Pecha Kucha slides on ReCollect Research presented by Patrick McSweeney, University of Southampton, on Thursday 1st August 2013 at Repository Fringe 2013.
Presentation given by Angus Whyte as part of the Digital Curation Centre's Round Table: "How can other stakeholders support repositories on research data", which was led by Anna Clements, University of St Andrews; Angus Whyte, Digital Curation Centre; Robin Rice, University of Edinburgh; Sarah Jones, Digital Curation Centre. The Round Table took place on Friday 2nd August 2013 at Repository Fringe 2013
Lessons in Open Access Compliance for Higher Education (LOCH)Repository Fringe
The document discusses the Lessons in Open Access Compliance for Higher Education (LOCH) project which involves the University of Edinburgh, Heriot-Watt University, and St Andrews University. The project aims to help the universities manage open access payments and compliance through tools like PURE, adapting workflows to make open access seamless for academics, and developing case studies, workshops, and reports on their processes. Planned outputs include case studies, webinars, workshops, blog posts, and guidance to help other universities with open access requirements.
The document discusses research information management processes and the CERIFY project. It describes mapping current 'as is' processes and identifying gaps to develop improved 'to be' processes using CERIF. Specific areas discussed include developing CERIF data models and processes for exchanging data with Thomson Reuters' InCites system and for capturing measures of esteem. The goal is to standardize data through authority lists and taxonomies to make the processes more efficient and help verify information.
This 3 sentence document thanks sponsors for supporting the Repository Fringe event organized by the Digital Curation Centre, EDINA, the University of Edinburgh Library, and University Collections. The event took place on Friday, August 2nd, 2013. The organizers express gratitude to sponsors for their support of the Repository Fringe event in 2013.
Jisc is working to support funder compliance with metadata standards for research outputs. They have developed the RIOXX metadata application profile and guidelines in collaboration with RCUK and HEFCE. Implementing RIOXX will facilitate consistency in metadata fields, interoperability between systems, and reporting of research outputs from institutions to funders. Jisc is providing plugins, patches, and support to help institutional repositories implement RIOXX as recommended by RCUK.
The Repository Fringe organizers thanked the event sponsors for Repository Fringe 2013, which was held on Thursday, August 1st, 2013. The event was organized and supported by the Digital Curation Centre, EDINA, the University of Edinburgh Library, and University Collections.
Getting to the Repository of the Future Round TableRepository Fringe
Slides from the Getting to the Repository of the Future Round Table held on Thursday 2nd August 2013 at Repository Fringe 2013. The Round Table was chaired by Chris Awre, University of Hull, and Balviar Notay, JISC.
The document discusses the role of libraries in providing access to research data and introduces DataCite, a global consortium focused on improving infrastructure for research datasets. Key points:
- Scientific information now includes non-textual data, requiring libraries to provide access to datasets in addition to publications.
- DataCite provides DOIs and standards to help data repositories and publishers improve identification, citation and discovery of datasets.
- DataCite has over 15 member institutions worldwide and has registered over 800,000 datasets with DOIs to help connect publications to underlying research data.
Presentation given by Angus Whyte as part of the Digital Curation Centre's Round Table: "How can other stakeholders support repositories on research data", which was led by Anna Clements, University of St Andrews; Angus Whyte, Digital Curation Centre; Robin Rice, University of Edinburgh; Sarah Jones, Digital Curation Centre. The Round Table took place on Friday 2nd August 2013 at Repository Fringe 2013
Lessons in Open Access Compliance for Higher Education (LOCH)Repository Fringe
The document discusses the Lessons in Open Access Compliance for Higher Education (LOCH) project which involves the University of Edinburgh, Heriot-Watt University, and St Andrews University. The project aims to help the universities manage open access payments and compliance through tools like PURE, adapting workflows to make open access seamless for academics, and developing case studies, workshops, and reports on their processes. Planned outputs include case studies, webinars, workshops, blog posts, and guidance to help other universities with open access requirements.
