The document discusses new metaphors for data papers and data citations. It notes that metaphors are pervasive in thought and language, and digital objects like files and folders are based on metaphors. It then provides an overview of the California Digital Library and how their environment and focus has changed from preservation to include curation and support for data producers. Forces like rising journal costs, increased research publication and declining budgets create structural problems for libraries. The document advocates a practical incremental approach to the complex problem of data curation, including initiatives like DataONE and the use of data papers and citations.
These slides were presented as part of a webinar to provide RLG Partnership institutions with the opportunity to learn more about the current work taking place in OCLC Research and discover new ways to become more engaged in the RLG Partnership.
Topics covered include: Green ILL Practices & Deaccessioning Decision Tree; Cloud Library; In-copyright Print Books; Evaluating Rights & Risk for Unpublished Materials;
Special Collections Survey; The Library's Role in Research Assessment; Data Curation; and Social Metadata. A preview of upcoming events, reports and webinars was also included.
We used to think of the user in the life of the library. Now we think of the library in the life of the user. As behaviors change in a network environment, we have seen growing interest in ethnographic and user-centered design approaches. This presentation introduces this topic. It also explores changes in how we manage collections as an illustration of this shift towards thinking of the library in the life of the user.
OCLC Research @ U of Calgary: New directions for metadata workflows across li...OCLC Research
Presentation used as scene setting for 2 days worth of discussion around library, archive & museum convergence, metadata workflows and single search at the University of Calgary.
Undue Diligence: Seeking Low-risk Strategies for Making Collections of Unpubl...OCLC Research
Slides from the 11 March 2010 OCLC Research meeting, Undue Diligence: Seeking Low-risk Strategies for Making Collections of Unpublished Materials More Accessible.
An update to the art library community about OCLC Research activities, including:
Streamlining the Sharing of Special Collections
Undue Diligence
Cloud Library
Museum Data Exchange
Towards collaboration at scale: Libraries, the social and the technicallisld
Libraries are now supporting research and learning behaviors in data rich network environments. This presentation looks at some examples focusing on how an emphasis on individual systems needs to give way to a broader view of process, workflow and behaviors.
It also discusses how this environment creates a demand for collaboration at scale among libraries.
These slides were presented as part of a webinar to provide RLG Partnership institutions with the opportunity to learn more about the current work taking place in OCLC Research and discover new ways to become more engaged in the RLG Partnership.
Topics covered include: Green ILL Practices & Deaccessioning Decision Tree; Cloud Library; In-copyright Print Books; Evaluating Rights & Risk for Unpublished Materials;
Special Collections Survey; The Library's Role in Research Assessment; Data Curation; and Social Metadata. A preview of upcoming events, reports and webinars was also included.
We used to think of the user in the life of the library. Now we think of the library in the life of the user. As behaviors change in a network environment, we have seen growing interest in ethnographic and user-centered design approaches. This presentation introduces this topic. It also explores changes in how we manage collections as an illustration of this shift towards thinking of the library in the life of the user.
OCLC Research @ U of Calgary: New directions for metadata workflows across li...OCLC Research
Presentation used as scene setting for 2 days worth of discussion around library, archive & museum convergence, metadata workflows and single search at the University of Calgary.
Undue Diligence: Seeking Low-risk Strategies for Making Collections of Unpubl...OCLC Research
Slides from the 11 March 2010 OCLC Research meeting, Undue Diligence: Seeking Low-risk Strategies for Making Collections of Unpublished Materials More Accessible.
An update to the art library community about OCLC Research activities, including:
Streamlining the Sharing of Special Collections
Undue Diligence
Cloud Library
Museum Data Exchange
Towards collaboration at scale: Libraries, the social and the technicallisld
Libraries are now supporting research and learning behaviors in data rich network environments. This presentation looks at some examples focusing on how an emphasis on individual systems needs to give way to a broader view of process, workflow and behaviors.
It also discusses how this environment creates a demand for collaboration at scale among libraries.
The facilitated collection: collections and collecting in a network environmentlisld
We often think of collections as local – whether owned or licensed. Increasingly this picture is changing in several ways. Libraries are sharing responsibility for collections. Libraries are providing access to materials they do not own, but which are available to their users (freely available digital book collections for example). Demand driven acquisitions changes the view of local collections. Institutions are also thinking about how to manage locally produced materials (research data for example) and support access across institutions. This trend is supported by changes as discovery is peeled away from local collections. This presentation discusses these trends, and collections and discovery change in a network environment.
