This presentation was provided by Carolyn Hansen of the University of Cincinnati during the NISO Training Thursday event, Metadata and the IR, held on Thursday, February 23, 2017.
This presentation was provided by Maria Praetzellis of California Digital Library, during the NISO hot topic virtual conference "Effective Data Management," which was held on September 29, 2021.
This presentation was provided by Carly Strasser of the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative during the NISO hot topic virtual conference "Effective Data Management," which was held on September 29, 2021.
February 18 2015 NISO Virtual Conference Scientific Data Management: Caring for Your Institution and its Intellectual Wealth
Learning to Curate Research Data
Jennifer Doty, Research Data Librarian, Emory Center for Digital Scholarship, Emory University, Robert W. Woodruff Library
Research Data Access and Preservation Summit, 2014
San Diego, CA
March 26-28, 2014
Jared Lyle, ICPSR
Jennifer Doty, Emory University
Joel Herndon, Duke University
Libbie Stephenson, University of California, Los Angeles
This presentation was provided by Diana Brooking of the University of Washington during the 11th Annual NISO-BISG Forum, Delivering the Integrated Information Experience, on June 23, 2017 and held at the ALA Annual Conference.
Les Hawkins discusses the development of the CONSER Standard Record (CSR) for cataloging serials. He addresses the challenges of introducing change, building trust, and clear communication. The CSR provides essential elements for users while streamlining training. It was developed cooperatively, tested at several institutions, and informed by user perspectives. While initial agreement took time, outreach, documentation, and online learning have increased adoption of the CSR over the past year.
February 18 2015 NISO Virtual Conference
Scientific Data Management: Caring for Your Institution and its Intellectual Wealth
Network Effects: RMap Project
Sheila M. Morrissey, Senior Researcher, ITHAKA
This presentation was provided by Carolyn Hansen of the University of Cincinnati during the NISO Training Thursday event, Metadata and the IR, held on Thursday, February 23, 2017.
This presentation was provided by Maria Praetzellis of California Digital Library, during the NISO hot topic virtual conference "Effective Data Management," which was held on September 29, 2021.
This presentation was provided by Carly Strasser of the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative during the NISO hot topic virtual conference "Effective Data Management," which was held on September 29, 2021.
February 18 2015 NISO Virtual Conference Scientific Data Management: Caring for Your Institution and its Intellectual Wealth
Learning to Curate Research Data
Jennifer Doty, Research Data Librarian, Emory Center for Digital Scholarship, Emory University, Robert W. Woodruff Library
Research Data Access and Preservation Summit, 2014
San Diego, CA
March 26-28, 2014
Jared Lyle, ICPSR
Jennifer Doty, Emory University
Joel Herndon, Duke University
Libbie Stephenson, University of California, Los Angeles
This presentation was provided by Diana Brooking of the University of Washington during the 11th Annual NISO-BISG Forum, Delivering the Integrated Information Experience, on June 23, 2017 and held at the ALA Annual Conference.
Les Hawkins discusses the development of the CONSER Standard Record (CSR) for cataloging serials. He addresses the challenges of introducing change, building trust, and clear communication. The CSR provides essential elements for users while streamlining training. It was developed cooperatively, tested at several institutions, and informed by user perspectives. While initial agreement took time, outreach, documentation, and online learning have increased adoption of the CSR over the past year.
February 18 2015 NISO Virtual Conference
Scientific Data Management: Caring for Your Institution and its Intellectual Wealth
Network Effects: RMap Project
Sheila M. Morrissey, Senior Researcher, ITHAKA
This document summarizes research data support services at Tufts University. It discusses the context at Tufts including relevant support organizations. It describes collaborations between the libraries, technology services, and research centers to provide data management resources like the Tufts Data Lab, a data management team, and Carpentries data workshops. Ongoing work includes developing guidance on data storage, a centralized support website, and expanding the use of the Dataverse sharing platform.
Feb 26 NISO Training Thursday
Crafting a Scientific Data Management Plan
About the Training
Addressing a data management plan for the first time can be an intimidating exercise. Join NISO for a hands-on workshop that will guide you through the elements of creating a data management plan, including gathering necessary information, identifying needed resources, and navigating potential pitfalls. Participants explore the important components of a data management plan and critique excerpts of sample plans provided by the instructors.
This session is meant to be a guided, step-by-step session that will follow the February 18 NISO Virtual Conference, Scientific Data Management: Caring for Your Institution and its Intellectual Wealth.
