From laura.palumbo at rutgers.edu Tue Apr 5 10:03:00 2016 From: laura.palumbo at rutgers.edu (Laura B. Palumbo) Date: Tue, 5 Apr 2016 10:03:00 -0400 (EDT) Subject: [Rdap] RDAP16 Disscussion Tables: call for topics and moderators In-Reply-To: <805504119.8822838.1459864635876.JavaMail.zimbra@rulmail.rutgers.edu> Message-ID: <1419887097.8828817.1459864980081.JavaMail.zimbra@rulmail.rutgers.edu> In just about a month we will be together in Atlanta for the next RDAP! The program looks great, and we are planning Discussion Roundtables again this year. In order to have these discussions reflect your interests and concerns, we welcome your suggestions for topics. What are your burning questions about research data? Let us know! We are also recruiting moderators for discussion topics, if you are interested in volunteering. Please reply to Laura and Line (laura.palumbo at rutgers.edu and pouchard at purdue.edu) with your suggestions for topics, and indicate if you would like to act as a moderator for a table. See you soon in Georgia! Laura -- Chemistry & Physics Librarian/ Science Data Specialist Rutgers University Library of Science and Medicine 848.445.3558 laura.palumbo at rutgers.edu --- Follow me: cheminformer.blogs.rutgers.edu Twitter: @LauraBPalumbo From alop at vt.edu Wed Apr 6 12:52:57 2016 From: alop at vt.edu (Andi Ogier) Date: Wed, 6 Apr 2016 12:52:57 -0400 Subject: [Rdap] Call for proposal WADL 2016 deadline extended to April 17 Message-ID: Posting on behalf of a colleague! The usual apologies for cross-posting. Subject: Call for proposal WADL 2016 deadline extended to April 17 WADL 2016 Web Archiving and Digital Libraries JCDL 2016 (http://www.jcdl2016.org), Rutgers University; 6/22-6/23 Workshop Please see approved workshop proposal at: http://fox.cs.vt.edu/WADLjcdl16.pdf Submissions (please provide contact and supporting info in <= 1 page): - EasyChair submission page: https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=wadl2016 - Due: April 17, 2016 (extended from original date April 3, 2016) - Notifications: May 2, 2016 - Categories are: - Poster + lightening talk - Demonstration + lightening talk - 20 min. presentation + 10 min. Q&A - 30 min. panel with interactive plenary discussion - Please indicate which one of these 4 categories best describes your submission. Description: - Selected works will likely be published in a special issue of IEEE TCDL Bulletin, and may lead to a journal publication next year in the International Journal on Digital Libraries (IJDL). These results were the case with works presented at WADL2015. - This will explore the integration of web archiving and digital libraries, over the complete life cycle: creation/authoring, uploading/publishing in the Web, ? issue of the - It will cover all topics of interest, including but not limited to: Archiving (events) Big data Classification, clustering Client/proxy/server side collecting Crawling (focused) Curation, quality control Databases / collections (of webpages) Discovery Extraction & analysis Filling gaps Globalization, languages Social sciences Linking archives Metadata Mobile devices Network science Preservation Resource description Standards, protocols Systems, tools Tweet collections and connections Objectives: - to continue to build the community of people integrating web archiving & DLs - to help attendees learn about useful methods, systems, and software in this area - to help chart future research and improved practice in this area - to promote synergistic efforts including collaborative projects and proposals - to produce an archival publication that will help advance technology and practice Workshop Co-chairs: - Chair, Edward A. Fox, Professor and Director Digital Library Research Laboratory, Virginia Tech, fox at vt.eduhttp://fox.cs.vt.edu, 540-231-5113 - Co-chair, Zhiwu Xie, zhiwuxie at vt.edu, Associate Professor and Technology Development Librarian, Center for Digital Research and Scholarship, University Libraries, Virginia Tech, 540-231-4453 - Co-chair, Martin Klein, UCLA, martinklein at library.ucla.edu Program Committee: - Jefferson Bailey, Internet Archive, jefferson at archive.org - Mohamed Magdy Farig, Virginia Tech, mmagdy at vt.edu - Vinay Goel, Internet Archive, vinay at archive.org - Gina Jones, Library of Congress, gjon at loc.gov - Deborah Kempe, Frick Art Reference Library, kempe at frick.org - Frank McCown, Harding University, fmccown at harding.edu - Michael Nelson, Old Dominion Univ., mln at cs.odu.edu - Christie Peterson, George Washington U. Libraries, cspeterson at gwu.edu - Thomas Risse, L3S Research Center, Leibniz Universitat Hannover, risse at L3S.de - Nicholas Taylor, Stanford U., ntay at stanford.edu - Matthew Weber, Rutgers U., matthew.weber at rutgers.edu - Robert Wolven, Columbia U., wolven at columbia.edu Closely related event and results: - Web Archiving and Digital Libraries (WADL'15), 24 June, at JCDL 2015, see website and proceedings in a special issue of the IEEE TCDL Bulletin, V. 11, Issue 2, Oct. 2015 - Working with Internet Archives for Research (WIRE 2014) NSF workshop, 17-18 June 2014, Cambridge, MA ? seehttp://wp.comminfo.rutgers.edu/nsfia/ - Web Archiving and Digital Libraries (WADL?13), 25-26 July, at JCDL 2013, see http://www.ctrnet.net/sites/default/files/JCDL2013WorkshopWebArchiving20130603.pdf and report in SIGIR Forum http://sigir.org/files/forum/2013D/p128.pdf - Web Archive Globalization Workshop, WAG 2011 ? see http://cs.harding.edu/wag2011/ , with 4 organizers