This document provides guidance on finding and managing engineering information. It discusses several strategies and resources for conducting research, including subject gateways, library catalogs, reference databases, and search techniques. It emphasizes the importance of orientation before searching, using multiple information sources, and carefully selecting search terms. The document also covers accessing full texts through interlibrary loan, publishers' portals, and link resolvers. Overall, it aims to help researchers cope with information challenges and find relevant information and documents for their academic work.
Finding and managing engineering informationThomas Hapke
The document discusses finding and managing engineering information. It provides guidance on systematically searching for information using subject-specific databases and reference management software to cope with information overload. The document also discusses using encyclopedias, standards, and other reference works for orientation and exploring subject gateways and databases to find full texts of articles and books. It emphasizes the importance of orientation before searching, using multiple information sources, and considering how information will be further processed when researching.
Welcome at TUHH library - A library in transition!Thomas Hapke
The TUHH library is transitioning as printed book usage declines and digital resources increase. It is reducing print shelves and improving study spaces while developing new services to meet users' changing needs. Usage of e-resources, gate counts, and digital library access are rising. The library spends 60-80% of its media budget on digital resources and is focusing on improving discovery tools and reference management support for students.
The Great Twentieth-Century Hole Or, what the Digital Humanities MissTU Delft, Netherlands
The Great Twentieth-Century Hole Or, what the Digital Humanities Miss.
Paper looking at lack of representation of 20th Century Digital Humanities
Presentation for Digital Humanities Benelux, June 2014
This document discusses potential cooperation between the DM2E (Digital Manuscripts to Europeana) project and the Europeana Cloud project. It describes three case studies of tools that could help researchers find, navigate, and share information from digitized content collections: 1) The ARIADNE Finder tool helps researchers find relevant content. 2) A timeline visualization of the Wittgenstein Nachlass could help navigate that content. 3) The TiNYARM tool allows researchers to see what papers their colleagues are reading and sharing to stay aware of their work. The document seeks feedback on what content and tools would be most relevant for DM2E researchers and how the tools could be evaluated.
Workshop 5: Uptake of, and concepts in text and data miningRoss Mounce
Content mining involves large-scale computer-aided information extraction from various types of digital content such as text, images, videos, and metadata. It can be used to extract useful information from the vast amounts of scholarly literature available online. Some examples of content mining include recomputing statistical tests reported in papers, finding recent publications using specimens from museums, and identifying associations between weevils and their host plants mentioned together in papers. However, much of the potential of content mining is not realized due to challenges such as fragmented publication of literature across many platforms, lack of standardized formats like XML that enable sophisticated searches, and publishers not making full text and metadata openly available.
Finding and managing engineering informationThomas Hapke
The document discusses finding and managing engineering information. It provides guidance on systematically searching for information using subject-specific databases and reference management software to cope with information overload. The document also discusses using encyclopedias, standards, and other reference works for orientation and exploring subject gateways and databases to find full texts of articles and books. It emphasizes the importance of orientation before searching, using multiple information sources, and considering how information will be further processed when researching.
Welcome at TUHH library - A library in transition!Thomas Hapke
The TUHH library is transitioning as printed book usage declines and digital resources increase. It is reducing print shelves and improving study spaces while developing new services to meet users' changing needs. Usage of e-resources, gate counts, and digital library access are rising. The library spends 60-80% of its media budget on digital resources and is focusing on improving discovery tools and reference management support for students.
The Great Twentieth-Century Hole Or, what the Digital Humanities MissTU Delft, Netherlands
The Great Twentieth-Century Hole Or, what the Digital Humanities Miss.
Paper looking at lack of representation of 20th Century Digital Humanities
Presentation for Digital Humanities Benelux, June 2014
This document discusses potential cooperation between the DM2E (Digital Manuscripts to Europeana) project and the Europeana Cloud project. It describes three case studies of tools that could help researchers find, navigate, and share information from digitized content collections: 1) The ARIADNE Finder tool helps researchers find relevant content. 2) A timeline visualization of the Wittgenstein Nachlass could help navigate that content. 3) The TiNYARM tool allows researchers to see what papers their colleagues are reading and sharing to stay aware of their work. The document seeks feedback on what content and tools would be most relevant for DM2E researchers and how the tools could be evaluated.
Workshop 5: Uptake of, and concepts in text and data miningRoss Mounce
Content mining involves large-scale computer-aided information extraction from various types of digital content such as text, images, videos, and metadata. It can be used to extract useful information from the vast amounts of scholarly literature available online. Some examples of content mining include recomputing statistical tests reported in papers, finding recent publications using specimens from museums, and identifying associations between weevils and their host plants mentioned together in papers. However, much of the potential of content mining is not realized due to challenges such as fragmented publication of literature across many platforms, lack of standardized formats like XML that enable sophisticated searches, and publishers not making full text and metadata openly available.
Representation and Absence in Digital Resources: The Case of Europeana Newspa...TU Delft, Netherlands
Presentation at Digital Humanities 2014, Lausanne. Looks at some of the issues related to digitising historic newspapers in Europe, particularly how a website that can search through all of them can be built
This document provides an agenda and information about a tutorial on topic exploration using the HathiTrust Research Center (HTRC) Data Capsule. The agenda includes an overview of HTRC, an introduction to the Data Capsule and topic modeling, and hands-on sessions. Information is also provided about HTRC, including its mission to enable non-consumptive research on HathiTrust's digital library, its organizational structure, goals for the future, and important URLs.
The HathiTrust Research Center: Enabling New Knowledge Through Shared Infras...Robert H. McDonald
The presentation provided an overview of the HathiTrust Research Center (HTRC) and its services. HTRC provides access to over 13 million digitized book volumes and facilitates text mining and analysis through its extracted features dataset, data capsule, and other tools. It discussed challenges of text mining copyrighted works and demonstrated use cases using distant reading techniques. HTRC also works on outreach, education, and developing new interfaces and tools to enable scholarly research using its collections and infrastructure.
Reusing historical newspapers of KB in e-humanities - Case studies and exampl...Olaf Janssen
This slidedeck gives an overview of Dutch e-humanties projects that build upon the datasets of the Koninklijke Bibliotheek, the national library of the Netherlands.
It focuses on 8 projects that reuse the digitized historical newspapers (1618-1995) of the KB.
It was presented on 7-1-2014 at the Huygens Institute for the History of the Netherlands (Huygens ING for short). This is an institute of the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences (KNAW) where around 100 scholars work in the largest humanities institute of the Netherlands.
Keywords: biland,delpher,e-humanities,elite network shifts,hirods,historical newspapers,isher,koninklijke bibliotheek,national library of the netherlands,open data,polimedia,political mashup,reuse,sealincmedia,translantis,washp
Results of a survey on newspaper digitisation with European public libraries. Also, plans of The European Library to build a cross-search tool incorporating library collections
Data Publishing and Post-Publication ReviewsTobias Kuhn
This presentation is about the combination of data publishing and post-publication reviews, and it covers some recent work on nanopublications for data publishing and reputation mechanisms for Web-scale quality metrics of scientific contributions.
This document discusses applications of linked data and semantic web technologies. It describes the linked open data cloud and prominent datasets like DBpedia. It provides statistics about the size and connectivity of linked open data. It also discusses ontologies, browsers, and search engines that facilitate working with linked data. Finally, it outlines the components needed to build linked data driven web applications and access linked data through SPARQL endpoints and libraries.
Linked Data and cultural heritage data: an overview of the approaches from Eu...The European Library
Europeana provides access to digital resources from a wide range of cultural heritage institutions all across Europe. In order to support Europeana, a wide network of organizations collaborates in data integration activities. The European Library plays the role of library-domain aggregator for Europeana, and its activities include also being a gateway to the collections and data of Europe’s national and research libraries, operating on the principle of open data for re-use.
The Europeana Network addresses its data integration challenges by leveraging on Linked Data and the Semantic Web. Its approach to data integration is based in a single data model, the Europeana Data Model, which embraces the Semantic Web principles to integrate the various data models and ontologies used in cultural heritage data.
The paradigm of Linked Data, brings many new challenges to libraries. The generic nature of data representation used in Linked Data, while allowing any community to manipulate the data, also opens many paths for implementation, with no clear optimal choice for libraries. The European Library leverages on its operational infrastructure to make library data available. It maintains The European Library Open Dataset, which is derived from the data aggregated from member libraries, and made available under the Creative Commons CC0 1.0 Universal license, in order to promote and facilitate its reuse by any community.
Extensive linking is performed in the preparation of The European Library Open Dataset. It relies on Information Extraction and Data Mining to establish links to external open datasets, covering the most prominent entities types present in library data: persons, corporate bodies, places, concepts, intellectual works and manifestations.
The European Library also applies a linked data approach for intellectual property rights clearance processes, for supporting mass digitization projects. This approach is applied in the within the European ARROW rights infrastructure .
The document discusses the transition of library data from bibliographic records to linked data on the web. It describes how library data is currently stored as records but is moving to be stored as entities in a library knowledge graph. This will allow library resources to be better exposed and connected on the web of linked data. Key points discussed include WorldCat linked data, the Bibliographic Framework (BIBFRAME) initiative, and opportunities for libraries to participate in building the web of data.