This was a presentation at the Libraries Australia Forum, Melbourne, 2015
Open Context and Publishing to the Web of Data: Eric Kansa's LAWDI Presentationekansa
This presentation discusses how a model of “data sharing as publishing” can contribute to developing Linked Open Data resources in archaeology and the study of the ancient world. The paper gives examples from Open Context’s developing approach to data editing, documentation and quality improvement processes. The goal of these efforts is to better align the professional interests of individual researchers with the needs of the larger community to access and use high-quality data in Linked Data scenarios.
Library collections and the emerging scholarly recordlisld
A high level review of collection trends followed by a summary of recent work on the evolving scholarly record.
Presented at the OCLC Research Library Partnership meeting at the University of Melbourne, 2 December 2015.
This presentation was given at Bobcatsss2013 in Ankara.
Once the library assembled a collection and people came to the library to use it. Now, people build communication, workflows and behaviors around a variety of network resources. The library needs to think about how it is visible and relevant in those workflows and behaviors.
DataCite and Campus Data Services
Paul Bracke, Associate Dean for Digital Programs and Information Services, Purdue University
Research libraries are increasingly interested in developing data services for their campuses. There are many perspectives, however, on how to develop services that are responsive to the many needs of scientists; sensitive to the concerns of scientists who are not always accustomed to sharing their data; and that are attractive to campus administrators. This presentation will discuss the development of campus-based data services programs, the centrality of data citation to these efforts, and the ways in which engagement with DataCite can enhance local programs.
Data mining OCLC for translations.
Creating authority records for VIAF.
Remodelling the bibliorgraphic structure to make the best mutli-lingual displays from all available data in a work set.
Libraries, collections, technology: presented at Pennylvania State University...lisld
Library collections are changing in a network environment. This presentation considers how collections are being reconfigured, it looks at research support services, and it explores the shift from the purchased/licensed collection to the facilitated collection.
The Library in the Life of the User: Two Collection Directionslisld
Our understanding of library collections is changing in a digital, network environment. This presentation focuses on two trends in this context. First, the inside-out library is a trend which sees libraries support the creation, management and discoverability of institutional materials: research data, expertise, preprints, and so on. Second, the facilitated collection is a trend which sees libraries increasingly organize resources around user interests, whether these resources are external, collaborative or locally acquired.
This presentation was given at 'The transformation of academic library collecting: a symposium inspired by Dan C. Hazen'. Harvard Library, 20/21 Oct. 2016
4.2.15 Slides, “Hydra: many heads, many connections. Enriching Fedora Reposit...DuraSpace
Hot Topics: The DuraSpace Community Webinar Series
Series 11: Integrating ORCID Persistent Identifiers with DSpace, Fedora and VIVO
Webinar 2: “Hydra: many heads, many connections. Enriching Fedora Repositories with ORCID.”
Thursday, April 2, 2015
Curated by Josh Brown, ORCID
Presented by: Laura Paglione, Technical Director, ORCID and Rick Johnson, Head of Digital Library Services, University of Notre Dame
The identity of the library is closely bound with its collections. In a print world, this made sense, as the central role of the library was to place materials close to the user and arrange them for effective use.
However, in a network environment this is no longer the case. Lorcan Dempsey, Vice President, Membership and Research, and Chief Strategist at the Online Computer Library Center, will discuss the following three trends that are changing the character of library collections:
The facilitated collection, where the library connects users to resources of interest to their research and learning needs, whether or not they are assembled locally.
The collective collection, where libraries begin to think about moving to shared environments to manage their collections and assuming collective responsibility for stewardship of the scholarly record.
The inside-out collection, where libraries work with other campus partners to support the creation, management and disclosure of institutional materials—research data, special collections, and so on. Here the library supports the creative enterprise of scholarship directly. Together, these trends are changing how we think about collections, libraries, and services to their users.
Together, these trends are changing how we think about collections, libraries, and services to their users.
The Thomas Lecture Series honors the outstanding work that Shirley K. Baker, former Vice Chancellor for Scholarly Resources & Dean of University Libraries, led in the areas of networked information and resource sharing.