plus 5 presenters and about 20 participants, held in Ottawa after JCDL 2011 (June 16-17) - Ongoing work by attendees in this area, growth in collaborative activity involving the Internet Archive, and specific community building successes like the Web Archive Cooperative ? see http://infolab.stanford.edu/wac/ - Annual meetings of the International Internet Preservation Consortium (IIPC), partner meetings of the Internet Archive (Archive-It), and ten workshops held with ECDL/TPDL: International Web Archiving Workshop (IWAW), 2001-2010 -- Andrea L. Ogier Associate Director, Data Services Research & Informatics Division University Libraries Virginia Tech alop at vt.edu (540) 231-9255 Google Calendar -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From cmmorris at duraspace.org Wed Apr 6 15:49:25 2016 From: cmmorris at duraspace.org (Carol Minton Morris) Date: Wed, 6 Apr 2016 15:49:25 -0400 Subject: [Rdap] OR2016 keynotes, accepted contributions announced; Early bird deadline is April 13 Message-ID: April 6, 2016 Read it online: Accepted contributions: http://or2016.net/accepted-contributions; Speakers: http://or2016.net/keynote-speakers; Registration: http://or2016.net/registration-submissions-2/ *OR2016 keynotes and accepted contributions announced; Early bird deadline is April 13* Open Repositories 2016?to be held in Dublin, Ireland June 13th-16th?is pleased to announce our opening and closing keynote speakers - Laura Czerniewicz and Rufus Pollock. Read below for more information about both. *Please note that early bird registration for Open Repositories 2016 will close on April 13th.* Register at http://or2016.net/ to take advantage of the early bird registration, make your hotel reservation, and book sightseeing tours. The accepted contributions are also now listed on the OR2016 Website here: http://or2016.net/accepted-contributions. We are currently working on the detailed program schedule, but you can find the general outline here: http://or2016.net/conference-at-a-glance/. Laura Czerniewicz will kick off Open Repositories 2016 with her opening keynote titled ?Which knowledge online? Reflections on networked scholarly communication practices in a global age? on the morning of Tuesday, June 14th. The current digitally-mediated networked age promises global digital cultures with flattened power relations, given the affordances of information and communication technologies to collapse distance, enable easier cross-country collaborations and create new opportunities for knowledge production and sharing. Drawing on case studies of local knowledge production, communication, visibility and discoverability, this talk will raise issues regarding how the reconfiguration of relationships and power is occurring in practice. Associate Professor Czerniewicz is the director of the Centre for Innovation in Learning and Teaching at the University of Cape Town (UCT), South Africa. Prior to that position, she ran the OpenUCT Initiative spearheading the university?s open scholarship agenda including the development of the Open Access policy and the repository as well as the integration of open education. She blogs intermittently at http://lauraczerniewicz.uct.ac.za/ and can be followed at https://twitter.com/czernie on Twitter. Dr. Rufus Pollock will deliver the closing keynote the afternoon of Thursday, June 16th. Dr Pollock is Founder and President of Open Knowledge, an international non-profit using advocacy, technology and training to unlock information and see it used to create insight that drives change. He was formerly a Shuttleworth Foundation Fellow and a Mead Fellow in Economics at Emmanuel College, University of Cambridge and is currently an adviser on open data to several governments. He has worked extensively as a scholar, activist and technologist on the social, legal and technical challenges around the creation and sharing of knowledge. See more about Dr. Pollock at http://rufuspollock.org/ and follow him on Twitter at https://twitter.com/rufuspollock. We look forward to seeing you in Dublin this June! Dermot Frost Chair, OR2016 Host Committee David Minor, Matthias Razum, and Sarah Shreeves Co-Chairs, OR2016 Program Committee -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From hoadriank at gmail.com Wed Apr 6 19:36:53 2016 From: hoadriank at gmail.com (Adrian Ho) Date: Wed, 6 Apr 2016 19:36:53 -0400 Subject: [Rdap] CfP: ACRL 2017 panel sessions Message-ID: Apologies for cross-posting As a member of the ACRL 2017 Panel Sessions Committee, I strongly encourage you to submit a proposal (or more than one!) for a panel discussion of your favorite topic at the ACRL 2017 Conference (http://conference.acrl.org/) in Baltimore. A panel session offers an opportune occasion for two to four presenters to engage in a cohesive and productive conversation about a topic of importance to academic libraries and librarianship. Lasting 60 minutes (including time for Q&A), the discussion proves effective in prompting the audience to think about the topic and/or share insights from different perspectives. Conference tags ( http://conference.acrl.org/conference-content/conference-tags/) are available to stimulate your thinking and position your proposal within the conference theme. Proposals for traditionally underrepresented topics such as scholarly communication, special collections/archives, and technical services are especially welcome! Information about submitting a proposal is online at: http://conference.acrl.org/conference-content/how-to-submit/ When you are ready for the submission, start the process here: https://s4.goeshow.com/acrl/national/2017/abstract_submission.cfm The submission deadline is May 6, 2016. Feel free to contact me if you have any questions. Adrian Ho -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From aneeser at umich.edu Thu Apr 7 09:57:53 2016 From: aneeser at umich.edu (Amy Neeser) Date: Thu, 7 Apr 2016 09:57:53 -0400 Subject: [Rdap] Midwest Data Librarian Symposium: call for program committee Message-ID: The University of Michigan Library is pleased to announce hosting the 2016 Midwest Data Librarian Symposium in Ann Arbor, MI on October 17 & 18, 2016. We are seeking volunteers for the program committee to help plan logistics and programming. Please send a short statement of interest (no more than a paragraph) to Amy Neeser (aneeser at umich.edu) and Scott Martin ( samarti at umich.edu). Thank you! -- Amy Neeser Research Data Curation Librarian University of Michigan Libraries 260E Hatcher Graduate Library South 734-764-2203 | aneeser at umich.edu ORCID: 0000-0003-2523-5079 -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From mfsense2 at illinois.edu Fri Apr 8 17:16:28 2016 From: mfsense2 at illinois.edu (Senseney, Megan Finn) Date: Fri, 8 Apr 2016 21:16:28 +0000 Subject: [Rdap] DHOxSS Workshop "Humanities Data: A Hands-On Approach" Message-ID: Humanities Data: A Hands-On Approach Digital Humanities at Oxford Summer School 4 - 8 July 2016 http://digital.humanities.ox.ac.uk/dhoxss/2016/workshops/dhcuration Are you... ... planning a digital humanities project? ... interested in learning more about data curation and cleaning? ... responsible for managing digital humanities data for a range of uses? Humanities Data: A Hands-On Approach This workshop will provide a hands-on introduction to a suite of useful tools, methods, and concepts for managing, organizing, cleaning, and processing data in digital humanities projects. Sessions will cover a range of topics, including information organization, data modeling, data quality and cleaning, and workflows. Throughout the week, participants will clean and curate a real-world digital humanities dataset based on a variety of use scenarios. At the end of the week, participants will present and discuss their experiences. The programme is aimed at humanities researchers?whether traditional faculty or alternative academic professionals?and may also be of interest to librarians, archivists, cultural heritage specialists, other information professionals, and advanced graduate students. Sessions will be led by experts from the iSchool at Illinois's Center for Informatics Research in Science and Scholarship and the HathiTrust Research Center as well as the University of Oxford?s Bodleian Libraries, Oxford e-Research Centre, and Oxford Internet Institute. Sessions This year?s sessions provide: * A grounding in the foundations of data curation through lectures on information organization, data quality, contextual data modeling, data provenance and reproducibility, and a round of lightning talks on advanced topics in data curation * Hands-on introductions to useful data curation tools and techniques including GitHub, OpenRefine, SQLite, and YesWorkflow * A ?dirty? dataset to clean and curate, mined from the writings of Thomas ?Mummy? Pettigrew (a 19th century antiquarian, surgeon and expert on Ancient Egyptian mummies). * An approach to data management as a form of project management * A discussion of post-project preservation repositories * An opportunity to ask tutors any further questions you might have about applying the techniques you have learned. Delegates do not need to bring their own laptops for this workshop. All required software will be provided for the duration of the summer school. Speakers Our speakers this year are David De Roure, Neil Jefferies, Bertram Lud?scher, Kevin Page, Allen Renear, Megan Senseney, Andrea K. Thomer, and David Tomkins. The Digital Humanities at Oxford Summer School The workshop sessions are situated amongst a rich variety of keynote and additional lectures which will enhance your knowledge of the wider field and provide interesting commentary on current debate in the Digital Humanities, as well as highlighting other technical areas of interest. During the summer school, you will meet participants from around the world, from every field and career stage. Evening events, such as a research poster and drinks reception and a conference dinner at the beautiful Exeter College, offer further opportunities to meet fellow delegates and exchange ideas. View the programme for further information. Registration Reduced fees are available for academics and students, as well as group bookings. See the registration page at http://digital.humanities.ox.ac.uk/dhoxss/2016/registration for details. Bursaries A limited number of bursaries are also available for the Summer School and open for applications until 18th April; for more information, see http://digital.humanities.ox.ac.uk/dhoxss/2016/bursaries. -- Megan Finn Senseney Senior Project Coordinator Center for Informatics Research in Science and Scholarship Graduate School of Library and Information Science University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign 501 East Daniel Street Champaign, Illinois 61820 Phone: (217) 244-5574 Email: mfsense2 at illinois.edu http://cirssweb.lis.illinois.edu -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From regina.avila at nist.gov