LIBER DH Working Group Workshop: Digital Humanities Activities at Göttingen S...LIBER Europe
This presentation was given as part of the Digital Humanities workshop at LIBER 2017, Patras. For more about LIBER and the Digital Humanities Working Group, please see: www.libereurope.eu
This document discusses open cultural data in Switzerland. It outlines the goals of OpenGLAM, which include engaging global audiences, improving discoverability of collections, enabling new participation opportunities, and facilitating reuse of heritage items. It then describes current OpenGLAM activities, including hackathons, a newsletter, and a "Sum of All Swiss GLAMs" pilot project. Finally, it summarizes recent projects by Bern University of Applied Sciences relating to linked open data, including publishing named entities and controlled vocabularies as LOD and developing domain-specific LOD ecosystems.
CUA Humanities Lecture on Scholarly Communications LSC634 Fall2014Kimberly Hoffman
Lecture on Scholarly Communications for CUA LSC634 students Sept. 29, 2014. Activities noted by * include mining new scholarly communications job descriptions; determining open access, self archiving and author rights of individual journals using SHERPA/RoMEO; and finding bibliometrics like JIF and h-index that drive publishing.
Estermann Linked Data Ecosystem for Heritage Data - 29 Feb 2020Beat Estermann
Linked Open Data Ecosystem for Heritage Data. Presentation held at the 5th Anniversary of the Swiss Open Cultural Data Hackathon on 29 February 2020 at the National Library in Bern.
Presentation given to Pubmet 2015, Zadar, Croatia.
For the live presentation having the rich media content, please access: http://kosson.ro/webpedia/presentationsnicolaiec/Croatia2015/#/
Trends und Entwicklungen in der Websuche und deren Relevanz für Bibliotheken: Workshop bei der Veranstaltung „Move and Make“ – in/trans/formation durch Themen, Trends und Visionen
Sebastian Sünkler
in/trans/formation, February 5, 2016, Hamburg
Die richtigen Mitarbeitenden heute, morgen und übermorgen.
Kein Inserat, welches ohne den Begriff Kompetenz auskommt. Kein Unternehmen, das nicht seine Kompetenzen in Imagebroschüren hervorhebt. Keine HR-Abteilung, die intern ohne die Benützung des Wortes Kompetenzen auskommt. Die Begriffe Kompetenzen und Kompetenz-Management reihen sich diesbezüglich nahtlos an die anderen Trendbegriffe wie Fachkräftemangel, Employer Branding und Active Sourcing an. Leider teilen sie aber das Schicksal vieler Trends und werden fast inflationär und mitunter unkritisch und nicht reflektiert verwendet.
Dabei ist das Kompetenz-Management weit mehr als nur ein Trend. Es ist eine Kernaufgabe der Unternehmensführung, die richtigen Mitarbeitenden-Ressourcen zum richtigen Zeitpunkt passend zur unternehmerischen Strategie zur Verfügung zu stellen. Fachkräftemangel, Globalisierung, demografische Entwicklung und digitale Beschleunigung sind nur einige Umweltbedingungen, die den Druck auf Unternehmen und somit auf die Mitarbeitenden erhöhen. Produktspezifische Alleinstellungsmerkmale werden seltener, der Markt transparenter und vergleichbarer.
Autor: Andreas Mollet
Blogs, eine Chance für Forschung und Wissenschaft?Beatrice Lugger
Die 3 deutschsprachigen, sehr unterschiedlichen wissenschaftlichen Blogportale forschungsblog, hypotheses und scilogs wurden beim 5. Forum Wissenschaftskommunikation in Dresden am 4. Dezember 2012 vorgestellt.
Für einige ist es ein zeitraubendes und nutzloses Übel, für andere ein wertvolles Führungsinstrument. Für die meisten ist es jedoch einfach eine notwendige Pflichtübung: das Mitarbeitergespräch. Dabei ginge es doch auch anders.
Von Andreas Mollet
Representation and Absence in Digital Resources: The Case of Europeana Newspa...TU Delft, Netherlands
Presentation at Digital Humanities 2014, Lausanne. Looks at some of the issues related to digitising historic newspapers in Europe, particularly how a website that can search through all of them can be built
This document provides an agenda and information about a tutorial on topic exploration using the HathiTrust Research Center (HTRC) Data Capsule. The agenda includes an overview of HTRC, an introduction to the Data Capsule and topic modeling, and hands-on sessions. Information is also provided about HTRC, including its mission to enable non-consumptive research on HathiTrust's digital library, its organizational structure, goals for the future, and important URLs.
The HathiTrust Research Center: Enabling New Knowledge Through Shared Infras...Robert H. McDonald
The presentation provided an overview of the HathiTrust Research Center (HTRC) and its services. HTRC provides access to over 13 million digitized book volumes and facilitates text mining and analysis through its extracted features dataset, data capsule, and other tools. It discussed challenges of text mining copyrighted works and demonstrated use cases using distant reading techniques. HTRC also works on outreach, education, and developing new interfaces and tools to enable scholarly research using its collections and infrastructure.
Reusing historical newspapers of KB in e-humanities - Case studies and exampl...Olaf Janssen
This slidedeck gives an overview of Dutch e-humanties projects that build upon the datasets of the Koninklijke Bibliotheek, the national library of the Netherlands.
It focuses on 8 projects that reuse the digitized historical newspapers (1618-1995) of the KB.
It was presented on 7-1-2014 at the Huygens Institute for the History of the Netherlands (Huygens ING for short). This is an institute of the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences (KNAW) where around 100 scholars work in the largest humanities institute of the Netherlands.
Keywords: biland,delpher,e-humanities,elite network shifts,hirods,historical newspapers,isher,koninklijke bibliotheek,national library of the netherlands,open data,polimedia,political mashup,reuse,sealincmedia,translantis,washp
Results of a survey on newspaper digitisation with European public libraries. Also, plans of The European Library to build a cross-search tool incorporating library collections
Data Publishing and Post-Publication ReviewsTobias Kuhn
This presentation is about the combination of data publishing and post-publication reviews, and it covers some recent work on nanopublications for data publishing and reputation mechanisms for Web-scale quality metrics of scientific contributions.
This document discusses applications of linked data and semantic web technologies. It describes the linked open data cloud and prominent datasets like DBpedia. It provides statistics about the size and connectivity of linked open data. It also discusses ontologies, browsers, and search engines that facilitate working with linked data. Finally, it outlines the components needed to build linked data driven web applications and access linked data through SPARQL endpoints and libraries.
Linked Data and cultural heritage data: an overview of the approaches from Eu...The European Library
Europeana provides access to digital resources from a wide range of cultural heritage institutions all across Europe. In order to support Europeana, a wide network of organizations collaborates in data integration activities. The European Library plays the role of library-domain aggregator for Europeana, and its activities include also being a gateway to the collections and data of Europe’s national and research libraries, operating on the principle of open data for re-use.
The Europeana Network addresses its data integration challenges by leveraging on Linked Data and the Semantic Web. Its approach to data integration is based in a single data model, the Europeana Data Model, which embraces the Semantic Web principles to integrate the various data models and ontologies used in cultural heritage data.
The paradigm of Linked Data, brings many new challenges to libraries. The generic nature of data representation used in Linked Data, while allowing any community to manipulate the data, also opens many paths for implementation, with no clear optimal choice for libraries. The European Library leverages on its operational infrastructure to make library data available. It maintains The European Library Open Dataset, which is derived from the data aggregated from member libraries, and made available under the Creative Commons CC0 1.0 Universal license, in order to promote and facilitate its reuse by any community.
Extensive linking is performed in the preparation of The European Library Open Dataset. It relies on Information Extraction and Data Mining to establish links to external open datasets, covering the most prominent entities types present in library data: persons, corporate bodies, places, concepts, intellectual works and manifestations.
The European Library also applies a linked data approach for intellectual property rights clearance processes, for supporting mass digitization projects. This approach is applied in the within the European ARROW rights infrastructure .
The document discusses the transition of library data from bibliographic records to linked data on the web. It describes how library data is currently stored as records but is moving to be stored as entities in a library knowledge graph. This will allow library resources to be better exposed and connected on the web of linked data. Key points discussed include WorldCat linked data, the Bibliographic Framework (BIBFRAME) initiative, and opportunities for libraries to participate in building the web of data.
LIBER DH Working Group Workshop: Digital Humanities Activities at Göttingen S...LIBER Europe
This presentation was given as part of the Digital Humanities workshop at LIBER 2017, Patras. For more about LIBER and the Digital Humanities Working Group, please see: www.libereurope.eu
This document discusses open cultural data in Switzerland. It outlines the goals of OpenGLAM, which include engaging global audiences, improving discoverability of collections, enabling new participation opportunities, and facilitating reuse of heritage items. It then describes current OpenGLAM activities, including hackathons, a newsletter, and a "Sum of All Swiss GLAMs" pilot project. Finally, it summarizes recent projects by Bern University of Applied Sciences relating to linked open data, including publishing named entities and controlled vocabularies as LOD and developing domain-specific LOD ecosystems.
CUA Humanities Lecture on Scholarly Communications LSC634 Fall2014Kimberly Hoffman
Lecture on Scholarly Communications for CUA LSC634 students Sept. 29, 2014. Activities noted by * include mining new scholarly communications job descriptions; determining open access, self archiving and author rights of individual journals using SHERPA/RoMEO; and finding bibliometrics like JIF and h-index that drive publishing.
Estermann Linked Data Ecosystem for Heritage Data - 29 Feb 2020Beat Estermann
Linked Open Data Ecosystem for Heritage Data. Presentation held at the 5th Anniversary of the Swiss Open Cultural Data Hackathon on 29 February 2020 at the National Library in Bern.
