Luminosity Function and Cosmic ...Sérgio Sacani
We characterize the earliest galaxy population in the JADES Origins Field (JOF), the deepest
imaging field observed with JWST. We make use of the ancillary Hubble optical images (5 filters
spanning 0.4−0.9µm) and novel JWST images with 14 filters spanning 0.8−5µm, including 7 mediumband filters, and reaching total exposure times of up to 46 hours per filter. We combine all our data
at > 2.3µm to construct an ultradeep image, reaching as deep as ≈ 31.4 AB mag in the stack and
30.3-31.0 AB mag (5σ, r = 0.1” circular aperture) in individual filters. We measure photometric
redshifts and use robust selection criteria to identify a sample of eight galaxy candidates at redshifts
z = 11.5 − 15. These objects show compact half-light radii of R1/2 ∼ 50 − 200pc, stellar masses of
M⋆ ∼ 107−108M⊙, and star-formation rates of SFR ∼ 0.1−1 M⊙ yr−1
. Our search finds no candidates
at 15 < z < 20, placing upper limits at these redshifts. We develop a forward modeling approach to
infer the properties of the evolving luminosity function without binning in redshift or luminosity that
marginalizes over the photometric redshift uncertainty of our candidate galaxies and incorporates the
impact of non-detections. We find a z = 12 luminosity function in good agreement with prior results,
and that the luminosity function normalization and UV luminosity density decline by a factor of ∼ 2.5
from z = 12 to z = 14. We discuss the possible implications of our results in the context of theoretical
models for evolution of the dark matter halo mass function.
Introduction:
RNA interference (RNAi) or Post-Transcriptional Gene Silencing (PTGS) is an important biological process for modulating eukaryotic gene expression.
It is highly conserved process of posttranscriptional gene silencing by which double stranded RNA (dsRNA) causes sequence-specific degradation of mRNA sequences.
dsRNA-induced gene silencing (RNAi) is reported in a wide range of eukaryotes ranging from worms, insects, mammals and plants.
This process mediates resistance to both endogenous parasitic and exogenous pathogenic nucleic acids, and regulates the expression of protein-coding genes.
What are small ncRNAs?
micro RNA (miRNA)
short interfering RNA (siRNA)
Properties of small non-coding RNA:
Involved in silencing mRNA transcripts.
Called “small” because they are usually only about 21-24 nucleotides long.
Synthesized by first cutting up longer precursor sequences (like the 61nt one that Lee discovered).
Silence an mRNA by base pairing with some sequence on the mRNA.
Discovery of siRNA?
The first small RNA:
In 1993 Rosalind Lee (Victor Ambros lab) was studying a non- coding gene in C. elegans, lin-4, that was involved in silencing of another gene, lin-14, at the appropriate time in the
development of the worm C. elegans.
Two small transcripts of lin-4 (22nt and 61nt) were found to be complementary to a sequence in the 3' UTR of lin-14.
Because lin-4 encoded no protein, she deduced that it must be these transcripts that are causing the silencing by RNA-RNA interactions.
Types of RNAi ( non coding RNA)
MiRNA
Length (23-25 nt)
Trans acting
Binds with target MRNA in mismatch
Translation inhibition
Si RNA
Length 21 nt.
Cis acting
Bind with target Mrna in perfect complementary sequence
Piwi-RNA
Length ; 25 to 36 nt.
Expressed in Germ Cells
Regulates trnasposomes activity
MECHANISM OF RNAI:
First the double-stranded RNA teams up with a protein complex named Dicer, which cuts the long RNA into short pieces.
Then another protein complex called RISC (RNA-induced silencing complex) discards one of the two RNA strands.
The RISC-docked, single-stranded RNA then pairs with the homologous mRNA and destroys it.
THE RISC COMPLEX:
RISC is large(>500kD) RNA multi- protein Binding complex which triggers MRNA degradation in response to MRNA
Unwinding of double stranded Si RNA by ATP independent Helicase
Active component of RISC is Ago proteins( ENDONUCLEASE) which cleave target MRNA.