About the Instructors
Kiyomi D. Deards, MSLIS, Assistant Professor, University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries
Jennifer Thoegersen, Data Curation Librarian, University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries
The document discusses data management plan requirements for proposals submitted to the U.S. Department of Energy Office of Science for research funding. It provides context on the history of data management policies, outlines the four main requirements for inclusion of a data management plan, and suggests elements that should be included in the plan such as data types/sources, content/format, sharing/preservation, and protection. It also discusses tools like the Public Access Gateway for Energy and Science that can help manage access to research publications and data.
1) The document provides tips for good research data management (RDM), including file management, naming, versioning, formats, documentation, storage, and addressing common questions.
2) It emphasizes the importance of RDM for identifying, locating, understanding, and reusing data effectively, as well as satisfying funder requirements.
3) Good RDM practices such as consistent naming, versioning, and use of open formats make data more accessible for collaboration, analysis, and preservation.
This presentation was provided by Joe Zucca of the University of Pennsylvania, during Session Five of the NISO event "Assessment Practices and Metrics for the 21st Century," held on November 22, 2019.
RDAP 16: DMPs and Public Access: Agency and Data Service ExperiencesASIS&T
Research Data Access and Preservation Summit, 2016
Atlanta, GA
May 4-7, 2016
Outline for Panel 5, "DMPs and Public Access: Agency and Data Service Experiences"
Panel Lead:
Margaret Henderson, Virginia Commonwealth University
February 18 2014 NISO Virtual Conference
Scientific Data Management: Caring for Your Institution and its Intellectual Wealth
Capacity Building: Leveraging existing library networks to take on research data
Heidi Imker, Director of the Research Data Service, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
This document outlines best practices for creating research data. [1] It recommends using consistent data organization with standardized formats and descriptive file names. [2] Researchers should perform quality assurance checks and use scripted programs to analyze data while keeping notes. [3] All aspects of data collection and analysis should be thoroughly documented. Following these practices will improve data usability, sharing, and reproducibility.
RDAP 16: If I could turn back time: Looking back on 2+ years of DMP consultin...ASIS&T
This document summarizes Andi Ogier's experience providing data management plan (DMP) consulting at Virginia Tech over the past 2 years. It outlines the goals and timeline of DMP consulting services, things that have been done to educate researchers on DMPs, statistics on DMP consulting, logistics of the consulting process, feedback received from the National Science Foundation, and plans for the future of DMP consulting at Virginia Tech including more embedded consulting and leveraging new data repository services.
RDAP14: DataONE: Data Observation Network for EarthASIS&T
Research Data Access and Preservation Summit, 2014
San Diego, CA
March 26-28, 2014
Amber E. Budden, Director for Community Engagement and Outreach, DataONE, University of New Mexico
February 18 2015 NISO Virtual Conference Scientific Data Management: Caring for Your Institution and its Intellectual Wealth
Building Best Practices in Research Data Management: Tisch Library’s Initiatives
Regina F. Raboin, Science Research and Instruction Librarian/ Data Management Services Group Coordinator, Tisch Library, Tufts University
Poster RDAP13: A Workflow for Depositing to a Research Data Repository: A Cas...ASIS&T
Betsy Gunia, David Fearon, Benjamin Brosius, Tim DiLauro
JHU Data Management Services
Johns Hopkins University Sheridan Libraries
A Workflow for Depositing to a Research Data Repository: A Case Study for Archiving Publication Data
Research Data Access & Preservation Summit 2013
Baltimore, MD April 4, 2013 #rdap13
A Data Curation Framework: Data Curation and Research Support ServicesSusanMRob
The document presents a data curation framework to help align research support services with university eResearch needs. The framework has four components: data processing, storage, archiving, and research data management. It identifies current support services around information literacy, collections access, and scholarship. The framework is intended as a tool to highlight areas for collaboration between research support services and eResearch providers as services evolve over time.
This presentation was provided by Kristi Holmes of Northwestern University during the NISO hot topic virtual conference "Effective Data Management," which was held on September 29, 2021.
The document summarizes the role and challenges of research data management (RDM) information professionals from the perspective of a library practitioner. It discusses how RDM professionals educate researchers on topics like data management planning and repositories, consult on issues like workflows and publishing, and curate data to ensure findability, understandability and reuse. However, navigating relationships with different university offices, building shared understanding of technical concepts, and managing expectations with limited resources present challenges. Key principles for RDM professionals include keeping researchers central, considering future data re-users, and contributing to communities of practice. Ongoing gaps include supporting restricted and large data as well as developing actionable policies and training new professionals.