Presentation given to Pubmet 2015, Zadar, Croatia.
For the live presentation having the rich media content, please access: http://kosson.ro/webpedia/presentationsnicolaiec/Croatia2015/#/
Trends und Entwicklungen in der Websuche und deren Relevanz für Bibliotheken: Workshop bei der Veranstaltung „Move and Make“ – in/trans/formation durch Themen, Trends und Visionen
Sebastian Sünkler
in/trans/formation, February 5, 2016, Hamburg
Die richtigen Mitarbeitenden heute, morgen und übermorgen.
Kein Inserat, welches ohne den Begriff Kompetenz auskommt. Kein Unternehmen, das nicht seine Kompetenzen in Imagebroschüren hervorhebt. Keine HR-Abteilung, die intern ohne die Benützung des Wortes Kompetenzen auskommt. Die Begriffe Kompetenzen und Kompetenz-Management reihen sich diesbezüglich nahtlos an die anderen Trendbegriffe wie Fachkräftemangel, Employer Branding und Active Sourcing an. Leider teilen sie aber das Schicksal vieler Trends und werden fast inflationär und mitunter unkritisch und nicht reflektiert verwendet.
Dabei ist das Kompetenz-Management weit mehr als nur ein Trend. Es ist eine Kernaufgabe der Unternehmensführung, die richtigen Mitarbeitenden-Ressourcen zum richtigen Zeitpunkt passend zur unternehmerischen Strategie zur Verfügung zu stellen. Fachkräftemangel, Globalisierung, demografische Entwicklung und digitale Beschleunigung sind nur einige Umweltbedingungen, die den Druck auf Unternehmen und somit auf die Mitarbeitenden erhöhen. Produktspezifische Alleinstellungsmerkmale werden seltener, der Markt transparenter und vergleichbarer.
Autor: Andreas Mollet
Blogs, eine Chance für Forschung und Wissenschaft?Beatrice Lugger
Die 3 deutschsprachigen, sehr unterschiedlichen wissenschaftlichen Blogportale forschungsblog, hypotheses und scilogs wurden beim 5. Forum Wissenschaftskommunikation in Dresden am 4. Dezember 2012 vorgestellt.
Für einige ist es ein zeitraubendes und nutzloses Übel, für andere ein wertvolles Führungsinstrument. Für die meisten ist es jedoch einfach eine notwendige Pflichtübung: das Mitarbeitergespräch. Dabei ginge es doch auch anders.
Von Andreas Mollet
Personal strategiegerecht entwickeln
Kein Unternehmen stellt die grundsätzliche Notwendigkeit der Personalentwicklung infrage. Dennoch hat es die Personalentwicklung oftmals schwer, den Nutzen und die Wirksamkeit nachvollziehbar aufzuzeigen. Der Grund liegt häufi g im fehlenden Bezug zur Unternehmensentwicklung.
Von Andreas Mollet
This document discusses web scale discovery services and information literacy. It begins by providing context about the social, economic, technological, and political factors driving changes in libraries. It then describes perceptions of libraries and information literacy skills students need. Next, it outlines features of next generation discovery services and their potential pros and cons. Specifically, it notes discovery services make access easier but may diminish search skills. The document concludes by questioning if discovery services compete with or support information literacy goals of teaching students to find, evaluate, and use information effectively.
Fachinformation nutzen plus: Volltexte und Open Access - Recherchieren in Suc...Thomas Hapke
Präsentation für Besuche in den Instituten der TU Hamburg-Harburg
Fachinformation nutzen plus:
Wie komme ich an Volltexte?
Wie kann ich sicherer sein, nichts Wesentliches übersehen zu haben?
Wie bewältige ich die Informationsflut?
Was bedeutet eigentlich Open Access?
Informationskompetenz in sich ständig verändernden Informationsumgebungen - z...Thomas Hapke
Vortrag auf dem Symposium „Informationskompetenz im Hochschulkontext – Interdisziplinäre Forschungsperspektiven“ des Leibniz‐Zentrums für Psychologische Information und Dokumentation (ZPID) am 16. Mai 2014 an der Universität Trier
Basic introduction to (mainly Nielsen) usability principles for a non UX audience. Content oriented with examples of success stories (both public sector complex sites) and their impact on objectives.
Die Gestaltung einer Unterrichtsstunde gliedert sich klassisch in drei Phasen: Einstieg, Erarbeitung, Anwendung. Im folgenden sollen dazu klassische Artikulationsschemata vorgestellt werden. Jedoch sollten diese nicht als starre Konstrukte betrachtet werden. Zwar kann man die einzelnen Unterrichtsphasen schülerzentriert gestalten, jedoch werden insgesamt durch diese straffe Phasierung Schüleraktivitäten stark gelenkt. Des Weiteren sollte man nicht Lerninhalte in eine Struktur pressen, sondern für Lerninhalte passende Strukturen suchen. Die klassischen Artikulationsschemata können jedoch eine Orientierungshilfe geben für die Strukturierung von Unterrichtsstunden.
Finding and managing engineering information … and the challenge of publishin...Thomas Hapke
Presentation at the Sino-German Summer School on "Bioprocess and Biosystems Engineering for Industrial Biotechnology" at Hamburg University of Technology, September 28, 2015.
"Nur was sich messen lässt, kann man auch managen." Diese Aussage gilt besonders für Marketing-Promotion, die kaum auf ihre Effizienz kontrolliert werden.
Ausführlichere Version der Folien zu einem Kurzvortrag zur Podiumsdiskussion im Rahmen des 2. Forums Informationskompetenz zum Thema "Standards und Frameworks zur Informationskompetenz: Rezeption und Umsetzung in Österreich, Deutschland und der Schweiz: aktueller Stand und Entwicklungen" am 18. September 2015 beim Österreichischen Bibliothekartag
Finding and managing process engineering informationThomas Hapke
The document discusses various strategies and resources for finding and managing process engineering information. It begins by outlining some common information challenges in academic research, such as ensuring comprehensive searching and coping with information overload. It then provides details on searching subject-specific databases, using reference management software, consulting encyclopedias and other reference works, and searching for substance property data. The document emphasizes the importance of orientation before searching, using multiple information sources, and thinking about how found information will be further processed. It also introduces resources available at the TUHH library, such as databases, subject gateways, and reference management software to help address these information challenges.
This document provides an overview of a library research seminar for honors students. It introduces the library staff, resources available, and outlines a seven step research process. This includes developing topics, finding background information, using catalogs to find books and media, evaluating internet resources, using databases to find articles, evaluating sources, and citing sources properly. The seminar will cover constructing research strategies, concept mapping, navigating databases and evaluating web resources to help students improve their research skills.
This document discusses potential cooperation between the DM2E (Digital Manuscripts to Europeana) project and the Europeana Cloud project. It describes three case studies of tools that could help researchers find, navigate, and share information from digitized content collections: 1) The ARIADNE Finder tool helps researchers find relevant content. 2) A timeline visualization of the Wittgenstein Nachlass could help navigate that content. 3) The TiNYARM tool allows researchers to see what papers their colleagues are reading and sharing to stay aware of their work. The document seeks feedback on what content and tools would be most relevant for DM2E researchers and how the tools could be evaluated.
This document discusses potential cooperation between the DM2E (Digital Manuscripts to Europeana) project and the Europeana Cloud project. It describes three case studies of tools that could help researchers find, navigate, and share information from digitized content collections: 1) The ARIADNE Finder tool helps researchers find relevant content. 2) A timeline visualization of the Wittgenstein Nachlass could help navigate that content. 3) The TiNYARM tool allows researchers to see what papers their colleagues are reading and sharing to stay aware of their work. The document seeks feedback on what content and tools would be most relevant for DM2E researchers and how the tools could be evaluated.
Between information retrieval services and bibliometrics research. New ...Andrea Scharnhorst
R. Koopman, S. Wang, A. Scharnhorst (2015) Between information retrieval services and bibliometrics research. New ways of semantic browsing and visual analytics. Presentation at the Sigmetrics workshop, ASIST 2015, November 7, 2015 St. Louis, Missouri
Europeana relies on aggregators and data providers to create an index of over 30 million metadata records from European cultural heritage institutions. This document discusses Europeana's role in aggregating these records and making them available through their portal and API. It also describes plans for the Europeana Cloud project to further develop Europeana as a platform and tools to better support research through improved access, analysis, annotation, transcription and discovery of content and metadata.
This document summarizes a presentation given by Clemens Neudecker of the Staatsbibliothek zu Berlin on reading a million books and newspapers through digitization. It discusses various digital library projects and collections containing millions of digitized objects. It then focuses on the Europeana Newspapers project, which has digitized over 12 million historic newspaper pages from across Europe. The presentation describes the formats and standards used in digitization, as well as tools for working with digitized content. It also evaluates the performance of optical character recognition on the Europeana Newspapers collection and challenges involved in processing historic newspaper text.
The document summarizes the work done to organize and link the data in the Theological Subject Headings Catalogue for Gender Studies. Key points:
- The catalogue contains 7,500 subject headings and bibliographic records for articles, books and journals on feminist theology and gender studies.
- The subject headings were cleaned up and organized into topical, temporal, geographical, personal, and scripture categories with thesauri built for each.
- The subject headings were mapped to external vocabularies like SKOS, DBpedia, GeoNames, and CIDOC-CRM to create linked open data and allow for expanded search queries.