DICER: endonuclease (RNase Family III)
Argonaute: Central Component of the RNA-Induced Silencing Complex (RISC)
One strand of the dsRNA produced by Dicer is retained in the RISC complex in association with Argonaute
ARGONAUTE PROTEIN :
1.PAZ(PIWI/Argonaute/ Zwille)- Recognition of target MRNA
2.PIWI (p-element induced wimpy Testis)- breaks Phosphodiester bond of mRNA.)RNAse H activity.
MiRNA:
The Double-stranded RNAs are naturally produced in eukaryotic cells during development, and they have a key role in regulating gene expression .
Observation of Io’s Resurfacing via Plume Deposition Using Ground-based Adapt...Sérgio Sacani
Since volcanic activity was first discovered on Io from Voyager images in 1979, changes
on Io’s surface have been monitored from both spacecraft and ground-based telescopes.
Here, we present the highest spatial resolution images of Io ever obtained from a groundbased telescope. These images, acquired by the SHARK-VIS instrument on the Large
Binocular Telescope, show evidence of a major resurfacing event on Io’s trailing hemisphere. When compared to the most recent spacecraft images, the SHARK-VIS images
show that a plume deposit from a powerful eruption at Pillan Patera has covered part
of the long-lived Pele plume deposit. Although this type of resurfacing event may be common on Io, few have been detected due to the rarity of spacecraft visits and the previously low spatial resolution available from Earth-based telescopes. The SHARK-VIS instrument ushers in a new era of high resolution imaging of Io’s surface using adaptive
optics at visible wavelengths.
Richard's entangled aventures in wonderlandRichard 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.
Professional air quality monitoring systems provide immediate, on-site data for analysis, compliance, and decision-making.
Monitor common gases, weather parameters, particulates.
What is greenhouse gasses and how many gasses are there to affect the Earth.moosaasad1975
What are greenhouse gasses how they affect the earth and its environment what is the future of the environment and earth how the weather and the climate effects.
What is greenhouse gasses and how many gasses are there to affect the Earth.
Interoperability: Research Identificaton (ORCID)
1. SNSF 15. Jun 2016 Research creates knowledge.
Interoperability: Researcher Identification
Science Europe Workshop: Data on Research Activity, The Hague, 15.06.2016
christian.gutknecht@snf.ch (http://orcid.org/0000-0002-7265-1692)