NISO Virtual Conference
Scientific Data Management: Caring for Your Institution and its Intellectual Wealth
Enabling transparency and efficiency in the research landscape
Dr. Melissa Haendel, Associate Professor, Ontology Development Group, OHSU Library, Department of Medical Informatics and Epidemiology, Oregon Health & Science University
RDAP 15: Beyond Metadata: Leveraging the “README” to support disciplinary Doc...ASIS&T
Research Data Access and Preservation Summit, 2015
Minneapolis, MN
April 22-23, 2015
Part of “Beyond metadata: Supporting non-standardized documentation to facilitate data reuse”
This talk was provided by Sarah Shreeves of the University of Miami, during the NISO Virtual Conference held on Feb 15, 2017, entitled Institutional Repositories: Ensuring Yours Is Populated, Useful and Thriving.
This presentation was provided by Christine Stohn of ExLibris/Proquest during the NISO Virtual Conference held on February 15, 2017, entitled Institutional Repositories: Ensuring Yours is Populated, Useful and Thriving.
This document summarizes research data support services at Tufts University. It discusses the context at Tufts including relevant support organizations. It describes collaborations between the libraries, technology services, and research centers to provide data management resources like the Tufts Data Lab, a data management team, and Carpentries data workshops. Ongoing work includes developing guidance on data storage, a centralized support website, and expanding the use of the Dataverse sharing platform.
Feb 26 NISO Training Thursday
Crafting a Scientific Data Management Plan
About the Training
Addressing a data management plan for the first time can be an intimidating exercise. Join NISO for a hands-on workshop that will guide you through the elements of creating a data management plan, including gathering necessary information, identifying needed resources, and navigating potential pitfalls. Participants explore the important components of a data management plan and critique excerpts of sample plans provided by the instructors.
This session is meant to be a guided, step-by-step session that will follow the February 18 NISO Virtual Conference, Scientific Data Management: Caring for Your Institution and its Intellectual Wealth.
About the Instructors
Kiyomi D. Deards, MSLIS, Assistant Professor, University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries
Jennifer Thoegersen, Data Curation Librarian, University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries
The document discusses data management plan requirements for proposals submitted to the U.S. Department of Energy Office of Science for research funding. It provides context on the history of data management policies, outlines the four main requirements for inclusion of a data management plan, and suggests elements that should be included in the plan such as data types/sources, content/format, sharing/preservation, and protection. It also discusses tools like the Public Access Gateway for Energy and Science that can help manage access to research publications and data.
1) The document provides tips for good research data management (RDM), including file management, naming, versioning, formats, documentation, storage, and addressing common questions.
2) It emphasizes the importance of RDM for identifying, locating, understanding, and reusing data effectively, as well as satisfying funder requirements.
3) Good RDM practices such as consistent naming, versioning, and use of open formats make data more accessible for collaboration, analysis, and preservation.
This presentation was provided by Joe Zucca of the University of Pennsylvania, during Session Five of the NISO event "Assessment Practices and Metrics for the 21st Century," held on November 22, 2019.
RDAP 16: DMPs and Public Access: Agency and Data Service ExperiencesASIS&T
Research Data Access and Preservation Summit, 2016
Atlanta, GA
May 4-7, 2016
Outline for Panel 5, "DMPs and Public Access: Agency and Data Service Experiences"
Panel Lead:
Margaret Henderson, Virginia Commonwealth University
February 18 2014 NISO Virtual Conference
Scientific Data Management: Caring for Your Institution and its Intellectual Wealth
Capacity Building: Leveraging existing library networks to take on research data
Heidi Imker, Director of the Research Data Service, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
This document outlines best practices for creating research data. [1] It recommends using consistent data organization with standardized formats and descriptive file names. [2] Researchers should perform quality assurance checks and use scripted programs to analyze data while keeping notes. [3] All aspects of data collection and analysis should be thoroughly documented. Following these practices will improve data usability, sharing, and reproducibility.
RDAP 16: If I could turn back time: Looking back on 2+ years of DMP consultin...ASIS&T
This document summarizes Andi Ogier's experience providing data management plan (DMP) consulting at Virginia Tech over the past 2 years. It outlines the goals and timeline of DMP consulting services, things that have been done to educate researchers on DMPs, statistics on DMP consulting, logistics of the consulting process, feedback received from the National Science Foundation, and plans for the future of DMP consulting at Virginia Tech including more embedded consulting and leveraging new data repository services.