The document discusses research information management processes and the CERIFY project. It describes mapping current 'as is' processes and identifying gaps to develop improved 'to be' processes using CERIF. Specific areas discussed include developing CERIF data models and processes for exchanging data with Thomson Reuters' InCites system and for capturing measures of esteem. The goal is to standardize data through authority lists and taxonomies to make the processes more efficient and help verify information.
This 3 sentence document thanks sponsors for supporting the Repository Fringe event organized by the Digital Curation Centre, EDINA, the University of Edinburgh Library, and University Collections. The event took place on Friday, August 2nd, 2013. The organizers express gratitude to sponsors for their support of the Repository Fringe event in 2013.
Jisc is working to support funder compliance with metadata standards for research outputs. They have developed the RIOXX metadata application profile and guidelines in collaboration with RCUK and HEFCE. Implementing RIOXX will facilitate consistency in metadata fields, interoperability between systems, and reporting of research outputs from institutions to funders. Jisc is providing plugins, patches, and support to help institutional repositories implement RIOXX as recommended by RCUK.
The Repository Fringe organizers thanked the event sponsors for Repository Fringe 2013, which was held on Thursday, August 1st, 2013. The event was organized and supported by the Digital Curation Centre, EDINA, the University of Edinburgh Library, and University Collections.
Getting to the Repository of the Future Round TableRepository Fringe
Slides from the Getting to the Repository of the Future Round Table held on Thursday 2nd August 2013 at Repository Fringe 2013. The Round Table was chaired by Chris Awre, University of Hull, and Balviar Notay, JISC.
The document discusses the role of libraries in providing access to research data and introduces DataCite, a global consortium focused on improving infrastructure for research datasets. Key points:
- Scientific information now includes non-textual data, requiring libraries to provide access to datasets in addition to publications.
- DataCite provides DOIs and standards to help data repositories and publishers improve identification, citation and discovery of datasets.
- DataCite has over 15 member institutions worldwide and has registered over 800,000 datasets with DOIs to help connect publications to underlying research data.
Unlocking Thesis Data - Stephen Grace, University of East LondonRepository Fringe
This document discusses unlocking thesis data by making it openly available online. It notes the benefits of doing so for students, funders, institutions, and researchers. It also provides examples of case studies from several universities that have assigned digital object identifiers (DOIs) to student theses to make them easily identifiable and citable. The document seeks feedback on what systems can be used to create and use persistent identifiers for thesis data and what type of data should or could be deposited online.
Open Access workshop at Repository Fringe 2015 - Valerie McCutcheonRepository Fringe
This document discusses an open access workshop and various topics related to open access publishing. It mentions notifying papers, choosing an item type, uploading documents and licenses, using Sherpa to inform open access routes, filling publication fields and adding open access information. It also discusses RCUK and REF compliance using RIOXX profiles, exporting to funders, and breakout groups on routing publications, Sherpa services, open access metadata, and installing/configuring RIOXX and REF profiles.
Repositories for OA, RDM and Beyond - Rory McNichollRepository Fringe
This document summarizes the history and services of the University of London Computer Centre (ULCC), including its Digital Archives & Research Technologies (DART) service. DART provides open access repositories, research data repositories, and archival storage using platforms like EPrints, OJS, and Arkivum. It works with the research community to meet open access and research data management requirements. The presentation concludes by discussing potential future directions like preservation as a service and moving back through the full research lifecycle.
The document discusses interest from researchers at other universities in Edinburgh's integration of electronic lab notebooks (ELNs) with research data management systems (RDMS). It summarizes the key benefits of RSpace, Edinburgh's ELN and RDMS, including its ability to capture, organize, and share data and files. It connects to Edinburgh's data storage systems and is integrated with their data repository and archive. This provides researchers an integrated research data management workflow.
This document summarizes a presentation on building data networks between authors, repositories, and journals. It discusses why researchers should work with data journals, the general criteria data journals require of repositories, and introduces the Journal of Open Research Software and initiatives like DataCite UK and BioSharing that aim to improve data sharing and reuse through standards and databases.