A presentation given at the "Data Stewardship: Increasing the Integrity and Effectiveness of Science and Scholarship" Session on Friday, June 8 2012 at the IASSIT 2012 conference in Washington DC.
This presentation introduced data publishing, using a social science (archaeology) case study to explore editorial processes and dissemination outcomes that increasingly demand “Linked Data” capabilities.
Research Data Management in the Humanities and Social SciencesCelia Emmelhainz
This two-part presentation for librarians reviews basic concepts and concerns with research data management, and is targeted to those working with humanists and social scientists. You are free to re-use and modify with attribution.
The scheme of an identifier determines almost nothing about its behavior compared to a resolver that's ready to map it to various services. When resolver infrastructure is shared across schemes instead of siloed, all schemes benefit. With suitable prefixing dozens of well-known, so-called non-actionable schemes can become available from a single unified base URL. The idealized resolver would adopt a fully open infrastructure, and support all schemes and the best features from modern resolvers -- deduplication, content negotiation, link checking, inflections, suffix passthrough, etc.
The facilitated collection: collections and collecting in a network environmentlisld
We often think of collections as local – whether owned or licensed. Increasingly this picture is changing in several ways. Libraries are sharing responsibility for collections. Libraries are providing access to materials they do not own, but which are available to their users (freely available digital book collections for example). Demand driven acquisitions changes the view of local collections. Institutions are also thinking about how to manage locally produced materials (research data for example) and support access across institutions. This trend is supported by changes as discovery is peeled away from local collections. This presentation discusses these trends, and collections and discovery change in a network environment.
This was a presentation at the Libraries Australia Forum, Melbourne, 2015
Open Context and Publishing to the Web of Data: Eric Kansa's LAWDI Presentationekansa
This presentation discusses how a model of “data sharing as publishing” can contribute to developing Linked Open Data resources in archaeology and the study of the ancient world. The paper gives examples from Open Context’s developing approach to data editing, documentation and quality improvement processes. The goal of these efforts is to better align the professional interests of individual researchers with the needs of the larger community to access and use high-quality data in Linked Data scenarios.
Library collections and the emerging scholarly recordlisld
A high level review of collection trends followed by a summary of recent work on the evolving scholarly record.
Presented at the OCLC Research Library Partnership meeting at the University of Melbourne, 2 December 2015.
This presentation was given at Bobcatsss2013 in Ankara.
Once the library assembled a collection and people came to the library to use it. Now, people build communication, workflows and behaviors around a variety of network resources. The library needs to think about how it is visible and relevant in those workflows and behaviors.
DataCite and Campus Data Services
Paul Bracke, Associate Dean for Digital Programs and Information Services, Purdue University
Research libraries are increasingly interested in developing data services for their campuses. There are many perspectives, however, on how to develop services that are responsive to the many needs of scientists; sensitive to the concerns of scientists who are not always accustomed to sharing their data; and that are attractive to campus administrators. This presentation will discuss the development of campus-based data services programs, the centrality of data citation to these efforts, and the ways in which engagement with DataCite can enhance local programs.
Data mining OCLC for translations.
Creating authority records for VIAF.
Remodelling the bibliorgraphic structure to make the best mutli-lingual displays from all available data in a work set.
Libraries, collections, technology: presented at Pennylvania State University...lisld
Library collections are changing in a network environment. This presentation considers how collections are being reconfigured, it looks at research support services, and it explores the shift from the purchased/licensed collection to the facilitated collection.
The Library in the Life of the User: Two Collection Directionslisld
Our understanding of library collections is changing in a digital, network environment. This presentation focuses on two trends in this context. First, the inside-out library is a trend which sees libraries support the creation, management and discoverability of institutional materials: research data, expertise, preprints, and so on. Second, the facilitated collection is a trend which sees libraries increasingly organize resources around user interests, whether these resources are external, collaborative or locally acquired.
This presentation was given at 'The transformation of academic library collecting: a symposium inspired by Dan C. Hazen'. Harvard Library, 20/21 Oct. 2016
4.2.15 Slides, “Hydra: many heads, many connections. Enriching Fedora Reposit...DuraSpace
Hot Topics: The DuraSpace Community Webinar Series
Series 11: Integrating ORCID Persistent Identifiers with DSpace, Fedora and VIVO
Webinar 2: “Hydra: many heads, many connections. Enriching Fedora Repositories with ORCID.”
