What is Transmedia? How does it change your approach to developing your media project? What are some basic parameters of a transmedia project? - Learn here!
"These slides from Anita Ondine are being made available under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License."
Introduction to Exceptional Event Analyst CommunityErin Robinson
This document summarizes an introduction webinar for the Exceptional Event Analyst Community. It provided an overview of the Exceptional Event Documentation System (EE DSS) tool and resources for exceptional event analysis. Over 140 people from over 50 organizations registered for the webinar. It highlighted the EE DSS wiki as a hub for community activities, resources tagged with #ExceptionalEvent on Delicious, and the timeline for exceptional event flag submission and documentation for PM2.5. Contact information was provided for key community contacts.
What is Transmedia? How does it change your approach to developing your media project? What are some basic parameters of a transmedia project? - Learn here!
"These slides from Anita Ondine are being made available under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License."
Introduction to Exceptional Event Analyst CommunityErin Robinson
This document summarizes an introduction webinar for the Exceptional Event Analyst Community. It provided an overview of the Exceptional Event Documentation System (EE DSS) tool and resources for exceptional event analysis. Over 140 people from over 50 organizations registered for the webinar. It highlighted the EE DSS wiki as a hub for community activities, resources tagged with #ExceptionalEvent on Delicious, and the timeline for exceptional event flag submission and documentation for PM2.5. Contact information was provided for key community contacts.
The document discusses the ESIP Commons, which aims to provide a knowledge repository and citation mechanism for information generated by the Federation of Earth Science Information Partners (ESIP). The ESIP Commons allows members to publish, cite, and discover various non-traditional scholarly works, including white papers, meeting materials, and future content types. It tracks contributions by individuals and organizations to further knowledge sharing within the ESIP network.
Proactively manage quality and outcomes readmissionsBrenda Aulinskis
The document discusses challenges in healthcare around reducing preventable hospital readmissions and the financial penalties providers face; it presents SAS's readmission analytics platform which uses data integration, predictive modeling, and clinical decision support to identify at-risk patients, determine the interventions most likely to prevent readmissions, and optimize outcomes. The platform aims to help providers engage patients, make evidence-based decisions, and lower readmission rates and costs.
The document discusses how ESIP (Earth Science Information Partners) uses virtual communities and platforms to facilitate collaboration around earth science data. It provides examples of how ESIP creates wikis, social media listening tools, and hybrid meeting spaces to allow distributed groups to find, discuss, and share data. These virtual "planks" and "workspaces" help scale collaboration across disciplines and communities. The goal is to support interoperability at multiple levels and allow earth scientists and IT practitioners to produce returns by working together in a connected, social way.
The document provides basic rules for using the articles "a/an", "the", and no article (nothing) in English. It explains that "a/an" is used before singular countable nouns when referring to something for the first time. "The" is used before singular and plural nouns when referring to something again, or when referring to specific people, places, or things. No article is used in many contexts like general references, days of the week, continents, individual countries, places, meals, modes of transportation, sports, and more.
Esip 101 - An introduction to all things ESIPErin Robinson
This document provides an introduction to the Earth Science Information Partners (ESIP) Federation, a community of Earth science data and information technology practitioners. It outlines ESIP's vision and history, describes its partner types and governance structure, and highlights some of the work it does to support interoperability, best practices, professional development, and collaboration in Earth science. Key information includes that ESIP was formed in 1998 by NASA, is a non-profit 501(c)(3) organization, and brings together over 150 partner organizations in a distributed network to advance Earth science.
Transforming Networking within ESIP using ResearchBitErin Robinson
Geoscientists increasingly need interdisciplinary teams to solve their research problems. Currently, geoscientists use Research Networking (RN) systems to connect with each other and find people of similar and dissimilar interests. As we shift to digitally mediated scholarship, we need innovative methods for scholarly communication. Formal methods for scholarly communication are undergoing vast transformation owing to the open-access movement and reproducible research. However, informal scholarly communication that takes place at professional society meetings and conferences, like AGU, has received limited research attention relying primarily on serendipitous interaction.