Building data networks: exploring trust and interoperability between authoris...Repository Fringe
Building data networks: exploring trust and interoperability between authoris, repositories and journals. Varsha Khodiyar , Scientific Data; Neil Chue Hong, Journal of Open Research Software; Rachael Kotarski, DataCite, Peter McQuilton, BioSharing; Reza Salek, Metabolights. At Repository Fringe 2015
Jisc on repositories unleashing data - Daniela DucaRepository Fringe
Jisc aims to make the UK the most digitally advanced education and research nation. It supports research through developing shared infrastructure, providing input to funders and publishers, and supporting standards. It is working on two relevant projects: the UK Research Data Discovery Service, which aims to make research data more discoverable by evaluating metadata models from Australia and Canada; and Research Data Metrics, which is scoping a tool to assess data usage and management systems through a proof of concept using the IRUS dataset.
IRUS-UK is a national aggregation service that collects usage statistics from UK institutional repositories. It processes raw download data into COUNTER-compliant statistics. A small piece of code is added to repository software to gather basic data for each download and send it to the IRUS-UK server. This data is then displayed through a web interface, SUSHI service, and API. Future priorities for IRUS-UK include increasing participating repositories, implementing the tracker for more software, expanding reports, leveraging additional metadata, and international collaboration.
Open Data and Sharing Science - Graham Steel, ContentmineRepository Fringe
This document contains information about Graham Steel, including his work with open knowledge and science groups in Scotland. It lists his blog and social media profiles, as well as links to resources on open data repositories, open notebook science, and content mining. The document promotes open sharing of research outputs and information.
The document discusses the benefits of exercise for mental health. Regular physical activity can help reduce anxiety and depression and improve mood and cognitive function. Exercise causes chemical changes in the brain that may help protect against mental illness and improve symptoms for those who already suffer from conditions like anxiety and depression.
Jisc is developing REF and Monitor tools to support open access compliance. The REF plugin will build on the previous version and institutions must install the RIOXX plugin. Jisc is also investigating a plugin for DSpace. Monitor tools include Monitor Local for institutions to track open access outputs and funding, and Monitor UK which aggregates data at a national level for analytics and sharing gold OA cost information.
Linking Software: citations, roles, references and moreRepository Fringe
This document discusses issues around properly attributing and citing software in research. It notes that current practices do not sufficiently reward those who create and reuse high-quality software and data. The document proposes treating software and data as first-class research outputs by publishing papers about software and data to allow them to be properly referenced and credited. It also discusses challenges around identifying citable elements of software, versioning, defining authorship and roles, and ensuring proper linking of metadata.
The document discusses Jisc Publications Router, which helps institutions capture research outputs by routing publication metadata from various sources to institutional repositories. Router 1.0 demonstrated a viable prototype routing metadata from Europe PMC and Nature, and full text from Europe PMC and eLife. Router 2.0 is now being developed to provide a pilot service, migrating existing participants and adding new content providers with the goal of becoming a full service by August 2016. It will have a new architecture and aim to capture more content and integrate better with other Jisc open access services.
This document discusses linking research outputs to enable reproducibility and acknowledgement through citation. It notes that not all research outputs are as easily identified as articles. Data citation allows research to be linked through identifiers for data, authors, and other research artifacts like theses, papers, and monographs. Technical and human infrastructure is needed for open research that integrates these linked objects and identifiers. Outreach and sustainability are also addressed.
HHuLO Access – Hull, Huddersfield and Lincoln explore open access good practi...Repository Fringe
HHuLO Access – Hull, Huddersfield and Lincoln explore open access good practice - Chris Awre, University of Hull. This presentation was part of Repository Fringe 2014, which took place from 30th to 31st July 2014 in Edinburgh.
Latest developments in Hydra-land - Chris Awre, University of HullRepository Fringe
Latest developments in Hydra-land - Chris Awre, University of Hull. This presentation was part of Repository Fringe 2014, which took place from 30th to 31st July 2014, in Edinburgh.
ArchivesSpace - Scott Renton, University of EdinburghRepository Fringe
ArchivesSpace - Scott Renton, University of Edinburgh. This presentation was part of Repository Fringe 2014, which took place from 30th to 31st July 2014 in Edinburgh.
Collections.ed – Launching the University Collections Online, Ianthe Sutherla...Repository Fringe
Collections.ed – Launching the University Collections Online, Ianthe Sutherland, University of Edinburgh. This presentation was part of Repository Fringe 2014, which took place from 30th to 31st July 2014 in Edinburgh.