Mon Apr 11 14:03:22 2016 From: regina.avila at nist.gov (Avila, Regina L. (Fed)) Date: Mon, 11 Apr 2016 18:03:22 +0000 Subject: [Rdap] data publishing - policy question re: data with errors Message-ID: Hello all, As we're formulating our policies and practices for publishing scientific research data at NIST, I'm wondering how my colleagues are handling published research data that is discovered to have errors. My questions are: Are you overwriting the erroneous data with the corrected data and then publishing changelogs? Are you keeping the original data but making it inaccessible? If you're keeping the original data accessible, how are you noting the errors? If you're keeping the erroneous data, is it kept permanently or for a set amount of time? Has any authority published a best practice guide on this matter? Any arguments for against any of these ideas? Thanks in advance for your assistance, Regina Avila ____________________________________ Regina L. Avila Digital Services Librarian National Institute of Standards and Technology 301-975-3575 -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From wynholds at ucla.edu Wed Apr 13 15:05:34 2016 From: wynholds at ucla.edu (L. Wynholds) Date: Wed, 13 Apr 2016 12:05:34 -0700 Subject: [Rdap] data publishing - policy question re: data with errors In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: I'd like to take this opportunity to share the following (hopefully helpful) summary of observations from my work with data scientists: Many scientists refer to a published/archived/networked set of data as a 'data release' and append a version number to track changes. The release version number allows the scientists to be able to concretely identify which version of the dataset was used (aka for reproducibility). When the dataset has changes, the data managers create a new release and/or version number. A record of changes (aka changelog) is often critical for the users to understand what changes were made between versions. There are probably only about 6-10 modalities of data ingest/update that I have observed in the wild, but I haven't seen any publications that summarize these use cases in terms of data management. Perhaps someone else has, tho. I did a brief lit survey at the time of writing this email and didn't see anything new. There are quite a few resources discussing the problem, but you may need to use the term 'data citation' or 'data quality control' in order to find the publications (e.g. http://docs.virtualsolar.org/wiki/Citation ) Be aware that some of the discussions in these publications may not be appropriate to the type of use and storage modalities present at NIST. 1) The considerations that you have for data errors is part of a larger discussion that is necessary for your group to make long term plans around publishing data and creating data release versions for distribution and/or reuse. Matt Mayernik, Carole Palmer, and many others in the fed.gov.us data world have had some excellent hands-on discussions about data management practices for both their live and static data sets. They are very helpful to chat with if you can swing it. 2) The exact considerations around storage and metadata (e.g.overwriting vs sequential releases of data on your servers) needs to be tailored to how the data is actually used and structured. Many of the very largest datasets are overwritten with detailed changelog files b/c the network storage and delivery costs would be untenable. E.g. sometimes it is cheaper and faster to maintain a detailed record of the changes than it is to maintain multiple versions of a structured database, but it depends on the dataset and its users/uses. Some datasets are sequential, e.g. every day more data is loaded into the set and therefore, the dataset changes every day. Hence the way the identifiers are applied depends on how each specific dataset is structured for loading new data and corrections. 3) The larger discussion around data citation and data release versions is necessary in order to apply finite identifiers to your data releases. 4) Finite identifiers are necessary for citing and locating the dataset for publication purposes. My IDCC paper (http://www.ijdc.net/index.php/ijdc/article/view/174 ) focuses on this problem, if you want to read a more detailed argument about identifiers and linking to data. Dataset versioning information is critical to appending finite identifiers. This is because records and/or metadata around dataset versioning are critical to reproducibility (e.g. so that the reader can correctly identify which version of the dataset was used in a research publication). Best of luck with your data publication activities, -l L. Wynholds wynholds at ucla.edu PhD Candidate, Information Studies, University of California, Lost Angeles On Mon, Apr 11, 2016 at 11:03 AM, Avila, Regina L. (Fed) wrote: > Hello all, > > > > As we?re formulating our policies and practices for publishing scientific > research data at NIST, I?m wondering how my colleagues are handling > published research data that is discovered to have errors. > > > > My questions are: > > > > Are you overwriting the erroneous data with the corrected data and then > publishing changelogs? > > Are you keeping the original data but making it inaccessible? > > If you?re keeping the original data accessible, how are you noting the > errors? > > If you?re keeping the erroneous data, is it kept permanently or for a set > amount of time? > > Has any authority published a best practice guide on this matter? > > Any arguments for against any of these ideas? > > > > > > Thanks in advance for your assistance, > > > > Regina Avila > > ____________________________________ > Regina L. Avila > > Digital Services Librarian > > National Institute of Standards and Technology > > 301-975-3575 > > > > > _______________________________________________ > Rdap mailing list > Rdap at mail.asis.org > http://mail.asis.org/mailman/listinfo/rdap > From Julie.Goldman at umassmed.edu Fri Apr 15 12:00:15 2016 From: Julie.Goldman at umassmed.edu (Goldman, Julie) Date: Fri, 15 Apr 2016 16:00:15 +0000 Subject: [Rdap] =?windows-1252?q?Upcoming_Webinar=3A_Complying_with_the_NS?