The ResearchBit project aims to fundamentally improve informal methods of scholarly communication by leveraging the serendipitous interactions of researchers and making them more aware of co-located potential collaborators with mutual interests. This presentation will describe our preliminary hardware testing done at the Federation for Earth Science Information Partners (ESIP) Summer meeting this past July and the initial recommendation system design. The presentation will also cover the cultural shifts and hurdles to introducing new technology, the privacy concerns of tracking technology and how we are addressing those new issues.
Presented at 2015 AGU Fall Meeting
https://agu.confex.com/agu/fm15/webprogram/Paper60869.html
The document discusses the ESIP Commons, which aims to provide a knowledge repository and citation mechanism for information generated by the Federation of Earth Science Information Partners (ESIP). The ESIP Commons allows members to publish, cite, and discover various non-traditional scholarly works, including white papers, meeting materials, and future content types. It tracks contributions by individuals and organizations to further knowledge sharing within the ESIP network.
Proactively manage quality and outcomes readmissionsBrenda Aulinskis
The document discusses challenges in healthcare around reducing preventable hospital readmissions and the financial penalties providers face; it presents SAS's readmission analytics platform which uses data integration, predictive modeling, and clinical decision support to identify at-risk patients, determine the interventions most likely to prevent readmissions, and optimize outcomes. The platform aims to help providers engage patients, make evidence-based decisions, and lower readmission rates and costs.
The document discusses how ESIP (Earth Science Information Partners) uses virtual communities and platforms to facilitate collaboration around earth science data. It provides examples of how ESIP creates wikis, social media listening tools, and hybrid meeting spaces to allow distributed groups to find, discuss, and share data. These virtual "planks" and "workspaces" help scale collaboration across disciplines and communities. The goal is to support interoperability at multiple levels and allow earth scientists and IT practitioners to produce returns by working together in a connected, social way.
The document provides basic rules for using the articles "a/an", "the", and no article (nothing) in English. It explains that "a/an" is used before singular countable nouns when referring to something for the first time. "The" is used before singular and plural nouns when referring to something again, or when referring to specific people, places, or things. No article is used in many contexts like general references, days of the week, continents, individual countries, places, meals, modes of transportation, sports, and more.
Esip 101 - An introduction to all things ESIPErin Robinson
This document provides an introduction to the Earth Science Information Partners (ESIP) Federation, a community of Earth science data and information technology practitioners. It outlines ESIP's vision and history, describes its partner types and governance structure, and highlights some of the work it does to support interoperability, best practices, professional development, and collaboration in Earth science. Key information includes that ESIP was formed in 1998 by NASA, is a non-profit 501(c)(3) organization, and brings together over 150 partner organizations in a distributed network to advance Earth science.
Transforming Networking within ESIP using ResearchBitErin Robinson
Geoscientists increasingly need interdisciplinary teams to solve their research problems. Currently, geoscientists use Research Networking (RN) systems to connect with each other and find people of similar and dissimilar interests. As we shift to digitally mediated scholarship, we need innovative methods for scholarly communication. Formal methods for scholarly communication are undergoing vast transformation owing to the open-access movement and reproducible research. However, informal scholarly communication that takes place at professional society meetings and conferences, like AGU, has received limited research attention relying primarily on serendipitous interaction.
The ResearchBit project aims to fundamentally improve informal methods of scholarly communication by leveraging the serendipitous interactions of researchers and making them more aware of co-located potential collaborators with mutual interests. This presentation will describe our preliminary hardware testing done at the Federation for Earth Science Information Partners (ESIP) Summer meeting this past July and the initial recommendation system design. The presentation will also cover the cultural shifts and hurdles to introducing new technology, the privacy concerns of tracking technology and how we are addressing those new issues.
Presented at 2015 AGU Fall Meeting
https://agu.confex.com/agu/fm15/webprogram/Paper60869.html
"Queer Legal Studies: An Introduction," a presentation given by Maurice Hong-...narzissmus
"Queer Legal Studies: An Introduction," a presentation given by Maurice Hong-Cheng Chang at Graduate Institute for Gender Studies, Shih Hsin University, 11 May 2009.