- Future work includes implementing a browsable thesaurus and making
This document discusses a research project on early modern professorial career patterns that analyzes databases of academic histories. It proposes a methodology using the Heloise Common Research Model, which takes a service-based, layered approach to applying knowledge bases. A key part of the methodology is developing a domain-specific research ontology to model relevant concepts from the databases. Future work includes simplifying exploration of databases by aligning them to publishing standards, and documenting the research process using tools and infrastructures.
Publishers' Bindings Online and The Artistic, Cultural, and Historical Signif...jessica666
The document discusses the Publishers' Bindings Online (PBO) project, which digitized over 12,000 images of book bindings from 1815-1930. It provides an overview of the project goals, deliverables such as the searchable online database, and value-added materials like essays and lesson plans. The project aims to promote special collections, provide open access to resources, and serve as a model for collaboration between institutions.
Publishers' Bindings Online and The Artistic, Cultural, and Historical Signif...jessica666
The document discusses the Publishers' Bindings Online (PBO) project, which digitized over 5,000 book bindings from the University of Alabama and University of Wisconsin-Madison collections. The PBO database provides images and metadata for the bindings and additional educational resources like essays and lesson plans. The project aims to promote collections, highlight the artistic and cultural significance of publishers' bindings, and serve a broad audience. Future opportunities for growth include contributions from other institutions and expanding research tools and educational materials.
Du Literary and linguistic computing aux Digital Humanities : retour sur 40 a...OpenEdition
The document discusses the evolution of digital humanities from literary and linguistic computing to humanities computing to digital humanities. Key points include:
1) Digital technologies have transformed humanities scholarship by making objects of study digital and changing research methods.
2) Early work in literary and linguistic computing in the 1960s-1980s used computers to analyze texts but was only accessible to technical experts.
3) Humanities computing from the 1980s-1990s saw institutionalization and standardization through projects like the Text Encoding Initiative (TEI).
4) Digital humanities from the 1990s onward has been shaped by increased digitization, collaboration, and development of new infrastructures and approaches like linking and analyzing
This document provides information on different types of research sources and techniques for conducting background research. It discusses various tools for finding books, journal articles, newspapers, encyclopedias and other sources. These include the library catalog, periodical databases, and specific databases by subject area. It also outlines the differences between popular and scholarly sources, as well as between magazines and scholarly journals. Tips are provided on narrowing topics, evaluating sources, and accessing sources both on and off campus. Citations tools are also mentioned.
This talk gives an overview of current research data management practice with special emphasis on the role libraries can play as actors within larger information infrastructures. Such infrastructures are being increasingly summarized under the term Research Data Repositories (RDR).
Research partnerships, user participation, extended outreach – some of ETH L...ETH-Bibliothek
IFLA Satellite Meeting 2017: Digital Humanities, Berlin, August 2017
> From "boutique" to mass digitization
> (Cooperative) online platforms for digitized content
> Research Partnerships
> User Participation
> Outreach
The document provides an overview of how to find information in transportation through scientific methods and information retrieval processes. It discusses the similarities between the scientific method and information retrieval, including knowing the subject, requiring new knowledge, devising search strategies, revising strategies based on findings, and examining final results. It also describes various transportation information resources like journals, conference proceedings, magazines, books, databases, and the NJIT library catalog and services.
The document discusses LIBER (Association of European Research Libraries) and EU projects that LIBER is involved in. It describes how LIBER represents over 420 research libraries across Europe and formulates strategies around issues like e-science, data sharing, and digital preservation. It provides examples of several specific EU-funded projects that LIBER is coordinating or participating in, including APARSEN, Europeana Libraries, Europeana Travel, and MedOANet, which focus on topics like digital preservation, open access, and data aggregation and dissemination.
Open Access to Science: a practical Institutional Repository perspectivecalsi
1. The document discusses open access to scientific research and the role of institutional repositories in curating and providing access to scholarly works.
2. It highlights several initiatives aimed at expanding open access, including projects at the University of Southampton and across Europe.
3. The author argues that open access is vital for speeding up scientific progress and that institutional repositories will continue growing to include more multimedia works and joined-up resources across disciplines.
2012 the literature review_industrial_systemsengineeringpalfordtamu
This document provides an overview of different types of information resources for conducting literature reviews, including catalogs, indexes, databases, web directories, and search engines. It discusses how each resource is structured and best used. The document also provides examples of specific resources for different subject areas, as well as tips for managing references and citations.
This document discusses digital corpora of inscriptions and the need for collaboration. It summarizes 3 main digital corpora - PHI, EDH, and Clauss-Slaby - and notes challenges like lack of quality control and coherence. It advocates learning from the success of integrated digital papyrology projects. The author proposes a "Citizens' Web of Inscriptions" using Linked Open Data to connect existing databases while allowing community annotation and enhancement through a centralized interface like SoSOL. This would create a massive yet decentralized database to better serve both academics and the public.
Similar to Finding and managing engineering information (20)
Präsentation zur Orientierungseinheit der Fachschaften der TUHH zur Bachelor- und Master-Arbeit
Fachinformation nutzen:
Wie komme ich an Volltexte?
Wie kann ich sicherer sein, nichts Wesentliches übersehen zu haben?
Wie bewältige ich die Informationsflut?
Vom Karteikasten zum Internet - Informationsbeschaffung und -vermittlung hist...Thomas Hapke
Die Bewältigung der Informationsflut durch maschinelles Suchen, Bilder als Informationsmedien, das Verhältnis von Information und Reklame, all diese Facetten unserer heutigen Medien- und Informationswelt haben eine Geschichte. Damals "neue" Informations-Medien in Form von Reklame- und Karteikarten, Lichtbildern und "PCs" aber auch Visionen wie die vom Schriftsteller und Bibliothekar Jorge Luis Borges 1941 beschriebene "Bibliothek von Babel" - diese enthält alle Bücher, die aus der Kombination von allen möglichen Zeichen kombinatorisch konstruiert werden können - lassen heutige Herausforderungen des Digitalen etwa im Bereich von Plagiaten und Kreativität in einem anderen Licht erscheinen. Erste elektronische Recherchen nach Dokumenten, gar erste Online-Recherchen fanden schon vor mehr als 50 bzw. gar 80 Jahren statt!
Information habits in continuously changing information environments : digg...Thomas Hapke
Slides of a talk at the seminar "Teaching Library : international trends in information literacy" led by Prof. Christine Gläser in the Master study program "Information, Media, Library" of the Faculty of Design, Media and Information at Hamburg University of Applied Sciences.
Zur sozialen Konstruktion von Recherche-Ergebnissen - Discovery-SystemeThomas Hapke
Eingangs-Statement zur Diskussion zum Thema "Informationskompetenz und Discovery-Systeme: Perspektiven und Herausforderungen" der AG Informationskompetenz im GBV am 6. September 2012 in Hannover
Social Media in der taeglichen Arbeit als wissenschaftlicher Bibliothekar Thomas Hapke
Beitrag zu „Update - Wissenschaftliche BibliothekarInnen und Social Media“ Weiterbildungsveranstaltung von IG WBS und AG IK, Universität Zürich, 15. Juni 2012
Information culture - different views on information literacyThomas Hapke
The document discusses different views on information literacy and proposes considering it within an "information culture". It notes that information literacy is difficult to define, and describes classical and critical views that emphasize competencies versus understanding dynamic information systems. The document suggests information culture implies creation, diversity, and viewing information through various contexts like disciplinary cultures.
Google und Wikipedia damals - Zur Fruehgeschichte des InternetsThomas Hapke
Vortrag zur 4. Hamburger Nacht des Wissens am 29.10.2011 in der TU Hamburg-Harburg
http://nachtdeswissens.hamburg.de/
Zusammenfassung:
Informationsflut sowie maschinelles Suchen und Aufbewahren von Information und Wissen, Bilder als Informationsmedien, Zersplitterung von Wissen, das Verhältnis von Information und Reklame, Information und Lernen - Alle diese modernen Aspekte des Informationswesens und weltweiten Sammelns von Wissen und Information haben eine Geschichte!
Im Vortrag wird dies anhand ausgewählter Beispiele, frühen Pionieren und Organisationen zum Umgang mit Informationen, „neuen“ Informations-Medien in Form von Reklame- und Karteikarten, Lichtbildern und „PCs“ sowie der ersten elektronischen Recherche bzw. der ersten Online-Recherche, erläutert.
Jonglieren mit Bällen, Ringen, ... und Informationen!Thomas Hapke
Poster zum Sommerfest der TUHH
Jonglieren - auf den Spuren von Claude Shannon, dem Begründer der technischen Kommunikationstheorie!
ZumZusammenhang zwischenSpielen, Information und Lernen
Jonglieren mit Informationen – in der TUHH-Bibliothek!
Einführung in Session "Nachdenken über Informationskompetenz" Bibcamp3, 7.-8. Mai 2010 in Hannover
Beiträge zum Begriff Informationskultur in meinem Blog unter
http://blog.hapke.de/?s=informationskultur
Ivanti’s Patch Tuesday breakdown goes beyond patching your applications and brings you the intelligence and guidance needed to prioritize where to focus your attention first. Catch early analysis on our Ivanti blog, then join industry expert Chris Goettl for the Patch Tuesday Webinar Event. There we’ll do a deep dive into each of the bulletins and give guidance on the risks associated with the newly-identified vulnerabilities.