Spike Walker, Wellcome Images, Creative Commons by-nc-nd 4.0
2. SNSF 15. Jun 2016 Research creates knowledge.
Agenda
1. How it Identity management currently works at the
SNSF
2. Potential of ORCID
3. Challenges of/with ORCID
3. SNSF 15. Jun 2016 Research creates knowledge.
Identity Management at the SNSF
Current situation
Annie Cavanagh, Wellcome Images, by-nc-nd 4.0
4. SNSF 15. Jun 2016 Research creates knowledge.
mySNF: Grant Administration System of
the SNSF
https://www.mysnf.ch
5. SNSF 15. Jun 2016 Research creates knowledge.
Registration – General information
https://www.mysnf.ch
6. SNSF 15. Jun 2016 Research creates knowledge.
Registration – Address of institute
https://www.mysnf.ch
7. SNSF 15. Jun 2016 Research creates knowledge.
Registration – Home Address
https://www.mysnf.ch
8. SNSF 15. Jun 2016 Research creates knowledge.
Registration – Communication
https://www.mysnf.ch
9. SNSF 15. Jun 2016 Research creates knowledge.
Edit personal data in user profile
https://www.mysnf.ch
10. SNSF 15. Jun 2016 Research creates knowledge.
Changes are approved manually by the SNFS
11. SNSF 15. Jun 2016 Research creates knowledge.
Edited
user
data
Existing
user
data
12. SNSF 15. Jun 2016 Research creates knowledge.
Existing
Institution
data
Edited
institution
data
13. SNSF 15. Jun 2016 Research creates knowledge.
http://intranet.snf.ch/downloads/itc_bus_Richtlinie_Adresswesen_d.pdf
Guidelines
14. SNSF 15. Jun 2016 Research creates knowledge.
Person Search in mySNF
15. SNSF 15. Jun 2016 Research creates knowledge.
Person Profile in mySNF
16. SNSF 15. Jun 2016 Research creates knowledge.
P3 – ORCID displayed
http://p3.snf.ch/person-523490-Abankwa-Daniel
17. SNSF 15. Jun 2016 Research creates knowledge.
P3 – Available in CSV-Download
http://p3.snf.ch/Pages/DataAndDocumentation.aspx
18. SNSF 15. Jun 2016 Research creates knowledge.
The Potential of ORCID for a funder
Alfred Anwander, Wellcome Images, Creative Commons by-nc-nd
19. SNSF 15. Jun 2016 Research creates knowledge.
Funders that require use of ORCID
Autism Speaks, USA (2014)
FCT, Portugal (2014)
QNRF, Qatar (2014)
SRC, Sweden (2014)
Department of Transportation, US (2015)
NIHR, UK (2015)
Wellcome Trust, UK (2015)
FWF, Austria (2016)
http://orcid.org/blog/2015/12/04/research-funders-and-orcid-new-members-mandates-and-platforms
20. SNSF 15. Jun 2016 Research creates knowledge.
ORCID Statistics (14.06.2016)
Live ORCID iDs 2,297,632
ORCID iDs with at least one work 467,587
Works activities
(publications, data sets, patents and other
research outputs)
13,840,369
Unique DOIs 6,225,032
Employment activities 822,024
Employment to unique organizations 257,774
Education activities 972,272
Education at unique organizations 172,816
Funding activities 176,664
Funding from unique organizations 56,118
21. SNSF 15. Jun 2016 Research creates knowledge.
Potential for ORCID
• Provide unique identifier for a researcher
• Sync current contact adresses
• Auto-fill for grant application: profile of applicant
and co-applicants, previous grants, related grants,
CV’s, publication lists
• Tracking outcome of a grant: publications, events,
research data etc.
• Follow researchers careers (scientific track record)
• Find Reviewers & Check conflict of interests
22. SNSF 15. Jun 2016 Research creates knowledge.
Import CV, publication list from ORCID
http://www.snf.ch/SiteCollectionDocuments/sinergia_leitfaden_e.pdf
Example of what applicants
should provide to the SNSF (today)
23. SNSF 15. Jun 2016 Research creates knowledge.
Example: SciENcv – NIH Biosketch
https://youtu.be/G_cKSRr7TJ4?t=32s
24. SNSF 15. Jun 2016 Research creates knowledge.
Capture Output data
25. SNSF 15. Jun 2016 Research creates knowledge.
Output data type as defined by the SNSF
• Personal Data
• Academic events
• Knowledge transfer events
• Public communication
• Collaboration
• Use-inspired Outputs
• (Patent, Start-up, Expert/Reviewer, Activity)
• Awards
• Third-party funds
• Follow-up projects
26. SNSF 15. Jun 2016 Research creates knowledge.
Peer Review Activities?
https://members.orcid.org/api/peer-review-getting-started
27. SNSF 15. Jun 2016 Research creates knowledge.
Import publications
28. SNSF 15. Jun 2016 Research creates knowledge.
Source for finding Reviewers?
29. SNSF 15. Jun 2016 Research creates knowledge.
Challenges
Pawel Wozniak - CC-BY
30. SNSF 15. Jun 2016 Research creates knowledge.
ORCID metadata schema sufficient for
your (more specific) needs?
https://members.orcid.org/api
31. SNSF 15. Jun 2016 Research creates knowledge.
Example: XML for funding I
http://members.orcid.org/api/xml-funding
• <type> The type of funding, select from award, contract, grant, salary-award. This field is required.
• <funding-title> A container tag for the title tags giving the title of the funding <title> is required
under <funding-title>
• <short-description> A brief description of the funding.