This document provides an overview of wound healing, its functions, stages, mechanisms, factors affecting it, and complications.
A wound is a break in the integrity of the skin or tissues, which may be associated with disruption of the structure and function.
Healing is the body’s response to injury in an attempt to restore normal structure and functions.
Healing can occur in two ways: Regeneration and Repair
There are 4 phases of wound healing: hemostasis, inflammation, proliferation, and remodeling. This document also describes the mechanism of wound healing. Factors that affect healing include infection, uncontrolled diabetes, poor nutrition, age, anemia, the presence of foreign bodies, etc.
Complications of wound healing like infection, hyperpigmentation of scar, contractures, and keloid formation.
Unlocking Thesis Data - Stephen Grace, University of East LondonRepository Fringe
This document discusses unlocking thesis data by making it openly available online. It notes the benefits of doing so for students, funders, institutions, and researchers. It also provides examples of case studies from several universities that have assigned digital object identifiers (DOIs) to student theses to make them easily identifiable and citable. The document seeks feedback on what systems can be used to create and use persistent identifiers for thesis data and what type of data should or could be deposited online.
Open Access workshop at Repository Fringe 2015 - Valerie McCutcheonRepository Fringe
This document discusses an open access workshop and various topics related to open access publishing. It mentions notifying papers, choosing an item type, uploading documents and licenses, using Sherpa to inform open access routes, filling publication fields and adding open access information. It also discusses RCUK and REF compliance using RIOXX profiles, exporting to funders, and breakout groups on routing publications, Sherpa services, open access metadata, and installing/configuring RIOXX and REF profiles.
Repositories for OA, RDM and Beyond - Rory McNichollRepository Fringe
This document summarizes the history and services of the University of London Computer Centre (ULCC), including its Digital Archives & Research Technologies (DART) service. DART provides open access repositories, research data repositories, and archival storage using platforms like EPrints, OJS, and Arkivum. It works with the research community to meet open access and research data management requirements. The presentation concludes by discussing potential future directions like preservation as a service and moving back through the full research lifecycle.
The document discusses interest from researchers at other universities in Edinburgh's integration of electronic lab notebooks (ELNs) with research data management systems (RDMS). It summarizes the key benefits of RSpace, Edinburgh's ELN and RDMS, including its ability to capture, organize, and share data and files. It connects to Edinburgh's data storage systems and is integrated with their data repository and archive. This provides researchers an integrated research data management workflow.
This document summarizes a presentation on building data networks between authors, repositories, and journals. It discusses why researchers should work with data journals, the general criteria data journals require of repositories, and introduces the Journal of Open Research Software and initiatives like DataCite UK and BioSharing that aim to improve data sharing and reuse through standards and databases.
Building data networks: exploring trust and interoperability between authoris...Repository Fringe
Building data networks: exploring trust and interoperability between authoris, repositories and journals. Varsha Khodiyar , Scientific Data; Neil Chue Hong, Journal of Open Research Software; Rachael Kotarski, DataCite, Peter McQuilton, BioSharing; Reza Salek, Metabolights. At Repository Fringe 2015
Jisc on repositories unleashing data - Daniela DucaRepository Fringe
Jisc aims to make the UK the most digitally advanced education and research nation. It supports research through developing shared infrastructure, providing input to funders and publishers, and supporting standards. It is working on two relevant projects: the UK Research Data Discovery Service, which aims to make research data more discoverable by evaluating metadata models from Australia and Canada; and Research Data Metrics, which is scoping a tool to assess data usage and management systems through a proof of concept using the IRUS dataset.
IRUS-UK is a national aggregation service that collects usage statistics from UK institutional repositories. It processes raw download data into COUNTER-compliant statistics. A small piece of code is added to repository software to gather basic data for each download and send it to the IRUS-UK server. This data is then displayed through a web interface, SUSHI service, and API. Future priorities for IRUS-UK include increasing participating repositories, implementing the tracker for more software, expanding reports, leveraging additional metadata, and international collaboration.