Monitoring and Managing Anomaly Detection on OpenShift.pdfTosin Akinosho
Monitoring and Managing Anomaly Detection on OpenShift
Overview
Dive into the world of anomaly detection on edge devices with our comprehensive hands-on tutorial. This SlideShare presentation will guide you through the entire process, from data collection and model training to edge deployment and real-time monitoring. Perfect for those looking to implement robust anomaly detection systems on resource-constrained IoT/edge devices.
Key Topics Covered
1. Introduction to Anomaly Detection
- Understand the fundamentals of anomaly detection and its importance in identifying unusual behavior or failures in systems.
2. Understanding Edge (IoT)
- Learn about edge computing and IoT, and how they enable real-time data processing and decision-making at the source.
3. What is ArgoCD?
- Discover ArgoCD, a declarative, GitOps continuous delivery tool for Kubernetes, and its role in deploying applications on edge devices.
4. Deployment Using ArgoCD for Edge Devices
- Step-by-step guide on deploying anomaly detection models on edge devices using ArgoCD.
5. Introduction to Apache Kafka and S3
- Explore Apache Kafka for real-time data streaming and Amazon S3 for scalable storage solutions.
6. Viewing Kafka Messages in the Data Lake
- Learn how to view and analyze Kafka messages stored in a data lake for better insights.
7. What is Prometheus?
- Get to know Prometheus, an open-source monitoring and alerting toolkit, and its application in monitoring edge devices.
8. Monitoring Application Metrics with Prometheus
- Detailed instructions on setting up Prometheus to monitor the performance and health of your anomaly detection system.
9. What is Camel K?
- Introduction to Camel K, a lightweight integration framework built on Apache Camel, designed for Kubernetes.
10. Configuring Camel K Integrations for Data Pipelines
- Learn how to configure Camel K for seamless data pipeline integrations in your anomaly detection workflow.
11. What is a Jupyter Notebook?
- Overview of Jupyter Notebooks, an open-source web application for creating and sharing documents with live code, equations, visualizations, and narrative text.
12. Jupyter Notebooks with Code Examples
- Hands-on examples and code snippets in Jupyter Notebooks to help you implement and test anomaly detection models.
Webinar: Designing a schema for a Data WarehouseFederico Razzoli
Are you new to data warehouses (DWH)? Do you need to check whether your data warehouse follows the best practices for a good design? In both cases, this webinar is for you.
A data warehouse is a central relational database that contains all measurements about a business or an organisation. This data comes from a variety of heterogeneous data sources, which includes databases of any type that back the applications used by the company, data files exported by some applications, or APIs provided by internal or external services.
But designing a data warehouse correctly is a hard task, which requires gathering information about the business processes that need to be analysed in the first place. These processes must be translated into so-called star schemas, which means, denormalised databases where each table represents a dimension or facts.
We will discuss these topics:
- How to gather information about a business;
- Understanding dictionaries and how to identify business entities;
- Dimensions and facts;
- Setting a table granularity;
- Types of facts;
- Types of dimensions;
- Snowflakes and how to avoid them;
- Expanding existing dimensions and facts.
HCL Notes und Domino Lizenzkostenreduzierung in der Welt von DLAUpanagenda
Webinar Recording: https://www.panagenda.com/webinars/hcl-notes-und-domino-lizenzkostenreduzierung-in-der-welt-von-dlau/
DLAU und die Lizenzen nach dem CCB- und CCX-Modell sind für viele in der HCL-Community seit letztem Jahr ein heißes Thema. Als Notes- oder Domino-Kunde haben Sie vielleicht mit unerwartet hohen Benutzerzahlen und Lizenzgebühren zu kämpfen. Sie fragen sich vielleicht, wie diese neue Art der Lizenzierung funktioniert und welchen Nutzen sie Ihnen bringt. Vor allem wollen Sie sicherlich Ihr Budget einhalten und Kosten sparen, wo immer möglich. Das verstehen wir und wir möchten Ihnen dabei helfen!
Wir erklären Ihnen, wie Sie häufige Konfigurationsprobleme lösen können, die dazu führen können, dass mehr Benutzer gezählt werden als nötig, und wie Sie überflüssige oder ungenutzte Konten identifizieren und entfernen können, um Geld zu sparen. Es gibt auch einige Ansätze, die zu unnötigen Ausgaben führen können, z. B. wenn ein Personendokument anstelle eines Mail-Ins für geteilte Mailboxen verwendet wird. Wir zeigen Ihnen solche Fälle und deren Lösungen. Und natürlich erklären wir Ihnen das neue Lizenzmodell.
Nehmen Sie an diesem Webinar teil, bei dem HCL-Ambassador Marc Thomas und Gastredner Franz Walder Ihnen diese neue Welt näherbringen. Es vermittelt Ihnen die Tools und das Know-how, um den Überblick zu bewahren. Sie werden in der Lage sein, Ihre Kosten durch eine optimierte Domino-Konfiguration zu reduzieren und auch in Zukunft gering zu halten.
Diese Themen werden behandelt
- Reduzierung der Lizenzkosten durch Auffinden und Beheben von Fehlkonfigurationen und überflüssigen Konten
- Wie funktionieren CCB- und CCX-Lizenzen wirklich?
- Verstehen des DLAU-Tools und wie man es am besten nutzt
- Tipps für häufige Problembereiche, wie z. B. Team-Postfächer, Funktions-/Testbenutzer usw.
- Praxisbeispiele und Best Practices zum sofortigen Umsetzen
Best 20 SEO Techniques To Improve Website Visibility In SERPPixlogix Infotech
Boost your website's visibility with proven SEO techniques! Our latest blog dives into essential strategies to enhance your online presence, increase traffic, and rank higher on search engines. From keyword optimization to quality content creation, learn how to make your site stand out in the crowded digital landscape. Discover actionable tips and expert insights to elevate your SEO game.
Salesforce Integration for Bonterra Impact Management (fka Social Solutions A...Jeffrey Haguewood
Sidekick Solutions uses Bonterra Impact Management (fka Social Solutions Apricot) and automation solutions to integrate data for business workflows.
We believe integration and automation are essential to user experience and the promise of efficient work through technology. Automation is the critical ingredient to realizing that full vision. We develop integration products and services for Bonterra Case Management software to support the deployment of automations for a variety of use cases.
This video focuses on integration of Salesforce with Bonterra Impact Management.
Interested in deploying an integration with Salesforce for Bonterra Impact Management? Contact us at sales@sidekicksolutionsllc.com to discuss next steps.
GraphRAG for Life Science to increase LLM accuracyTomaz Bratanic
GraphRAG for life science domain, where you retriever information from biomedical knowledge graphs using LLMs to increase the accuracy and performance of generated answers
AI 101: An Introduction to the Basics and Impact of Artificial IntelligenceIndexBug
Imagine a world where machines not only perform tasks but also learn, adapt, and make decisions. This is the promise of Artificial Intelligence (AI), a technology that's not just enhancing our lives but revolutionizing entire industries.
HCL Notes and Domino License Cost Reduction in the World of DLAUpanagenda
Webinar Recording: https://www.panagenda.com/webinars/hcl-notes-and-domino-license-cost-reduction-in-the-world-of-dlau/
The introduction of DLAU and the CCB & CCX licensing model caused quite a stir in the HCL community. As a Notes and Domino customer, you may have faced challenges with unexpected user counts and license costs. You probably have questions on how this new licensing approach works and how to benefit from it. Most importantly, you likely have budget constraints and want to save money where possible. Don’t worry, we can help with all of this!
We’ll show you how to fix common misconfigurations that cause higher-than-expected user counts, and how to identify accounts which you can deactivate to save money. There are also frequent patterns that can cause unnecessary cost, like using a person document instead of a mail-in for shared mailboxes. We’ll provide examples and solutions for those as well. And naturally we’ll explain the new licensing model.
Join HCL Ambassador Marc Thomas in this webinar with a special guest appearance from Franz Walder. It will give you the tools and know-how to stay on top of what is going on with Domino licensing. You will be able lower your cost through an optimized configuration and keep it low going forward.
These topics will be covered
- Reducing license cost by finding and fixing misconfigurations and superfluous accounts
- How do CCB and CCX licenses really work?
- Understanding the DLAU tool and how to best utilize it
- Tips for common problem areas, like team mailboxes, functional/test users, etc
- Practical examples and best practices to implement right away
Unlock the Future of Search with MongoDB Atlas_ Vector Search Unleashed.pdfMalak Abu Hammad
Discover how MongoDB Atlas and vector search technology can revolutionize your application's search capabilities. This comprehensive presentation covers:
* What is Vector Search?
* Importance and benefits of vector search
* Practical use cases across various industries
* Step-by-step implementation guide
* Live demos with code snippets
* Enhancing LLM capabilities with vector search
* Best practices and optimization strategies
Perfect for developers, AI enthusiasts, and tech leaders. Learn how to leverage MongoDB Atlas to deliver highly relevant, context-aware search results, transforming your data retrieval process. Stay ahead in tech innovation and maximize the potential of your applications.
#MongoDB #VectorSearch #AI #SemanticSearch #TechInnovation #DataScience #LLM #MachineLearning #SearchTechnology
Taking AI to the Next Level in Manufacturing.pdfssuserfac0301
Read Taking AI to the Next Level in Manufacturing to gain insights on AI adoption in the manufacturing industry, such as:
1. How quickly AI is being implemented in manufacturing.
2. Which barriers stand in the way of AI adoption.
3. How data quality and governance form the backbone of AI.
4. Organizational processes and structures that may inhibit effective AI adoption.
6. Ideas and approaches to help build your organization's AI strategy.
Main news related to the CCS TSI 2023 (2023/1695)Jakub Marek
An English 🇬🇧 translation of a presentation to the speech I gave about the main changes brought by CCS TSI 2023 at the biggest Czech conference on Communications and signalling systems on Railways, which was held in Clarion Hotel Olomouc from 7th to 9th November 2023 (konferenceszt.cz). Attended by around 500 participants and 200 on-line followers.