= =?windows-1252?q?F=92s_New_Public_Access_Policy_and_Depositing_a_Manuscri?= =?windows-1252?q?pt_in_NSF-PAR?= Message-ID: <6806253756CE0C4CB2112B1B715DB09889BEA18C@ummscsmbx11.ad.umassmed.edu> Reminder to register for this free webinar offering ? registration is almost full! The National Network of Library of Medicine, New England Region is hosting a webinar led by Brown University to discuss the new NSF Public Access Policy and how this will affect the sharing of the results of research, both publications and data, in the coming year. Title: Complying with the NSF?s New Public Access Policy and Depositing a Manuscript in NSF-PAR Date: 12PM-1:30PM Tuesday, April 19th, 2016 Description: In 2016 the National Science Foundation (NSF) rolled out its new online public access repository, NSF-PAR for investigators funded by the NSF to deposit their manuscripts to comply with its new Public Access Policy. The NSF?s policy and its new publications repository differ in several key ways from the National Institutes of Health?s (NIH) public access policy and PMC, particularly in terms of requirements for compliance and procedures for deposit. While NIH grants may make up the majority of biomedical institutions? research funds, the NSF is also an important source of biomedical funding, especially for career awards, research training grants, and translational research. In this webinar we will walk participants through the requirements for compliance and the process for deposit and share insights provided by the NSF Policy Office. Instructors: Hope Lappen is the Biomedical and Life Sciences Librarian at Brown University. Prior to coming to Brown, Hope served as the Science and Engineering Librarian at George Washington University and the Eugene Garfield Resident in Science Librarianship at University of Pennsylvania. Andrew Creamer is the Science Data Management Librarian at Brown University. He helps students and faculty researchers with NSF data management plans and digital curation projects. Prior to Brown, Andrew worked on research data management initiatives at the NN/LM NER. Registration: http://nnlm.gov/ntc/classes/class_details.html?class_id=1027 Julie Goldman, MLIS eScience Coordinator NN/LM New England Region University of Massachusetts Medical School 55 Lake Avenue North Worcester, MA 01655 (508) 856-3048 Julie.Goldman at umassmed.edu http://works.bepress.com/juliegoldman http://esciencelibrary.umassmed.edu -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From daureen.nesdill at utah.edu Fri Apr 15 12:27:56 2016 From: daureen.nesdill at utah.edu (Daureen Nesdill) Date: Fri, 15 Apr 2016 16:27:56 +0000 Subject: [Rdap] =?windows-1252?q?Upcoming_Webinar=3A_Complying_with_the_NS?= =?windows-1252?q?F=92s_New_Public_Access_Policy_and_Depositing_a_Manuscri?= =?windows-1252?q?pt_in_NSF-PAR?= In-Reply-To: <6806253756CE0C4CB2112B1B715DB09889BEA18C@ummscsmbx11.ad.umassmed.edu> References: <6806253756CE0C4CB2112B1B715DB09889BEA18C@ummscsmbx11.ad.umassmed.edu> Message-ID: <4BB8E3E08D34034DB9A7D4F285555FB13C97C4E1@X-MB4.xds.umail.utah.edu> I Just registered and am on the waiting list. Daureen From: Rdap [mailto:rdap-bounces at asis.org] On Behalf Of Goldman, Julie Sent: Friday, April 15, 2016 10:00 AM To: rdap at mail.asis.org Subject: [Rdap] Upcoming Webinar: Complying with the NSF?s New Public Access Policy and Depositing a Manuscript in NSF-PAR Reminder to register for this free webinar offering ? registration is almost full! The National Network of Library of Medicine, New England Region is hosting a webinar led by Brown University to discuss the new NSF Public Access Policy and how this will affect the sharing of the results of research, both publications and data, in the coming year. Title: Complying with the NSF?s New Public Access Policy and Depositing a Manuscript in NSF-PAR Date: 12PM-1:30PM Tuesday, April 19th, 2016 Description: In 2016 the National Science Foundation (NSF) rolled out its new online public access repository, NSF-PAR for investigators funded by the NSF to deposit their manuscripts to comply with its new Public Access Policy. The NSF?s policy and its new publications repository differ in several key ways from the National Institutes of Health?s (NIH) public access policy and PMC, particularly in terms of requirements for compliance and procedures for deposit. While NIH grants may make up the majority of biomedical institutions? research funds, the NSF is also an important source of biomedical funding, especially for career awards, research training grants, and translational research. In this webinar we will walk participants through the requirements for compliance and the process for deposit and share insights provided by the NSF Policy Office. Instructors: Hope Lappen is the Biomedical and Life Sciences Librarian