RDAP14: DataONE: Data Observation Network for EarthASIS&T
Research Data Access and Preservation Summit, 2014
San Diego, CA
March 26-28, 2014
Amber E. Budden, Director for Community Engagement and Outreach, DataONE, University of New Mexico
February 18 2015 NISO Virtual Conference Scientific Data Management: Caring for Your Institution and its Intellectual Wealth
Building Best Practices in Research Data Management: Tisch Library’s Initiatives
Regina F. Raboin, Science Research and Instruction Librarian/ Data Management Services Group Coordinator, Tisch Library, Tufts University
Poster RDAP13: A Workflow for Depositing to a Research Data Repository: A Cas...ASIS&T
Betsy Gunia, David Fearon, Benjamin Brosius, Tim DiLauro
JHU Data Management Services
Johns Hopkins University Sheridan Libraries
A Workflow for Depositing to a Research Data Repository: A Case Study for Archiving Publication Data
Research Data Access & Preservation Summit 2013
Baltimore, MD April 4, 2013 #rdap13
A Data Curation Framework: Data Curation and Research Support ServicesSusanMRob
The document presents a data curation framework to help align research support services with university eResearch needs. The framework has four components: data processing, storage, archiving, and research data management. It identifies current support services around information literacy, collections access, and scholarship. The framework is intended as a tool to highlight areas for collaboration between research support services and eResearch providers as services evolve over time.
This presentation was provided by Kristi Holmes of Northwestern University during the NISO hot topic virtual conference "Effective Data Management," which was held on September 29, 2021.
The document summarizes the role and challenges of research data management (RDM) information professionals from the perspective of a library practitioner. It discusses how RDM professionals educate researchers on topics like data management planning and repositories, consult on issues like workflows and publishing, and curate data to ensure findability, understandability and reuse. However, navigating relationships with different university offices, building shared understanding of technical concepts, and managing expectations with limited resources present challenges. Key principles for RDM professionals include keeping researchers central, considering future data re-users, and contributing to communities of practice. Ongoing gaps include supporting restricted and large data as well as developing actionable policies and training new professionals.
NISO Virtual Conference
Scientific Data Management: Caring for Your Institution and its Intellectual Wealth
Enabling transparency and efficiency in the research landscape
Dr. Melissa Haendel, Associate Professor, Ontology Development Group, OHSU Library, Department of Medical Informatics and Epidemiology, Oregon Health & Science University
RDAP 15: Beyond Metadata: Leveraging the “README” to support disciplinary Doc...ASIS&T
Research Data Access and Preservation Summit, 2015
Minneapolis, MN
April 22-23, 2015
Part of “Beyond metadata: Supporting non-standardized documentation to facilitate data reuse”
This talk was provided by Sarah Shreeves of the University of Miami, during the NISO Virtual Conference held on Feb 15, 2017, entitled Institutional Repositories: Ensuring Yours Is Populated, Useful and Thriving.
This presentation was provided by Christine Stohn of ExLibris/Proquest during the NISO Virtual Conference held on February 15, 2017, entitled Institutional Repositories: Ensuring Yours is Populated, Useful and Thriving.
This conversation with Cliff Lynch was the opening segment of the February 15, 2017 program, sponsored by NISO, entitled Institutional Repositories: Ensuring Yours Is Populated, Useful and Thriving
This presentation was provided by Violeta Ilik of Northwestern University during the NISO Virtual Conference held on Feb 15, 2017, entitled Institutional Repositories: Ensuring Yours is Populated, Useful and Thriving. The DOI for this presentation is http://dx.doi.org/10.18131/G3VP6R
This presentation was provided by Sandi Caldrone of Purdue during the NISO Virtual Conference held on Feb 15, 2017, entitled Institutional Repositories: Ensuring Yours is Populated, Useful and Thriving.
This presentation was provided by Kate Byrne of Symplectic during the NISO virtual conference held on Feb 15, 2017, entitled Institutional Repositories: Ensuring Yours is Populated, Useful and Thriving.
Fedora is an open source digital repository system that is flexible, durable, and standards-based. It is developed and supported by a thriving community to store, preserve, and provide access to digital objects. Fedora repositories can handle both simple and complex use cases and content models. Examples of Fedora implementations include institutional repositories, research data repositories, digital archives and special collections, and manuscript collections.