The original Czech 🇨🇿 version of the presentation can be found here: https://www.slideshare.net/slideshow/hlavni-novinky-souvisejici-s-ccs-tsi-2023-2023-1695/269688092 .
The videorecording (in Czech) from the presentation is available here: https://youtu.be/WzjJWm4IyPk?si=SImb06tuXGb30BEH .
Generating privacy-protected synthetic data using Secludy and MilvusZilliz
During this demo, the founders of Secludy will demonstrate how their system utilizes Milvus to store and manipulate embeddings for generating privacy-protected synthetic data. Their approach not only maintains the confidentiality of the original data but also enhances the utility and scalability of LLMs under privacy constraints. Attendees, including machine learning engineers, data scientists, and data managers, will witness first-hand how Secludy's integration with Milvus empowers organizations to harness the power of LLMs securely and efficiently.
Generating privacy-protected synthetic data using Secludy and Milvus
Finding and managing engineering information
1. May 2017 University Library, Thomas Hapke
Finding and managing
engineering information
2. May 2017 University Library, Thomas Hapke
Digital transition
– an example
Do you still know this?
This is a 3-D model of
an icon which is used in
modern programs to
indicate the possibility
to save something as a
file. 8-)
3. May 2017 University Library, Thomas Hapke
Transition in the
library
Shadows of shelfs in
reading and working
areas within TUHH
library
4. May 2017 University Library, Thomas Hapke
Information challenges for
academic research
• The silver bullet to find information!? Searching
more systematically?!
• A look over someone‘s shoulder!
Here a librarian‘s one.
• How to be more sure not to miss something
essential?
• How to get access to relevant documents in full
text?
• How to cope with information overload?
Curiosity!
Doubt!
Graphics: D. Bieler
5. May 2017 University Library, Thomas Hapke
Finding topic,
problem,
information demand
Informing
oneself,
finding
publications
Researching,
reading,
evaluating,
understanding
Organising
knowledge and
writing
Publishing
Critical reflexion
on information,
learning,
writing, and
publishing
processes
full texts
Open
Access
copy right
presenting,
reporting
citing
plagiarism
structuring
creativity
problem based
learning
citation
styles
peer
review
text
optimisation
visualisation
reviews
gathering ideas
research strategies
research
methods
focusing
formatting
excerption
information overload
intellectual property
Creative
Commons
impact
Issues for
reflection
tools
emotions
Life cycle
of scholarly communication
experimenting
6. May 2017 University Library, Thomas Hapke
• Ullmann's encyclopedia of industrial
chemistry
(6. ed., 2002, 40 vols.)
Online in TUHH intranet (2017 ed.)!
• Comprehensive renewable energy
(2013, 8 vols) Online in TUHH intranet!
• Handbook of loss prevention engineering
(2013) Online in TUHH intranet!
• Encyclopedia of tribology (2013)
Online in TUHH intranet!
• Encyclopedia of complexity and systems
science (2009) Online in TUHH intranet!
• Encyclopedia of optimization
(2009) Online in TUHH intranet!
• Wiley encyclopedia of computer science and
engineering (2009)
• Encyclopedia of nanoscience and society
(2010, 2 vols.)
Using encyclopedias and
reference works for orientation!
7. May 2017 University Library, Thomas Hapke
Orientation: Subject information
Process engineering @TUBHH
http://www.tub.tuhh.de/en/subject-information/process-and-chemical-engineering/
8. May 2017 University Library, Thomas Hapke
Subject gateways
U.S. National Center for Biotechnology
Information
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
https://www.econbiz.de
A printed source: Using the engineering
literature / Bonnie A. Osif. 2. ed. 2012.
Shelf number for reference copy: TEA-804
https://www.tib.eu/en/
9. May 2017 University Library, Thomas Hapke
Informing – Points to
survive
1. Orientation before searching.
2. Don‘t trust only one information source.
How to be more sure not to
miss something essential?
10. May 2017 University Library, Thomas Hapke
Beyond Google!
FindING @ TUHH-Bibliothek
First orientation
Catalog
Actual
research information
Specials
Reference databases for journal articles:
TEMA, Web of Science
Civil engineering: RSWB, TEMA
Electrical engeineering: TEMA, (IEEE)
Mechanical engineering: TEMA, Web of Science
Process engineering: Web of Science, TEMA
Business sciences: TEMA, Business Source Premier,
WISO
Library website: http://www.tub.tuhh.de/en/
Subject groups in reading room
Encyclopedias and other reference works
Media - digital (TUHH intranet!) or printed (reading
rooms, closed stacks)
https://katalog.tub.tuhh.de/?mylang=en
German DIN standards online!
Patents: Esp@cenet, DEPATISnet
Interlibrary loan and document deliveryGraphics: D. Bieler
11. May 2017 University Library, Thomas Hapke
Dimensions of
finding
How?
Adopted from: Sheila Corrall, John Dove: Web scale discovery and information literacy: competing visions or mutual
support? LILAC 2012, Glasgow. http://de.slideshare.net/infolit_group/corrall-dove)
Approved
scholarly content
What?
Open web content
Single search box
Advanced search
options
Google
Scholar
Where? Local
availability!
Specialized databases
with costs:
Web of Science, TEMA
Graphics: D. Bieler
12. May 2017 University Library, Thomas Hapke
The TUHH Library
Closed Stacks
Readings rooms
• Reference works and
Encyclopedias
• Journals
• Subject groups
• Textbook collection
Digital Library
• Online-Books
• E-Journals
• Databases
Picture: D. Bieler
The catalog – the heart
of the library!
Access to complete
holdings!
Graphics: D. Bieler
13. May 2017 University Library, Thomas Hapke
tub.find
The library catalog as search engine
14. May 2017 University Library, Thomas Hapke
tub.find – simply more!
• Search engine to find TUHH library holdings and more
• Including also journal articles
• Also for searching within library website and library weblog
• In addition finding resources of the GBV Common Library
Network – to order via interlibrary loan
• Search philosophy: Best hits, relevance ranking
• Sorting according descending date possible
• Filtering according format, language, author
17. May 2017 University Library, Thomas Hapke
Finding most recent
journal articles!
18. May 2017 University Library, Thomas Hapke
Looking for books
http://www.ubka.uni-karlsruhe.de/kvk.html
GVK - GBV Union Catalogue
http://gso.gbv.de/DB=2.1/LNG=EN/
http://www.worldcat.org/
Local library catalog,
e.g. from the TUHH library
https://katalog.tub.tuhh.de/?mylang=en
Regional Catalogue of Hamburg
http://gso.gbv.de/DB=2.91/LNG=EN/
http://books.google.com
http://beluga.hamburg
19. May 2017 University Library, Thomas Hapke
Finding journal articles via
subject-specific databases
Web of Science with Science Citation Index
- interdisciplinary! Who cited a specific document?
How much is a document cited?
TEMA (Technology and Management),
wti Frankfurt, formerly Fachinformationszentrum (FIZ)
Technik
(Access to these reference databases only within TUHH intranet)
PubMed
20. May 2017 University Library, Thomas Hapke
Differences
Seach engines Subject databases
• Interdisciplinary sources
• Widely intuitively to use
• Full text often searchable
• Rarely intellectual indexing
• Abbrevating of search terms
automatically („stemming“)
• Search philosophy: Best hits,
relevance ranking
• Good for subject-specific searching
• Sophisticated stragegies for
searching possible
• Full text not included in search index
• Partially intellectual indexing with
descriptors or integrated thesaurus
• Abbreviating search terms with
wildcard symbol (often *)
• Search philosophy: Exact hits,
Boolean combination of search terms
Use diverse databases and search engines!
21. May 2017 University Library, Thomas Hapke
Database of databases:
Subject overview
www.bibliothek.uni-regensburg.de/dbinfo/
http://tinyurl.com/DBIS-TUHH (for German interface only)
22. May 2017 University Library, Thomas Hapke
Articles’ databases:
Diversity and outcome
Database GVK-Plus (GBV
Common
Library
Network )
PubMed, TEMA
(wti), Web of
Science
Publishers‘
portals: Wiley,
SpringerLink,
ScienceDirect
Google
Scholar, BASE
(Bielefeld
Acad. Search
Engine)
Content articles, books,
and more
Articles,
(conference
papers)
articles, books,
book chapters
articles, books,
files, and more
Searchable
content
bibliographical
description
bibliographical
description,
abstracts,
descriptors
bibliographical
description,
abstracts, full
text
full text
Content
from
printed and
electronic
holdings of
libraries
diverse
publishers
only publisher,
here e.g.
Springer
who knows?
8-)
Access to
full text
directly, through
library in print
or ordering via
interlibary loan
through other
databases, link
resolver or
interlibrary loan
directly, in case
access is part of
subscription
directly, access
maybe
restricted
23. May 2017 University Library, Thomas Hapke
About 60 % of the information in patents is not
published elsewhere.