at Brown University. Prior to coming to Brown, Hope served as the Science and Engineering Librarian at George Washington University and the Eugene Garfield Resident in Science Librarianship at University of Pennsylvania. Andrew Creamer is the Science Data Management Librarian at Brown University. He helps students and faculty researchers with NSF data management plans and digital curation projects. Prior to Brown, Andrew worked on research data management initiatives at the NN/LM NER. Registration: http://nnlm.gov/ntc/classes/class_details.html?class_id=1027 Julie Goldman, MLIS eScience Coordinator NN/LM New England Region University of Massachusetts Medical School 55 Lake Avenue North Worcester, MA 01655 (508) 856-3048 Julie.Goldman at umassmed.edu http://works.bepress.com/juliegoldman http://esciencelibrary.umassmed.edu -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From daureen.nesdill at utah.edu Fri Apr 15 12:27:56 2016 From: daureen.nesdill at utah.edu (Daureen Nesdill) Date: Fri, 15 Apr 2016 16:27:56 +0000 Subject: [Rdap] =?windows-1252?q?Upcoming_Webinar=3A_Complying_with_the_NS?= =?windows-1252?q?F=92s_New_Public_Access_Policy_and_Depositing_a_Manuscri?= =?windows-1252?q?pt_in_NSF-PAR?= In-Reply-To: <6806253756CE0C4CB2112B1B715DB09889BEA18C@ummscsmbx11.ad.umassmed.edu> References: <6806253756CE0C4CB2112B1B715DB09889BEA18C@ummscsmbx11.ad.umassmed.edu> Message-ID: <4BB8E3E08D34034DB9A7D4F285555FB13C97C4E1@X-MB4.xds.umail.utah.edu> I Just registered and am on the waiting list. Daureen From: Rdap [mailto:rdap-bounces at asis.org] On Behalf Of Goldman, Julie Sent: Friday, April 15, 2016 10:00 AM To: rdap at mail.asis.org Subject: [Rdap] Upcoming Webinar: Complying with the NSF?s New Public Access Policy and Depositing a Manuscript in NSF-PAR Reminder to register for this free webinar offering ? registration is almost full! The National Network of Library of Medicine, New England Region is hosting a webinar led by Brown University to discuss the new NSF Public Access Policy and how this will affect the sharing of the results of research, both publications and data, in the coming year. Title: Complying with the NSF?s New Public Access Policy and Depositing a Manuscript in NSF-PAR Date: 12PM-1:30PM Tuesday, April 19th, 2016 Description: In 2016 the National Science Foundation (NSF) rolled out its new online public access repository, NSF-PAR for investigators funded by the NSF to deposit their manuscripts to comply with its new Public Access Policy. The NSF?s policy and its new publications repository differ in several key ways from the National Institutes of Health?s (NIH) public access policy and PMC, particularly in terms of requirements for compliance and procedures for deposit. While NIH grants may make up the majority of biomedical institutions? research funds, the NSF is also an important source of biomedical funding, especially for career awards, research training grants, and translational research. In this webinar we will walk participants through the requirements for compliance and the process for deposit and share insights provided by the NSF Policy Office. Instructors: Hope Lappen is the Biomedical and Life Sciences Librarian at Brown University. Prior to coming to Brown, Hope served as the Science and Engineering Librarian at George Washington University and the Eugene Garfield Resident in Science Librarianship at University of Pennsylvania. Andrew Creamer is the Science Data Management Librarian at Brown University. He helps students and faculty researchers with NSF data management plans and digital curation projects. Prior to Brown, Andrew worked on research data management initiatives at the NN/LM NER. Registration: http://nnlm.gov/ntc/classes/class_details.html?class_id=1027 Julie Goldman, MLIS eScience Coordinator NN/LM New England Region University of Massachusetts Medical School 55 Lake Avenue North Worcester, MA 01655 (508) 856-3048 Julie.Goldman at umassmed.edu http://works.bepress.com/juliegoldman http://esciencelibrary.umassmed.edu -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From mizzy at email.unc.edu Fri Apr 15 13:46:27 2016 From: mizzy at email.unc.edu (Mizzy, Danianne) Date: Fri, 15 Apr 2016 17:46:27 +0000 Subject: [Rdap] Spaces have opened up for the STELLA(!) 2016 Unconference Message-ID: Spaces have opened up for the STELLA(!) 2016 Unconference and we encourage you to sign up! REGISTER HERE! When: May 20 & 21, 2016 Where: University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, NC The fourth biennial STELLA(!) (Science, Technology & Engineering Library Leaders in Action) Unconference is a participant-driven event for current and aspiring science, technology, engineering, and medical/health librarians. At an unconference everyone is a presenter and an organizer. Participants collaboratively decide on the breakout session topics, volunteer to moderate sessions, self-assemble panels of experts, serve as recorders and report back in wrap-up sessions. Highlights include the return of the popular poster session from STELLA(!) 