Thursday, April 2, 2015
Curated by Josh Brown, ORCID
Presented by: Laura Paglione, Technical Director, ORCID and Rick Johnson, Head of Digital Library Services, University of Notre Dame
The identity of the library is closely bound with its collections. In a print world, this made sense, as the central role of the library was to place materials close to the user and arrange them for effective use.
However, in a network environment this is no longer the case. Lorcan Dempsey, Vice President, Membership and Research, and Chief Strategist at the Online Computer Library Center, will discuss the following three trends that are changing the character of library collections:
The facilitated collection, where the library connects users to resources of interest to their research and learning needs, whether or not they are assembled locally.
The collective collection, where libraries begin to think about moving to shared environments to manage their collections and assuming collective responsibility for stewardship of the scholarly record.
The inside-out collection, where libraries work with other campus partners to support the creation, management and disclosure of institutional materials—research data, special collections, and so on. Here the library supports the creative enterprise of scholarship directly. Together, these trends are changing how we think about collections, libraries, and services to their users.
Together, these trends are changing how we think about collections, libraries, and services to their users.
The Thomas Lecture Series honors the outstanding work that Shirley K. Baker, former Vice Chancellor for Scholarly Resources & Dean of University Libraries, led in the areas of networked information and resource sharing.
A presentation given at the "Data Stewardship: Increasing the Integrity and Effectiveness of Science and Scholarship" Session on Friday, June 8 2012 at the IASSIT 2012 conference in Washington DC.
This presentation introduced data publishing, using a social science (archaeology) case study to explore editorial processes and dissemination outcomes that increasingly demand “Linked Data” capabilities.
Research Data Management in the Humanities and Social SciencesCelia Emmelhainz
This two-part presentation for librarians reviews basic concepts and concerns with research data management, and is targeted to those working with humanists and social scientists. You are free to re-use and modify with attribution.
The scheme of an identifier determines almost nothing about its behavior compared to a resolver that's ready to map it to various services. When resolver infrastructure is shared across schemes instead of siloed, all schemes benefit. With suitable prefixing dozens of well-known, so-called non-actionable schemes can become available from a single unified base URL. The idealized resolver would adopt a fully open infrastructure, and support all schemes and the best features from modern resolvers -- deduplication, content negotiation, link checking, inflections, suffix passthrough, etc.
Two themes
1. Proposed metadata for “persistence statements”
What you mean by persistence
Informing user linking choices
2. Metadata hardened in open yamz.net dictionary
Crowdsourced, but with reputation-based voting
Every term has a unique persistent identifier (PID)
A huge amount of incredibly diverse research data remains beyond the reach of internet search engines, peer review processes, and systematic cataloging. The ability by consumers to annotate data is an important mitigation, harnessing "the crowd" to make it easier for everyone to discover and re-use data.
How the Long Tail is Occurring in the Movie IndustrySFU Pub355
Tanya Fish's presentation "How the Long Tail is Occurring in the Movie Industry" explores how the Long Tail and the "80/20 rule" can be seen in the movie industry and the role that the internet is playing with movie sites such as Netflix.
David Santoro's presentation, "RSS Feeds" is a presentation that describes what RSS feeds are, how to subscribe to them, and how to ultimately view these feed posts using a reader such as Google reader.
YAMZ.net is a tool for taxonomy building. Metadata vocabulary standardization ranks among the most awful design-by-committee experiences, whether at the international standards level or at the working group level. We used a crowdsourced metadata dictionary with reputation-based voting, and in which every term gets a unique persistent identifier. In the second half, are exercises to see how it all works in practice.
RDAP13 John Kunze: The Data Management EcosystemASIS&T
John Kunze, University of California, Curation Center
California Digital Library (CDL)
The Data Management Ecosystem
Panel: Partnerships between institutional repositories, domain repositories, and publishers
Research Data Access & Preservation Summit 2013
Baltimore, MD April 4, 2013 #rdap13
Come Together: Interdepartmental Collaboration to Connect the IR and Library ...NASIG
Presenter: Amanda Makula, University Of San Diego
While institutional repositories (IRs) often include a built-in searching mechanism and/or are indexed by web search engines, what about our patrons who go straight to the library catalog with their information need? Rather than hope that users will stumble upon the IR from the library website or assume that they will start their research with a Google search, librarians can facilitate greater IR discoverability and usage by integrating its content into the library catalog. With strong teamwork, good communication, and a shared vision, this endeavor helps transform the IR and library catalog from separate, siloed platforms into a more cohesive collections package.