Open Data and Sharing Science - Graham Steel, ContentmineRepository Fringe
This document contains information about Graham Steel, including his work with open knowledge and science groups in Scotland. It lists his blog and social media profiles, as well as links to resources on open data repositories, open notebook science, and content mining. The document promotes open sharing of research outputs and information.
The document discusses the benefits of exercise for mental health. Regular physical activity can help reduce anxiety and depression and improve mood and cognitive function. Exercise causes chemical changes in the brain that may help protect against mental illness and improve symptoms for those who already suffer from conditions like anxiety and depression.
Jisc is developing REF and Monitor tools to support open access compliance. The REF plugin will build on the previous version and institutions must install the RIOXX plugin. Jisc is also investigating a plugin for DSpace. Monitor tools include Monitor Local for institutions to track open access outputs and funding, and Monitor UK which aggregates data at a national level for analytics and sharing gold OA cost information.
Linking Software: citations, roles, references and moreRepository Fringe
This document discusses issues around properly attributing and citing software in research. It notes that current practices do not sufficiently reward those who create and reuse high-quality software and data. The document proposes treating software and data as first-class research outputs by publishing papers about software and data to allow them to be properly referenced and credited. It also discusses challenges around identifying citable elements of software, versioning, defining authorship and roles, and ensuring proper linking of metadata.
The document discusses Jisc Publications Router, which helps institutions capture research outputs by routing publication metadata from various sources to institutional repositories. Router 1.0 demonstrated a viable prototype routing metadata from Europe PMC and Nature, and full text from Europe PMC and eLife. Router 2.0 is now being developed to provide a pilot service, migrating existing participants and adding new content providers with the goal of becoming a full service by August 2016. It will have a new architecture and aim to capture more content and integrate better with other Jisc open access services.
This document discusses linking research outputs to enable reproducibility and acknowledgement through citation. It notes that not all research outputs are as easily identified as articles. Data citation allows research to be linked through identifiers for data, authors, and other research artifacts like theses, papers, and monographs. Technical and human infrastructure is needed for open research that integrates these linked objects and identifiers. Outreach and sustainability are also addressed.
HHuLO Access – Hull, Huddersfield and Lincoln explore open access good practi...Repository Fringe
HHuLO Access – Hull, Huddersfield and Lincoln explore open access good practice - Chris Awre, University of Hull. This presentation was part of Repository Fringe 2014, which took place from 30th to 31st July 2014 in Edinburgh.
Latest developments in Hydra-land - Chris Awre, University of HullRepository Fringe
Latest developments in Hydra-land - Chris Awre, University of Hull. This presentation was part of Repository Fringe 2014, which took place from 30th to 31st July 2014, in Edinburgh.
ArchivesSpace - Scott Renton, University of EdinburghRepository Fringe
ArchivesSpace - Scott Renton, University of Edinburgh. This presentation was part of Repository Fringe 2014, which took place from 30th to 31st July 2014 in Edinburgh.
Collections.ed – Launching the University Collections Online, Ianthe Sutherla...Repository Fringe
Collections.ed – Launching the University Collections Online, Ianthe Sutherland, University of Edinburgh. This presentation was part of Repository Fringe 2014, which took place from 30th to 31st July 2014 in Edinburgh.
This document provides an overview of wound healing, its functions, stages, mechanisms, factors affecting it, and complications.
A wound is a break in the integrity of the skin or tissues, which may be associated with disruption of the structure and function.
Healing is the body’s response to injury in an attempt to restore normal structure and functions.
Healing can occur in two ways: Regeneration and Repair
There are 4 phases of wound healing: hemostasis, inflammation, proliferation, and remodeling. This document also describes the mechanism of wound healing. Factors that affect healing include infection, uncontrolled diabetes, poor nutrition, age, anemia, the presence of foreign bodies, etc.
Complications of wound healing like infection, hyperpigmentation of scar, contractures, and keloid formation.
Elevate Your Nonprofit's Online Presence_ A Guide to Effective SEO Strategies...TechSoup
Whether you're new to SEO or looking to refine your existing strategies, this webinar will provide you with actionable insights and practical tips to elevate your nonprofit's online presence.