DEPATISnet - the German patent information
system at http://depatisnet.dpma.de
esp@cenet – European Patent Office
http://worldwide.espacenet.com/
US patents via the US Patent and Trademark
Office http://patft.uspto.gov/
https://www.tub.tuhh.de/en/find/patents/
Patents for talents!
24. May 2017 University Library, Thomas Hapke
Searching for
substance properties’ data
In reference works
(CRC Handbook of Chemistry and Physics, Perry's Chemical
Engineers' Handbook, Aldrich Handbook)
In extensive substance property collections
(„Handbooks“)
(Landolt-Börnstein Numerical data and functional relationships in
science and technology, Gmelin Handbook of Inorganic and
Organometallic Chemistry, Beilstein Handbook of Organic
Chemistry)
Via the net
(e.g. NIST Chemistry WebBook at
http://webbook.nist.gov/chemistry/ or the Physical Properties
Sources Index (PPSI) at http://www.eqi.ethz.ch/en/
- also: Reaxys, SciFinder, both not @TUHamburg)
More:
https://www.tub.tuhh.de/en/find/substance-property-data/
25. May 2017 University Library, Thomas Hapke
Informing – Points to
survive
1. Orientation before searching.
2. Don‘t trust only one information source.
3. In case you are asked for your login or for your credit
card, remember the library …
How to get full text?
26. May 2017 University Library, Thomas Hapke
How to get the full text
of this article?
Sparrow, B.; Liu, J.; Wegner, D. M. (2011): Google
Effects on Memory: Cognitive Consequences of
Having Information at Our Fingertip. Science 333,
6043, 776-778 2011.
Access: Online in Internet as
author copy
How to get the full text in case
the author would not have put
the article online?
27. May 2017 University Library, Thomas Hapke
How to get the full text
of this article?
R. Ladenstein, G. Antranikian: Proteins from
hyperthermophiles: Stability and enzymatic catalysis
close to the boiling point of water. Biotechnology of
Extremophiles. 1998, pp. 37 - 85.
Access: Printed in a book located
in the TUHH reading rooms
How to find?
28. May 2017 University Library, Thomas Hapke
How to get the full text
of this article?
Early Modern Information Overload, Daniel
Rosenberg, Journal of the History of Ideas 64 (2003)
1, pp. 1-9 10.1353/jhi.2003.0017
Access: Full text from TUHH only
available via interlibrary loan!
How to do interlibrary loan?
What does the character string at
the end of the citation mean?
29. May 2017 University Library, Thomas Hapke
How to get the full text
of this article?
Access not possible via
publisher‘s website within TUHH
intranet.
Catalog links to fulltext via Get
TIB Hannover!
Merajver, S. D.; Yorke, E. D.; Rocco, A. G. de. Random-
walk model of the phase transition of hydrocarbon
chains on a lattice. Physical Review A (General
Physics) 1981, 23 (2), 897–907
30. May 2017 University Library, Thomas Hapke
„On the shoulders of“
Google Scholar
Ca. 1410
Quelle: http://lccn.loc.gov/50041709
31. May 2017 University Library, Thomas Hapke
Google Scholar http://scholar.google.com
Finding full texts
32. May 2017 University Library, Thomas Hapke
Via linking service
to the catalog!
33. May 2017 University Library, Thomas Hapke
From Google Scholar
to the printed book!
Classical interface of the catalog!
34. May 2017 University Library, Thomas Hapke
A further example
Google Scholar http://scholar.google.com
38. May 2017 University Library, Thomas Hapke
Interlibrary loan via
library union network
Interlibrary loan for material not
owned by the TUHH library!
Use the databases of the
GBV Common Library Network
to locate material!
Fee 1,50 € for one article (copy) or
book.
40. May 2017 University Library, Thomas Hapke
Function of Link
Resolvers
Cited source
Link Resolver
Source of full text
Knowledge base
with local
holdings data
Catalog data,
maintenance through
library
Meta data
(in OpenURL)
URL of source,
e.g. DOI
(in OpenURL)
Search in catalog,
interlibrary loan
database
Meta data
(in OpenURL)
41. May 2017 University Library, Thomas Hapke
Informing – Points to
survive
1. Orientation before searching.
2. Don‘t trust only one information source.
3. In case you are asked for your login or for your credit
card, remember the library …
4. When searching: „Bulls*** in, bulls*** out.“
Think about search terms you use and their
variations and synonyms.
Poorly chosen search terms bring poor search
results. Too general key words lead to too
many hits from which often only a fraction is
useful; when using too specific key words,
important information might not be found.
42. May 2017 University Library, Thomas Hapke
Play! With search terms!
Make a search term diagram!
Topic: Microbial degradation of aromatic compounds in soil
Component 1 Component 2 Component 3
Microbi* degrad* aromat* soil*
Biodegrad* Polyaromat* Clay*
Bioremed* Benzene compost*
Microbi* decompos* PAH sediment*
Mikrobiol* abbau* Naphthalin Boden*
Böden
Component 1 AND Component 2 AND Component 3
where e.g.
Component 1 = (“microbi* degrad*”) OR biodegrad* OR bioremed* OR ...
43. May 2017 University Library, Thomas Hapke
Play! With search terms!
Make a search term diagram:
Topic: Recycling of plastics by biotechnological methods
Component 1 Component 2 Component 3
Recycl* Plasti* biotech*
reuse polymer* Biodegrad*
Wiederverw* Kunststoff* Microbi*
Verwert* PVC
Component 1 AND Component 2 AND Component 3
where e.g.
Component 2 = plasti* OR polymer* OR kunststoff* OR ...
44. May 2017 University Library, Thomas Hapke
Playing with search
terms in Web of Science
www.bibliothek.uni-regensburg.de/dbinfo/
45. May 2017 University Library, Thomas Hapke
Play! With databases!
Explore database features:
• Boolean logic
• Wildcard symbols: * ? $
• “Neighborhood operators”:
Context and phrases
• Search fields:
Basic index, author field,
descriptor or thesaurus fields
46. May 2017 University Library, Thomas Hapke
Informing – Points to
survive
1. Orientation before searching.
2. Don‘t trust only one information source.
3. In case you are asked for your login or for your credit
card, remember the library …
4. When searching: „Bulls*** in, bulls*** out.“
5. When finding information - think already of its further
processing, respectively later publication of your
research results.
How to cope with
information overload?
=> Reference management software
like Zotero and Citavi
47. May 2017 University Library, Thomas Hapke
Reference management
is no art!
Matej Krén, Idiom, Town Library Prague (1998),
Photo 2009
Today not searching or finding is the main
problem, but coping with information overload!
48. May 2017 University Library, Thomas Hapke
Software for reference
management
http://www.tub.tuhh.de/en/publishing/reference-management/
49. May 2017 University Library, Thomas Hapke
Possible functionalities
in Citavi
Step-by-Step Overview
https://www.citavi.com/service/e
n/docs/Citavi_5_Slideshows.pdf
Numbers can be used for short
links to step-by-step guides in
the manual, e.g.
www.citavi.com/shows/10
50. May 2017 University Library, Thomas Hapke
Reference management
on the web with Zotero
51. May 2017 University Library, Thomas Hapke
Bibliographical
formats to import
TY - JOUR
SN - 0926-9630
AU - Jauhiainen, A.
AU - Pulkkinen, R.
T1 - Problem-based learning
JF - Studies in health
SP - 572
EP - 576
VL - 146
PY - 2009
KW - Education
KW - Nursing
ER -
RIS
%0 Journal Article
%@ 0926-9630
%A Jauhiainen, A.
%A Pulkkinen, R.
%T Problem-based learning
%J Studies in health
%P 572-576
%V 146
%D 2009
%K Education
%K Nursing
EndNote Tagged
@article{Jauhiainen_Pulkkinen:
2009,
author = {Jauhiainen, A. and
Pulkkinen, R.},
year = {2009},
title = {Problem-based
learning and e-learning
methods in clinical practice},
keywords = {Education;
Nursing},
pages = {572--576},
volume = {146},
issn = {0926-9630},
journal = {Studies in health}
}
BibTeX
PMID- 19592907
PT - Journal Article
IS - 0926-9630 (Print)
AU - Jauhiainen A
AU - Pulkkinen R
TI - Problem-based learning
JT - Studies in health
PG - 572-6
VI - 146
DP - 2009
MH - Education
MH - Nursing
No Standard
52. May 2017 University Library, Thomas Hapke
Types of Citation Styles
52
References
as in-text
citations
Author / Date
(Doe, Smith 2009:
14)
Reference
number
[34]
Citation Key
[DoS09:14]
References
as footnotes
Author / Date
Doe, Smith 2009:
14
Full citation
Jane Doe, Mia
Smith: E-Learning.
London 2009, p.
14
Full citation in footnotes sometimes
called „Oxford System“.
Known style = Chicago-Manual of Style
Author-Year-System also called
„Harvard System“.
Known style = APA-Style.
53. May 2017 University Library, Thomas Hapke
Combining Citavi or Zotero
with Word or Writer
54. May 2017 University Library, Thomas Hapke
How to reduce uncertainty to miss
important information?
• Using different databases.
• Using subject-specific databases.
• Reflecting on appropriate search terms.
• Knowing how to logically combine search
terms within a specific database interface.
• Keeping treck of results through effective
reference management.
• …
A summary
55. May 2017 University Library, Thomas Hapke
A case study for finding
information
- at the same time a plea to
look at the sources as
original document!
56. May 2017 University Library, Thomas Hapke
Basic rules for citing
1) Used sources have to be quoted.