At the University of San Diego, librarians and administrators across three departments -- Technical Services, Systems, and Archives / Special Collections / Digital Initiatives --recognized this opportunity and came together to share information and work in concert to explore and enact the benefits of auto-harvesting IR content into the library catalog. Driven by a vision of providing enhanced discoverability and access, as well as promoting the IR as a whole and enriching the catalog, the team members worked cooperatively to identify specific IR collections appropriate for harvest, investigate technical logistics, consult outside vendors (including Innovative and bepress), and experiment with implementation.
Presentació de Lluís M. Anglada, director de l'Àrea de Biblioteques, Informació i Documentació del CSUC, a l'International Coalition of Library Consortia (ICOLC), que va tenir lloc del 20 al 22 d'octubre de 2014 a la Biblioteca Nacional de Portugal.
En aquesta presentació, que formava part del bloc dedicat a noves eines, Anglada presenta el nou sistema integrat de biblioteques i eines de descobriment com a oportunitats per als consorcis.
Web-Scale Discovery: Post ImplementationRachel Vacek
Discovery services provide users a single
search box to access a library’s entire prei-ndexed collection. Representatives from
two academic libraries serving different
user populations will discuss marketing,
instructing users, evaluating the product,
and maintaining the resource after a
discovery service is implemented
What do you want to discover today? / Janet Aucock, University of St AndrewsCIGScotland
Overview of resource discovery in libraries today. Presented at the CIG Scotland seminar 'Resource Discovery : from catalogues to discovery services' at the National Library of Scotland, Edinburgh, 21st March 2018
Presentation to the ARROW repositories day, Brisbane, 2008, on suggestions for improving the rate of capture of documents in institutional repositories
The traditional process of achieving metadata standards has failed, and I know what I’m talking about because of Dublin Core, BagIt, Z39.50, URLs, and ARKs.
We must think outside the box or we will keep failing. YAMZ (Yet Another Metadata Zoo) is not a standard. Instead it is a dictionary of terms, some fixed and others still evolving, that are meant to be selectively referenced by future standards. Terms are otherwise decoupled from standards that reference them. Each term is a kind of nano-specification with a unique persistent identifier that tracks the term from evolving to mature to deprecated.
Instructions for Submissions thorugh G- Classroom.pptxJheel Barad
This presentation provides a briefing on how to upload submissions and documents in Google Classroom. It was prepared as part of an orientation for new Sainik School in-service teacher trainees. As a training officer, my goal is to ensure that you are comfortable and proficient with this essential tool for managing assignments and fostering student engagement.
2024.06.01 Introducing a competency framework for languag learning materials ...Sandy Millin
http://sandymillin.wordpress.com/iateflwebinar2024
Published classroom materials form the basis of syllabuses, drive teacher professional development, and have a potentially huge influence on learners, teachers and education systems. All teachers also create their own materials, whether a few sentences on a blackboard, a highly-structured fully-realised online course, or anything in between. Despite this, the knowledge and skills needed to create effective language learning materials are rarely part of teacher training, and are mostly learnt by trial and error.
Knowledge and skills frameworks, generally called competency frameworks, for ELT teachers, trainers and managers have existed for a few years now. However, until I created one for my MA dissertation, there wasn’t one drawing together what we need to know and do to be able to effectively produce language learning materials.
This webinar will introduce you to my framework, highlighting the key competencies I identified from my research. It will also show how anybody involved in language teaching (any language, not just English!), teacher training, managing schools or developing language learning materials can benefit from using the framework.
The French Revolution, which began in 1789, was a period of radical social and political upheaval in France. It marked the decline of absolute monarchies, the rise of secular and democratic republics, and the eventual rise of Napoleon Bonaparte. This revolutionary period is crucial in understanding the transition from feudalism to modernity in Europe.
For more information, visit-www.vavaclasses.com
This is a presentation by Dada Robert in a Your Skill Boost masterclass organised by the Excellence Foundation for South Sudan (EFSS) on Saturday, the 25th and Sunday, the 26th of May 2024.