This presentation was provided by Todd Digby and Robert Phillips of the University of Florida during the NISO Virtual Conference held on Feb 15, 2017, entitled Institutional Repositories: Ensuring Yours is Populated, Useful and Thriving.
Technological changes are accelerating social changes in the scholarly publishing landscape. There has been significant consolidation among publishers through horizontal and vertical integration. Relationships between authors, readers, publishers, and librarians have shifted with the rise of content aggregators and library vendors that now provide aggregated content and library management systems. Major companies like Thomson Reuters and Elsevier have expanded into research administration services. Startups are also emerging to create new models for scholarly communication through open solutions. The landscape continues to transform dramatically and it is unclear what relationships and models may emerge by 2030.
This Presentation was provided by Thad McIlroy, independent analyst and author, during the NISO webinar entitled Understanding the Marketplace - Consolidation, the Long Term Impact, and the New Players, held on March 8, 2017
This presentation was provided by Emily Ayubi of the American Psychological Association during a NISO webinar entitled Understanding the Marketplace: Creating the New Information Product, held on Wednesday, March 15, 2017
This document discusses the challenges facing scientists and researchers today, including issues around funding, reproducibility of research, and demonstrating return on investment. It also discusses how information service providers are evolving their business models and products to help address these challenges through metrics, collaboration tools, and other services. The goal is to help researchers navigate an increasingly complex information landscape and funding environment through open, transparent, and comprehensive metrics and solutions.
The document discusses how companies should focus on providing an excellent "experience" rather than just content delivery. It emphasizes that execution is as important as new ideas in innovation. The rest of the document outlines how Kanopy focuses on discovery, personalization, accessibility across devices, diversity in content and talent, and independence in order to distinguish itself as a leader through innovation.
This presentation was provided by Alex Humphreys of Ithaka/JStor during a NISO webinar, Understanding the Marketplace: Creating the New Information Product, held on Wednesday, March 15, 2017
Web-scale Discovery Services are becoming an integral part of libraries' information gathering arsenal. These services are able to use a single interface to seamlessly integrate results from a wide range of online sources, emulating the experience patrons have come to expect from Internet search engines. But despite their ability to streamline searching, discovery services provide a wide set of challenges for libraries who implement them. This virtual conference will touch on both the potential of discovery services as well as some of the issues involved.
This presentation was provided by Athena Hoeppner of the University of Central Florida during a NISO webinar, Providing Access: Ensuring What Libraries Have Licensed is What Users Can Reach, held on February 8, 2017
The document provides an overview of metadata and how it can be used. It discusses different types of metadata including structural, administrative, and descriptive metadata. It also covers how to create metadata by determining content types and attributes, and identifying functionality. Standards like Dublin Core, RDF/RDFa and Schema.org are examined as sources for metadata fields. The workshop teaches best practices for applying metadata to improve search, browsing and other functions.
PwC is a global network of firms providing professional services including assurance, tax, and advisory services. This training module provides an introduction to metadata management, including defining metadata, the metadata lifecycle, ensuring metadata quality, and using controlled vocabularies. Metadata exchanges and aggregation are important for interoperability.
Linked Data Quality Assessment – daQ and Luzzujerdeb
Presentation at the Ontology Engineering Group at UPM related to Linked Data Quality and the work done in the Enterprise Information System Group at Universität Bonn
Fiona Counsell Taylor & FrancisHow do we make what some might think to be boring metadata more appealing? Metadata has a PR problem and it’s time to wrap it in pastry and bake it for 40-45 minutes until golden brown. How can we motivate organizations and businesses in scholarly communications to improve their metadata? How do we support individuals to make the case for metadata solutions to decision makers in their organizations? How might we elevate the importance of metadata to motivate publishers, service providers, and libraries to make the sometimes costly infrastructure changes to enhance the completeness, connectedness, openness and reusability of metadata? ‘Incentives for Improving Metadata’ is one of Metadata 2020’s six projects, and has been described as the ‘vision’ project of the collaboration. Project participants are working to create resources to help organizations across scholarly communications understand the importance of metadata, including helping them identify tangible and appealing operational benefits for infrastructure changes. In this session Fiona will present the resources created to date and engage attendees to consider what additional resources may be helpful in their respective communities.
This document is the introduction and abstract for a PhD dissertation titled "Designing Optimal Network Topologies under Multiple Efficiency and Robustness Constraints". It was submitted by Sanket Patil to the International Institute of Information Technology–Bangalore in 2011. The dissertation addresses the problem of designing optimal network topologies when there are multiple, sometimes conflicting requirements around efficiency, robustness, costs, and other factors. It models the design problem using parameters like efficiency, robustness and cost, and uses a genetic algorithm called "topology breeding" to evolve optimal network topologies under different conditions by sampling the optimal topology space formed by the three performance parameters.