• <amount> A numerical value for the amount of the award, the currency of the award should be
given using the attribute "currency-code." This field is required.
• <url> A link to the funding or funding output
• <start-date> The date the funding began, given to any level of specificity with the tags <year>
<month> <date>.
• <end-date> The date funding ended or will end, given to any level of specificity with the tags
<year> <month> <date>.
• <funding-external-identifiers> A non-repeatable container for identifiers of the funding
• <funding-external-identifier> A container tag for one unique identifier linked to the funding
• <funding-external-identifier-type> Currently only grant_number is allowed
• <funding-external-identifier-value> The unique identifier itself
• <funding-external-identifier-url> An external link to information about the funding link using
the unique identifier.
•
32. SNSF 15. Jun 2016 Research creates knowledge.
• <contributors> a non-repeatable container for information about the recipients of the funding.
• <funding-contributor> a container for information about each recipient of the funding.
• <credit-name> name of the recipient of the funding.
• <contributor-email> email address of the recipient, if known.
• <funding-contributor-attributes> a container for information about the recipient's relationship to
the funding
• <funding-contributor-role> the recipient's role in relation to the funding. role in this funding. The
options are Leadand Co lead for individuals who applied for and received the funding, Supported by for
individuals employed by the funding, or Other contribution.
• <organization> a container for elements describing the organization which awarded the funding
• <name> The name of the parent organization which awarded the funding. This field is required.
• <address> Contains the tags <city>, <region> and <country> for the location of the funding agency.
<country> should be filed out with a two letter country code. The <city> and <country> tags are
required.
• <disambiguated-organization> a tag container tag for information distinguishing the funding
agency.
• <disambiguated-organization-identifier> A unique identifier for the organization.
• <disambiguation-source> The source of the identifier used in <disambiguated-organization-
identifier>. Durring the testing on sandbox, ORCID supports Ringgold identifiers, FundRef identifiers
will be supported by the time funding is launched on production. For more information see
Organizations in ORCID.
Example: XML for funding II
http://members.orcid.org/api/xml-funding
33. SNSF 15. Jun 2016 Research creates knowledge.
Controled by the researcher
- Use of ORCID record requires consent of researchers
- Completeness of an ORCID record depends on the
activity of researchers
- There’s no central authority that «corrects» the data.
34. SNSF 15. Jun 2016 Research creates knowledge.
How are new features decided?
“Many of the enhancements on the ORCID development
roadmap are from community suggestions received
through the ORCID iDeas Forum. We work with the
community through the ORCID Technical Steering Group
to review your suggestions. Occasionally, a topic will be
big enough that we will engage a
Technical Working Group to help understand the area and
to solicit broader input from the
ORCID Technical Community.”
http://support.orcid.org/knowledgebase/articles/135210
35. SNSF 15. Jun 2016 Research creates knowledge.
Governance I
“As part of our charter, we are seeking member
recommendations for new Directors. All ORCID members
are eligible to have representatives serve as ORCID
Directors. In addition, the Board has a slot for a researcher,
who need not be affiliated with an ORCID member to
serve. We will draw up a slate based on member
recommendations, taking into account balance by sector,
region, skills, and non-profit status requirements
established in the ORCID bylaws.”
http://orcid.org/blog/2016/06/08/orcid-board-elections-calling-nominations
36. SNSF 15. Jun 2016 Research creates knowledge.
Governance II
http://orcid.org/blog/2016/06/08/orcid-board-elections-calling-nominations
37. SNSF 15. Jun 2016 Research creates knowledge.
Import vs. Sync
• Currently many applications just import from ORCID
• To setup a fully syncronized solution ist not trivial and
is prone for errors. See:
Moreira et al. (2015): An ORCID based synchronization
framework for a national CRIS ecosystem: http://doi.org/9g8
38. SNSF 15. Jun 2016 Research creates knowledge.
https://orcid.org/blog/2016/06/07/collect-connect-turning-orcid%E2%80%99s-vision-reality