He discussed the concept of quality improvement, emphasizing its applicability to various aspects of life, including personal, project, and program improvements. He defined quality as doing the right thing at the right time in the right way to achieve the best possible results and discussed the concept of the "gap" between what we know and what we do, and how this gap represents the areas we need to improve. He explained the scientific approach to quality improvement, which involves systematic performance analysis, testing and learning, and implementing change ideas. He also highlighted the importance of client focus and a team approach to quality improvement.
Palestine last event orientationfvgnh .pptxRaedMohamed3
An EFL lesson about the current events in Palestine. It is intended to be for intermediate students who wish to increase their listening skills through a short lesson in power point.
Ethnobotany and Ethnopharmacology:
Ethnobotany in herbal drug evaluation,
Impact of Ethnobotany in traditional medicine,
New development in herbals,
Bio-prospecting tools for drug discovery,
Role of Ethnopharmacology in drug evaluation,
Reverse Pharmacology.
Unit 8 - Information and Communication Technology (Paper I).pdfThiyagu K
This slides describes the basic concepts of ICT, basics of Email, Emerging Technology and Digital Initiatives in Education. This presentations aligns with the UGC Paper I syllabus.
The Art Pastor's Guide to Sabbath | Steve ThomasonSteve Thomason
What is the purpose of the Sabbath Law in the Torah. It is interesting to compare how the context of the law shifts from Exodus to Deuteronomy. Who gets to rest, and why?
How to Create Map Views in the Odoo 17 ERPCeline George
The map views are useful for providing a geographical representation of data. They allow users to visualize and analyze the data in a more intuitive manner.
1. New
Metaphors:
Data
Papers
and
Data
Cita4ons
2 7
F e b r u a r y
2 0 1 2
U C
C u r a 4 o n
C e n t e r
C a l i f o r n i a
D i g i t a l
L i b r a r y
2. Metaphors
we
live
by
“...
metaphor
is
pervasive
in
everyday
life,
not
just
in
language
but
in
thought
and
ac4on.
Our
ordinary
conceptual
system,
in
terms
of
which
we
both
think
and
act,
is
fundamentally
metaphorical
in
nature.”
From
Lakoff
and
Johnson,
Metaphors
We
Live
By,
1980
(thanks
to
Parsons
&
Fox,
Is
Data
Publica8on
the
Right
Metaphor?,
2011)
3. Digital
=
Metaphorical
Everything
is
a
story
on
top
of
sequences
of
bits
• Fonts,
files,
folders,
formaXng,
phone
calls
• Programs,
protocols,
data,
tweets,
even
bits
Old
metaphors
can
impede
technical
change
Disrup4ve
technical
change
is
inevitable
4. Roadmap
for
today’s
talk
• Who
we
are
• What’s
changed
• Forced
incrementalism
• Data
cita4on
• Tradi4onal
ar4cles
• Data
papers
• Closing
metaphor
6. California
Digital
Library
–
born
1997
University
of
California
stakeholders
CDL
supports
the
research
lifecycle
• 10
campuses
• Collec4ons
• 226K
students,
134K
faculty
&
staff
• Digital
Special
Collec4ons
• 100’s
of
museums,
art
galleries,
• Discovery
&
Delivery
observatories,
marine
centers,
• Publishing
Group
botanical
gardens
• UC
Cura4on
Center
(UC3)
• 5
medical
centers
• 5
law
schools
• 3
Dept.
of
Energy
na4onal
labs
7. Our
environment
circa
2002-‐2008
Focus
on
preserva4on
For
memory
organiza4ons
Infrastructure:
sta4c
Services:
hosted
Content:
museum
&
library
Sustainability:
?