The document discusses the findings of interviews conducted for an open data project in Slovenia, which revealed a lack of common policies around research data creation, access, and preservation, as well as limited incentives and funding for preparing metadata and maintaining data over the long term, though some disciplines have established good practices and there is interest in further developing data services and infrastructure.
This document discusses community approaches to open data at scale. It describes the Metadata 2020 collaboration, which aims to promote richer, connected, reusable open metadata. It outlines several projects undertaken by Metadata 2020 working groups to address challenges around metadata quality, standards, and incentives. The document also summarizes two talks on improving metadata pipelines for SHARE and the evolution of metadata curation at Dryad data repository. It discusses Dryad's integration of manuscript and data submission as well as efforts to enhance interoperability, data citation, and the proposed Data Curation Network model.
RDAP 15: Research Data Integration in the Purdue LibrariesASIS&T
Research Data Access and Preservation Summit, 2015
Minneapolis, MN
April 22-23, 2015
Lisa Zilinski, Data Specialist, Carnegie Mellon University
Amy Barton, Metadata Specialist, Purdue
Tao Zhang, Digital User Experience Specialist, Purdue
Line Pouchard, Computational Science Information Specialist, Purdue
Pete E. Pascuzzi, Molecular Biosciences Information Specialist, Purdue
The document discusses two NSF-funded research projects on intelligence and security informatics:
1. A project to filter and monitor message streams to detect "new events" and changes in topics or activity levels. It describes the technical challenges and components of automatic message processing.
2. A project called HITIQA to develop high-quality interactive question answering. It describes the team members and key research issues like question semantics, human-computer dialogue, and information quality metrics.
This presentation was provided by Chris Erdmann of Library Carpentries and by Judy Ruttenberg of ARL during the NISO virtual conference, Open Data Projects, held on Wednesday, June 13, 2018.
Final version of the general presentation that the RDA Secretary General presented about a dozen times at various conferences and workshops around Europe in the last two months.
PEARC17: ARCC Identity and Access Management, Security and related topics. Cy...Florence Hudson
This document discusses the Cybersecurity Transition to Practice (TTP) Acceleration Program funded by an NSF EAGER grant. It describes three innovation working groups launched by Internet2's Collaborative Innovation Community to address topics like the Internet of Things, end-to-end trust and security, and distributed big data and analytics. The program aims to accelerate the transition of NSF-funded cybersecurity research into practical use through matchmaking researchers with practitioners for pilot deployments, webinars, and workshops. Over 385 participants from 165 institutions are now involved in collaborating on use cases.
This document discusses the need for critical infrastructure to promote data synthesis and evidence-based nutrient management. It outlines 10 steps for real-time data uptake, analysis, and customized nutrient recommendations. Key challenges include data standards, minimum data sets, provenance, and repositories. The Purdue University Research Repository is presented as a solution, providing preservation, curation, and publication of agricultural data. Hands-on support from librarians and agronomists is discussed to help researchers transition data and ensure best practices.
INSERM Workshop 246 - Management and reuse of health data: methodological issues: https://ateliersinserm.dakini.fr/en/workshop.246.management.and.reuse.of.health.data.methodological.issues-66-22.php
Here is a Python code that automatically finds all research papers (and their authors) about a given set of keywords, where keywords is an input parameter:
```python
import requests
from bs4 import BeautifulSoup
keywords = ["user data"]
def find_papers(keywords):
url = "https://dblp.org/search/publ/api?q=" + "+".join(keywords)
r = requests.get(url)
data = r.json()
papers = data["result"]["hits"]["hit"]
for paper in papers:
title = paper["info"]["title"]
authors = paper["info"]["author"]
print(f"Title: {title}")
print(
Building Capacity in Your Library for Research Data Management Support (Or Wh...Charleston Conference
This document summarizes the North Carolina State University Libraries' experience offering a research data management plan (DMP) review service. It discusses models of research data management support, including providing a DMP guide and tool, workshops, and consultations. The library received positive feedback from researchers who used the DMP review service. The document also covers lessons learned about the research process, opportunities for librarian learning, campus partnerships, and next steps for developing research data management support at NCSU and nationally.