2) Position of references has to be without any doubt.
3) Cited sources have to be traceable because of
bibliographical description.
4) Consult the original document of your sources!
Don‘t use a citation from a paper without looking at the
original document of the citation.
Avoid secondary citations!
According:
Theuerkauf, Judith: Schreiben im Ingenieurstudium : Effektiv und effizient zur Bachelor-, Master- und
Doktorarbeit. Paderborn : Schöningh, 2012, pp. 86-99.
Biedermann, Wieland et al: Forschungsmethodik in den Ingenieurwissenschaften : Skript vom
Lehrstuhl für Produktentwicklung, Prof. Dr.-Ing. Udo Lindemann, Technische Universität München
(TUM), 2012, p. 63.
57. May 2017 University Library, Thomas Hapke
Avoid secondary
citations! An example
A conference paper cited a lot
Friedel, L. (1979). Improved Friction Pressure Drop Correlations
for Horizontal and Vertical Two-Phase Pipe Flow, European Two-
Phase Flow Group Meeting, Ispra, Italy, June, Paper E2.
58. May 2017 University Library, Thomas Hapke
Also actually cited a
lot!
Friedel, L. (1979). Improved Friction Pressure Drop Correlations
for Horizontal and Vertical Two-Phase Pipe Flow. …
59. May 2017 University Library, Thomas Hapke
Locating paper via
interlibrary loan!
Searching the catalog of the GBV Common Library Network
(https://www.gbv.de/?set_language=en):
Friedel, L. (1979). Improved Friction Pressure Drop Correlations
for Horizontal and Vertical Two-Phase Pipe Flow, European Two-
Phase Flow Group Meeting, Ispra, Italy, June, Paper E2.
60. May 2017 University Library, Thomas Hapke
Accessible at TIB/UB
Hannover!
Searching the catalog of the GBV Common Library Network:
Friedel, L. (1979). Improved Friction Pressure Drop Correlations
for Horizontal and Vertical Two-Phase Pipe Flow, European Two-
Phase Flow Group Meeting, Ispra, Italy, June, Paper E2.
61. May 2017 University Library, Thomas Hapke
Getting the paper via
interlibrary loan!
Accessible is only the abstract!
Friedel, L. (1979). Improved
Friction Pressure Drop
Correlations for Horizontal
and Vertical Two-Phase Pipe
Flow, European Two-Phase
Flow Group Meeting, Ispra,
Italy, June, Paper E2.
And now?
62. May 2017 University Library, Thomas Hapke
Searching the paper in an
engineering database!
Database: TEMA Technology and Management from wti-Frankfurt
Friedel, L. (1979). Improved Friction Pressure Drop Correlations
for Horizontal and Vertical Two-Phase Pipe Flow, European Two-
Phase Flow Group Meeting, Ispra, Italy, June, Paper E2.
63. May 2017 University Library, Thomas Hapke
Complete paper
appeared in a journal!
Result in TEMA:
Friedel, L. (1979).
Improved Friction
Pressure Drop
Correlations for
Horizontal and
Vertical Two-
Phase Pipe Flow,
European Two-Phase
Flow Group Meeting,
Ispra, Italy, June, Paper
E2.
64. May 2017 University Library, Thomas Hapke
Journal in print available at
TUHH library!
Friedel, L. (1979).
Improved Friction
Pressure Drop
Correlations for
Horizontal and
Vertical Two-
Phase Pipe Flow,
European Two-Phase
Flow Group Meeting,
Ispra, Italy, June,
Paper E2.
65. May 2017 University Library, Thomas Hapke
Searching for paper in
database Web of Science!
Friedel, L. (1979). Improved Friction Pressure Drop Correlations
for Horizontal and Vertical Two-Phase Pipe Flow, European Two-
Phase Flow Group Meeting, Ispra, Italy, June, Paper E2.
66. May 2017 University Library, Thomas Hapke
Versions of citing
Friedel‘s paper
Searching the database
„Web of Science“!
The correct citation:
Friedel, L. (1979). Improved
Friction Pressure Drop
Correlations for Horizontal
and Vertical Two-Phase Pipe
Flow.
In: 3 R-International, 18, 7,
485-491.
„Mixtures“ 8-)
67. May 2017 University Library, Thomas Hapke
Informing – Points to
survive
1. Orientation before searching.
2. Don‘t trust only one information source.
3. In case you are asked for your login or for your credit
card, remember the library …
4. When searching: „Bulls*** in, bulls*** out.“
5. When finding information - think already of its further
processing respectively later publication of your
research results.
6. Keeping current …
7. Reflect on information and on your own information
behavior
https://www.tub.tuhh.de/en/find/subject-information/informing-points-to-survive/
69. May 2017 University Library, Thomas Hapke
Openness of knowledge
A definition:
„Knowledge is open if anyone is
free to access, use, modify, and
share it — subject, at most, to
measures that preserve
provenance and openness.“
Graphics: e-InfraNet: ‘Open’ as the default modus operandi for research and
higher education (2013), p. 11 http://tinyurl.com/diversity-openness
CC-BY-SA 3.0 Lizenz
https://okfn.org/
http://opendefinition.org/od/2.1/en/
70. May 2017 University Library, Thomas Hapke
„Open Access is a strategic aim of TUHH“
Presidium of TUHH 20.03.2013
The Golden Road:
First publication in Open
Access journal
Articles in peer-reviewed
Open Access journals
Finding the right journal:
Directory of Open Access
Journals www.doaj.org
Publication fees:
Support by Publishing Fund
of TUHH
The Green Road:
Parallel publication of pre-
and postprints as Open
Access
Practicing the right to
publish pre-/post-prints as
secondary publication
Self archiving via TUBdok:
Open Access Repository of
the TUHH
What is allowed by my
publisher:
Open Access Policies
www.sherpa.ac.uk/romeo/
Publishing Open Access
Free and unhindered access to
scholarly information for anybody!
http://www.tub.tu-harburg.de/en/openaccess/
71. May 2017 University Library, Thomas Hapke
Using open licences
CC 0 Public Domain
CC BY 4.0 Attribution (Indicate if changes were made)
CC BY-SA 4.0 Attribution-ShareAlike
CC BY-ND 4.0 Attribution-NoDerivatives
CC BY-NC 4.0 Attribution-NonCommercial
CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike
CC BY-NC-ND
4.0
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives
CC-Graphics: http://creativecommons.org/examples / CC BY 4.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)
A modular system for securing
some intellectual property
rights:
Share – Adapt – Remix
Photo: TilarX / Flickr
https://www.flickr.com/photos/tylerstefanich/2117633427/
CC BY 2.0 (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/)
74. May 2017 University Library, Thomas Hapke
Finding topic,
problem,
information demand
Informing
oneself,
finding
publications
Researching,
reading,
evaluating,
understanding
Organising
knowledge and
writing
Publishing
Critical reflexion
on information,
learning,
writing, and
publishing
processes
full texts
specialised databases
reference management
software
Open Access
copy right
presenting, reporting
citing
plagiarism
structuring
creativity
problem based learning
citation styles
peer review
text optimisation
learning and
writing diary
visualisation
library
reviews weblog
mind mapping
Examensarbeit
journal article
gathering ideas
research strategies
research methods
focusing
formatting
excerption
catalogs
search engines
information overload
intellectual property
Creative Commons
impact
Issues for
reflection
tools
emotions
Life cycle
of scholarly communication
lab notebook
text processing
experimenting
75. May 2017 University Library, Thomas Hapke
Nature Special on the
future of publishing
http://www.nature.com/news/specials/scipublishing/
Open Access
Data curation
Quality of Open Access
publishers
Alternatives to Peer
Review: “Altmetrics”
Impact-Factor and Hirsch-
Index
Creative Commens-
Licences
76. May 2017 University Library, Thomas Hapke
Again a tip:
Thinking anew about science!
Open Access publication: http://www.openingscience.org/get-the-book/
77. May 2017 University Library, Thomas Hapke
At the end something general
Some general hints and key competences when managing
information
‣ Be prepared for constant change.
‣ Know your skills and limits!
‣ Tolerate ambiguity and differences.
‣ Don‘t give up too early.
‣ Be aware that every fact is the result of an act, that
information has been created by somebody with a certain
purpose.
According: T. Hapke: Informationskompetenz in einer neuen Informationskultur.
In: Handbuch Informationskompetenz, S. 36-48. Ed. W. Sühl-Strohmenger. Berlin:
De Gruyter Saur, 2012.
78. May 2017 University Library, Thomas Hapke
Reflecting on your information
behavior- a little bit more?!
Appendix I. The world of biotechnology
information: seven points for reflecting on
your information behavior (by T. Hapke)
In: Buchholz, K., Kasche, V., Bornscheuer,
U.T.: Biocatalysts and Enzyme Technology.
2. ed. Wiley-VCH, 2012, pp. 553-564.
Preprint available at:
http://biotech.uni-
greifswald.de/assets/downloads/Informati
on_BuchholzKascheBornscheuer.pdf
The general issues in the text below are valid for all subjects!
79. May 2017 University Library, Thomas Hapke
Contact
Thomas Hapke
Web: http://www.tuhh.de/b/hapke/
Blog: http://blog.hapke.de
Slidespace: http://www.slideshare.net/thapke
Tweets: http://twitter.com/thapke
Informing – Points to survive at
http://www.tub.tuhh.de/en/subject-
information/informing-points-to-survive/