8. Our
environment
since
2008
Focus
on
preserva4on
cura8on
(lifecycle)
For
memory
organiza4ons
and
now
data
producers
Infrastructure:
sta4c
+
cloud,
vm,
bitbucket
Services:
hosted
+
partnered,
self-‐serve
Content:
museum
&
library
data,
web
crawls
Sustainability:
?
cost
recovery,
pay
once
9. The
Library
Reality
• Journal
expenditures
rising
Journal
expenditures
are
outpacing
library
• Increase
in
budgets
research
publica4on
• Increase
in
researchers
• Declining
budgets
10. The
Library
Reality
• Journal
expenditures
rising
• Increase
in
research
publica4on
• Increase
in
researchers
• Declining
budgets
The
growth
of
acEve,
peer
reviewed
learned
journals
since
1665
(Mabe,
2003)
11. The
Library
Reality
• Journal
expenditures
rising
• Increase
in
research
publica4on
• Increase
in
researchers
• Declining
budgets
(Mabe
2004,
based
on
data
from
ISI
and
NSF)
12. The
Library
Reality
• Journal
expenditures
rising
• Increase
in
research
publica4on
• Increase
in
researchers
• Declining
budgets
13. Trends
create
a
structural
problem;
calls
on
libraries
to
do
more
with
less
14. Trends
create
a
structural
problem;
climb
the
mountain
step
by
step
...
16. Prac8cal
incrementalism
for
the
complex
problem
of
data
cura8on
• Baby
steps
–
data
paper/cita4on
metaphors
• Chipping
away
–
making
the
problem
smaller
• DataONE
global
data
network
[NSF]
• Merrio
data
repository
• EZID
for
crea4ng
DOIs,
ARKs,
and
URNs
• Data
management
plans
(DMPTool)
• Web
archiving
service
(WAS)
[Library
of
Congress]
• Open-‐source
Excel
add-‐in
[MS
Research
&
GBMF]
17. Prac8cal
incrementalism
for
the
complex
problem
of
data
cura8on
• Baby
steps
–
data
paper/cita4on
metaphors
• Chipping
away
–
making
the
problem
smaller
• DataONE
global
data
network
[NSF]
• Merrio
data
repository
• EZID
for
crea4ng
DOIs,
ARKs,
and
URNs
• Data
management
plans
(DMPTool)
• Web
archiving
service
(WAS)
[Library
of
Congress]
• Open-‐source
Excel
add-‐in
[MS
Research
&
GBMF]
18. The
scien4fic
record
is
at
risk
Data
dissemina4on
is
rare,
risky,
expensive,
labor-‐intensive,
domain-‐specific,
and
receives
liole
credit
as
research
output
Global
Change
Galac4c
Change
19. What
data
cita4on
offers
• Credit
• Discovery
• Impact
tracking
– Helping
data
authors
verify
use
of
their
data
and
– Helping
iden4fy
how
others
have
used
the
data
• With
archiving:
re-‐use
and
reproducibility
25. Need
to
save
data
+
processing
Algorithms
+
Data
Structures
=
Programs
26. Vision
for
a
“data
paper”
• Wrap
the
unfamiliar
in
a
familiar
façade
• A
“data
paper”
is
minimally
a
cover
sheet
and
a
set
of
links
to
archived
ar4facts
• Cover
sheet
contains
familiar
elements:
4tle,
date,
authors,
abstract,
and
persistent
iden4fier
(DOI,
ARK,
etc.)
• Just
enough
to
permit
basic
exposure
and
discovery
– Building
a
basic
data
cita4on
– Indexing
by
services
such
as
Web
of
Science,
Google
Scholar
– Ins4lling
confidence
in
the
iden4fier’s
stability
27. Data
Papers
at
the
CDL
UC
CuraEon
Center
Publishing
Services
Program
• Merrio
Cura4on
repository
• Online
journals,
with
peer
review
• EZID:
Persistent
id
management
• Scholarly
communica4on:
grey
and
resolu4on
(ARKs,
DOIs,
et
al.)
literature
to
post-‐prints
• Search
and
display
tools
(XTF)
29. Data
paper:
envisioned
outcomes
• Familiar
look
and
feel
eases
adop4on
and
indexing
• Aoribu4on
mo4vates
deposit
• Stable
storage
and
ids
leads
to
cita4on
and
impact
• Data
products
enter
the
record
instead
of
being
lost
• Data
journals
spring
up
around
disciplines
30. Metaphors
we
close
with
“Our
ordinary
conceptual
system,
in
terms
of
which
we
both
think
and
act,
is
fundamentally
metaphorical
in
nature.”
OTOH,
“the
more
things
change
the
more
they
remain
the
same”
31. Ques4ons?
John.Kunze@ucop.edu
California
Digital
Library
hop://www.cdlib.org/
“Data
Paper”
Paper:
hop://escholarship.org/uc/item/9jw4964t