Doran Chakraborty has received his PhD in Computer Science from the University of Texas at Austin and his MS in Computer Science from the University of Tulsa with a GPA of 4.0/4.0. His research interests include machine learning, multiagent learning, planning under uncertainty, and negotiation and game theory. He has several publications in peer-reviewed conferences and journals and has worked as a teaching assistant and research assistant during his graduate studies.
Learning Hands-on and by Trial & Error with Data Curation ProfilesDigCurV
Presentation by D Scott Brandt, Purdue Libraries, USA at the DigCurV International Conference; Framing the digital curation curriculum
6-7 May, 2013
Florence, Rome
This presentation was provided by Racquel Jemison, Ph.D., Christina MacLaughlin, Ph.D., and Paulomi Majumder. Ph.D., all of the American Chemical Society, for the second session of NISO's 2024 Training Series "DEIA in the Scholarly Landscape." Session Two: 'Expanding Pathways to Publishing Careers,' was held June 13, 2024.
This presentation was provided by Rebecca Benner, Ph.D., of the American Society of Anesthesiologists, for the second session of NISO's 2024 Training Series "DEIA in the Scholarly Landscape." Session Two: 'Expanding Pathways to Publishing Careers,' was held June 13, 2024.
This presentation was provided by Steph Pollock of The American Psychological Association’s Journals Program, and Damita Snow, of The American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE), for the initial session of NISO's 2024 Training Series "DEIA in the Scholarly Landscape." Session One: 'Setting Expectations: a DEIA Primer,' was held June 6, 2024.
This presentation was provided by William Mattingly of the Smithsonian Institution, during the closing segment of the NISO training series "AI & Prompt Design." Session Eight: Limitations and Potential Solutions, was held on May 23, 2024.
This presentation was provided by William Mattingly of the Smithsonian Institution, during the seventh segment of the NISO training series "AI & Prompt Design." Session 7: Open Source Language Models, was held on May 16, 2024.
This presentation was provided by William Mattingly of the Smithsonian Institution, during the sixth segment of the NISO training series "AI & Prompt Design." Session Six: Text Classification with LLMs, was held on May 9, 2024.
This presentation was provided by William Mattingly of the Smithsonian Institution, during the fifth segment of the NISO training series "AI & Prompt Design." Session Five: Named Entity Recognition with LLMs, was held on May 2, 2024.
This presentation was provided by William Mattingly of the Smithsonian Institution, during the fourth segment of the NISO training series "AI & Prompt Design." Session Four: Structured Data and Assistants, was held on April 25, 2024.
This presentation was provided by William Mattingly of the Smithsonian Institution, during the third segment of the NISO training series "AI & Prompt Design." Session Three: Beginning Conversations, was held on April 18, 2024.
This presentation was provided by Kaveh Bazargan of River Valley Technologies, during the NISO webinar "Sustainability in Publishing." The event was held April 17, 2024.
This presentation was provided by Dana Compton of the American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE), during the NISO webinar "Sustainability in Publishing." The event was held April 17, 2024.
This presentation was provided by William Mattingly of the Smithsonian Institution, during the second segment of the NISO training series "AI & Prompt Design." Session Two: Large Language Models, was held on April 11, 2024.
This presentation was provided by Teresa Hazen of the University of Arizona, Geoff Morse of Northwestern University. and Ken Varnum of the University of Michigan, during the Spring ODI Conformance Statement Workshop for Libraries. This event was held on April 9, 2024
This presentation was provided by William Mattingly of the Smithsonian Institution, during the opening segment of the NISO training series "AI & Prompt Design." Session One: Introduction to Machine Learning, was held on April 4, 2024.
This presentation was provided by William Mattingly of the Smithsonian Institution, for the eight and final session of NISO's 2023 Training Series on Text and Data Mining. Session eight, "Building Data Driven Applications" was held on Thursday, December 7, 2023.
This presentation was provided by William Mattingly of the Smithsonian Institution, for the seventh session of NISO's 2023 Training Series on Text and Data Mining. Session seven, "Vector Databases and Semantic Searching" was held on Thursday, November 30, 2023.
This presentation was provided by William Mattingly of the Smithsonian Institution, for the sixth session of NISO's 2023 Training Series on Text and Data Mining. Session six, "Text Mining Techniques" was held on Thursday, November 16, 2023.
This presentation was provided by William Mattingly of the Smithsonian Institution, for the fifth session of NISO's 2023 Training Series on Text and Data Mining. Session five, "Text Processing for Library Data" was held on Thursday, November 9, 2023.
This presentation was provided by Todd Carpenter, Executive Director, during the NISO webinar on "Strategic Planning." The event was held virtually on November 8, 2023.
More from National Information Standards Organization (NISO) (20)
ISO/IEC 27001, ISO/IEC 42001, and GDPR: Best Practices for Implementation and...PECB
Denis is a dynamic and results-driven Chief Information Officer (CIO) with a distinguished career spanning information systems analysis and technical project management. With a proven track record of spearheading the design and delivery of cutting-edge Information Management solutions, he has consistently elevated business operations, streamlined reporting functions, and maximized process efficiency.
Certified as an ISO/IEC 27001: Information Security Management Systems (ISMS) Lead Implementer, Data Protection Officer, and Cyber Risks Analyst, Denis brings a heightened focus on data security, privacy, and cyber resilience to every endeavor.
His expertise extends across a diverse spectrum of reporting, database, and web development applications, underpinned by an exceptional grasp of data storage and virtualization technologies. His proficiency in application testing, database administration, and data cleansing ensures seamless execution of complex projects.
What sets Denis apart is his comprehensive understanding of Business and Systems Analysis technologies, honed through involvement in all phases of the Software Development Lifecycle (SDLC). From meticulous requirements gathering to precise analysis, innovative design, rigorous development, thorough testing, and successful implementation, he has consistently delivered exceptional results.
Throughout his career, he has taken on multifaceted roles, from leading technical project management teams to owning solutions that drive operational excellence. His conscientious and proactive approach is unwavering, whether he is working independently or collaboratively within a team. His ability to connect with colleagues on a personal level underscores his commitment to fostering a harmonious and productive workplace environment.
Date: May 29, 2024
Tags: Information Security, ISO/IEC 27001, ISO/IEC 42001, Artificial Intelligence, GDPR
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Find out more about ISO training and certification services
Training: ISO/IEC 27001 Information Security Management System - EN | PECB
ISO/IEC 42001 Artificial Intelligence Management System - EN | PECB
General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) - Training Courses - EN | PECB
Webinars: https://pecb.com/webinars
Article: https://pecb.com/article
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For more information about PECB:
Website: https://pecb.com/
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/pecb/
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/PECBInternational/
Slideshare: http://www.slideshare.net/PECBCERTIFICATION
Walmart Business+ and Spark Good for Nonprofits.pdfTechSoup
"Learn about all the ways Walmart supports nonprofit organizations.
You will hear from Liz Willett, the Head of Nonprofits, and hear about what Walmart is doing to help nonprofits, including Walmart Business and Spark Good. Walmart Business+ is a new offer for nonprofits that offers discounts and also streamlines nonprofits order and expense tracking, saving time and money.
The webinar may also give some examples on how nonprofits can best leverage Walmart Business+.
The event will cover the following::
Walmart Business + (https://business.walmart.com/plus) is a new shopping experience for nonprofits, schools, and local business customers that connects an exclusive online shopping experience to stores. Benefits include free delivery and shipping, a 'Spend Analytics” feature, special discounts, deals and tax-exempt shopping.
Special TechSoup offer for a free 180 days membership, and up to $150 in discounts on eligible orders.
Spark Good (walmart.com/sparkgood) is a charitable platform that enables nonprofits to receive donations directly from customers and associates.
Answers about how you can do more with Walmart!"
How to Fix the Import Error in the Odoo 17Celine George
An import error occurs when a program fails to import a module or library, disrupting its execution. In languages like Python, this issue arises when the specified module cannot be found or accessed, hindering the program's functionality. Resolving import errors is crucial for maintaining smooth software operation and uninterrupted development processes.
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How to Make a Field Mandatory in Odoo 17Celine George
In Odoo, making a field required can be done through both Python code and XML views. When you set the required attribute to True in Python code, it makes the field required across all views where it's used. Conversely, when you set the required attribute in XML views, it makes the field required only in the context of that particular view.
Reimagining Your Library Space: How to Increase the Vibes in Your Library No ...Diana Rendina
Librarians are leading the way in creating future-ready citizens – now we need to update our spaces to match. In this session, attendees will get inspiration for transforming their library spaces. You’ll learn how to survey students and patrons, create a focus group, and use design thinking to brainstorm ideas for your space. We’ll discuss budget friendly ways to change your space as well as how to find funding. No matter where you’re at, you’ll find ideas for reimagining your space in this session.
A workshop hosted by the South African Journal of Science aimed at postgraduate students and early career researchers with little or no experience in writing and publishing journal articles.