2014 and a brand new session format, a digital mixer for pop-up workshops and technology and app demos. More information on the schedule and logistics is posted on our web site ! There is no fee to attend STELLA(!) but space is limited, so sign up now! If you have questions please get in touch with us at stellaunconference at gmail.com . Thank you, STELLA(!)16 Unconference Planning Committee -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From mar at pitt.edu Wed Apr 27 13:11:59 2016 From: mar at pitt.edu (Ratajeski, Melissa Anne) Date: Wed, 27 Apr 2016 17:11:59 +0000 Subject: [Rdap] Keynote suggestions Message-ID: Hello, I'm gathering keynote speaker ideas for the broad topic: "Enhancing Reproducibility through Rigor and Transparency". Anyone that you have seen speak on the topic that was amazing or anyone that you have been dying to hear? Thanks in advance for thoughts. Melissa Melissa Ratajeski, MLIS, AHIP, RLAT Coordinator of Data Management Services; IACUC Liaison Health Sciences Library System, University of Pittsburgh 200 Scaife Hall, 3550 Terrace Street, Pittsburgh, PA 15261 Phone: 412-648-1971 Fax: 412-648-8819 email: mar at pitt.edu -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From rinehart.64 at osu.edu Wed Apr 27 14:30:24 2016 From: rinehart.64 at osu.edu (Rinehart, Amanda K.) Date: Wed, 27 Apr 2016 18:30:24 +0000 Subject: [Rdap] Keynote suggestions In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: Brian Nosek and Marcia McNutt spoke on a transparency panel at AAAS 2016 (link to their abstract below). They both had interesting perspectives from the Center for Open Science and Science Magazine, respectively. https://aaas.confex.com/aaas/2016/webprogram/Session12060.html best of luck! Amanda [The Ohio State University] Amanda Rinehart [https://orcid.org/sites/default/files/images/orcid_16x16(1).gif] http://orcid.org/0000-0002-9987-0131 Data Management Services Librarian University Libraries 175 W. 18th Ave, Columbus, OH 43210 614-292-3336 Office rinehart.64 at osu.edu osu.edu From: Rdap [mailto:rdap-bounces at asis.org] On Behalf Of Ratajeski, Melissa Anne Sent: Wednesday, April 27, 2016 1:12 PM To: Research Data, Access and Preservation Subject: [Rdap] Keynote suggestions Hello, I'm gathering keynote speaker ideas for the broad topic: "Enhancing Reproducibility through Rigor and Transparency". Anyone that you have seen speak on the topic that was amazing or anyone that you have been dying to hear? Thanks in advance for thoughts. Melissa Melissa Ratajeski, MLIS, AHIP, RLAT Coordinator of Data Management Services; IACUC Liaison Health Sciences Library System, University of Pittsburgh 200 Scaife Hall, 3550 Terrace Street, Pittsburgh, PA 15261 Phone: 412-648-1971 Fax: 412-648-8819 email: mar at pitt.edu -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image001.png Type: image/png Size: 3605 bytes Desc: image001.png URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image002.gif Type: image/gif Size: 1221 bytes Desc: image002.gif URL: From rboehm at nd.edu Wed Apr 27 14:42:23 2016 From: rboehm at nd.edu (Reid Boehm) Date: Wed, 27 Apr 2016 14:42:23 -0400 Subject: [Rdap] Keynote suggestions In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: Hi Melissa, I really have enjoyed hearing Victoria Stodden speak: most recently at CNI: *Defining the Scholarly Record for Computational Research*, by Victoria Stodden of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, explores how to define and ensure the integrity of the scholarly record in an age of computationally enabled work, focusing especially on the reproducibility of research findings. *YouTube: https://youtu.be/X8M6ocvEOdE * I'll be interested to hear everyone's answers! Take care, *--Reid * *Reid I Boehm, PhD* CLIR Postdoctoral Fellow in Data Curation for the Sciences and Social Sciences Hesburgh Libraries ? Center for Digital Scholarship *University of Notre Dame*131 Hesburgh Library Notre Dame, IN 46556 o: 574-631-3461 e: rboehm at nd.edu OrCiD: 0000-0002-5474-0253 On Wed, Apr 27, 2016 at 2:30 PM, Rinehart, Amanda K. wrote: > Brian Nosek and Marcia McNutt spoke on a transparency panel at AAAS 2016 > (link to their abstract below). They both had interesting perspectives from > the Center for Open Science and Science Magazine, respectively. > > > > https://aaas.confex.com/aaas/2016/webprogram/Session12060.html > > > > best of luck! > > > > Amanda > > > > [image: The Ohio State University] > > *Amanda Rinehart* > > [image: https://orcid.org/sites/default/files/images/orcid_16x16(1).gif] > http://orcid.org/0000-0002-9987-0131 > Data Management Services Librarian > University Libraries > 175 W. 18th Ave, Columbus, OH 43210 > 614-292-3336 Office > rinehart.64 at osu.edu osu.edu > > > > > > > > *From:* Rdap [mailto:rdap-bounces at asis.org] *On Behalf Of *Ratajeski, > Melissa Anne > *Sent:* Wednesday, April 27, 2016 1:12 PM > *To:* Research Data, Access and Preservation > *Subject:* [Rdap] Keynote suggestions > > > > Hello, > > > > I?m gathering keynote speaker ideas for the broad topic: ?Enhancing > Reproducibility through Rigor and Transparency?. > > > > Anyone that you have seen speak on the topic that was amazing or anyone > that you have been dying to hear? > > > > Thanks in advance for thoughts. > > > > Melissa > > > > *Melissa Ratajeski, MLIS, AHIP, RLAT* > > Coordinator of Data Management Services; > > IACUC Liaison > > > > Health Sciences Library System, > > University of Pittsburgh > > 200 Scaife Hall, 3550 Terrace Street, Pittsburgh, PA 15261 > > Phone: 412-648-1971 > > Fax: 412-648-8819 > > email: mar at pitt.edu > > _______________________________________________ > Rdap mailing list > Rdap at mail.asis.org > http://mail.asis.org/mailman/listinfo/rdap > > -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image002.gif Type: image/gif Size: 1221 bytes Desc: not available URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image001.png Type: image/png Size: 3605 bytes Desc: not available URL: From mehenderson at vcu.edu Wed Apr 27 14:42:42 2016 From: mehenderson at vcu.edu (Margaret E Henderson) Date: Wed, 27 Apr 2016 14:42:42 -0400 Subject: [Rdap] Keynote suggestions In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: We had Lawrence Tabak, from NIH, come and speak on the same topic here in 2014 - you can view the talk here http://www.library.vcu.edu/about/events/sanger-series/sanger-series-tabak.html We also had Brian Nosek here, just a few months ago http://www.library.vcu.edu/about/events/sanger-series/sanger-series-nosek.html but the lecture recording isn't online yet. He was very good, and lots of discussion, some slightly hostile from those who don't want to let others play with their data. Margaret Margaret Henderson, MLIS, AHIP Associate Professor Director, Research Data Management VCU Libraries www.library.vcu.edu Room 146 Tompkins-McCaw Library for the Health Sciences Virginia Commonwealth University 509 North 12th Street Richmond, VA 23298 (804)628-2714 mehenderson at vcu.edu On Wed, Apr 27, 2016 at 2:30 PM, Rinehart, Amanda K. wrote: > Brian Nosek and Marcia McNutt spoke on a transparency panel at AAAS 2016 > (link to their abstract below). They both had interesting perspectives from > the Center for Open Science and Science Magazine, respectively. > > > > https://aaas.confex.com/aaas/2016/webprogram/Session12060.html > > > > best of luck! > > > > Amanda > > > > [image: The Ohio State University] > > *Amanda Rinehart* > > [image: https://orcid.org/sites/default/files/images/orcid_16x16(1).gif] > http://orcid.org/0000-0002-9987-0131 > Data Management Services Librarian > University Libraries > 175 W. 18th Ave, Columbus, OH 43210 > 614-292-3336 Office > rinehart.64 at osu.edu osu.edu > > > > > > > > *From:* Rdap [mailto:rdap-bounces at asis.org] *On Behalf Of *Ratajeski, > Melissa Anne > *Sent:* Wednesday, April 27, 2016 1:12 PM > *To:* Research Data, Access and Preservation > *Subject:* [Rdap] Keynote suggestions > > > > Hello, > > > > I?m gathering keynote speaker ideas for the broad topic: ?Enhancing > Reproducibility through Rigor and Transparency?. > > > > Anyone that you have seen speak on the topic that was amazing or anyone > that you have been dying to hear? > > > > Thanks in advance for thoughts. > > > > Melissa > > > > *Melissa Ratajeski, MLIS, AHIP, RLAT* > > Coordinator of Data Management Services; > > IACUC Liaison > > > > Health Sciences Library System, > > University of Pittsburgh > > 200 Scaife Hall, 3550 Terrace Street, Pittsburgh, PA 15261 > > Phone: 412-648-1971 > > Fax: 412-648-8819 > > email: mar at pitt.edu > > _______________________________________________ > Rdap mailing list > Rdap at mail.asis.org > http://mail.asis.org/mailman/listinfo/rdap > > -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image001.png Type: image/png Size: 3605 bytes Desc: not available URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image002.gif Type: image/gif Size: 1221 bytes Desc: not available URL: From plackie at carleton.edu Wed Apr 27 15:15:35 2016 From: plackie at carleton.edu (Paula Lackie) Date: Wed, 27 Apr 2016 14:15:35 -0500 Subject: [Rdap] Keynote suggestions In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: At EyeO 2012 I heard a rather shy (at the time) Amanda Cox give a compelling talk about the philosophy behind how the NYT was beginning to deliver interactive, data-rich, journalism. So much has happened since then & I think it would be a great idea to help bridge the cowboy-style open-data people with more professional data curation. The bottom line being using data for good, never for evil. Another down-to-earth speaker is Kim Rees . She can also bridge between data-viz and understanding. Without open data these data-hackers wouldn't be able to produce what they do. Good luck! (I wish I could go to RDAP.) On Wed, Apr 27, 2016 at 12:11 PM, Ratajeski, Melissa Anne wrote: > Hello, > > > > I?m gathering keynote speaker ideas for the broad topic: ?Enhancing > Reproducibility through Rigor and Transparency?. > > > > Anyone that you have seen speak on the topic that was amazing or anyone > that you have been dying to hear? > > > > Thanks in advance for thoughts. > > > > Melissa > > > > *Melissa Ratajeski, MLIS, AHIP, RLAT* > > Coordinator of Data Management Services; > > IACUC Liaison > > > > Health Sciences Library System, > > University of Pittsburgh > > 200 Scaife Hall, 3550 Terrace Street, Pittsburgh, PA 15261 > > Phone: 412-648-1971 > > Fax: 412-648-8819 > > email: mar at pitt.edu > > _______________________________________________ > Rdap mailing list > Rdap at mail.asis.org > http://mail.asis.org/mailman/listinfo/rdap > > -- Paula Lackie - Academic Technology, Curricular & Research Data Support - Carleton College - Northfield, MN USA Check my calendar or Sign-up for office hours or come to a Data Services drop-in ~ For curricular questions send mail to *at @carleton.edu * -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From hcoates at iupui.edu Fri Apr 22 13:44:37 2016 From: hcoates at iupui.edu (Coates, Heather) Date: Fri, 22 Apr 2016 17:44:37 +0000 Subject: [Rdap] Emerging Technologies Coordinator at the South Central Regional Medical Library Message-ID: <8dde7a56ffaa4587b196569441a22172@bl-cci-exch05.ads.iu.edu> Hi all, I'm posting this on behalf of Lisa Smith, the new Executive Director of the Regional Medical Library for the National Network of Libraries of Medicine South Central Region (NN/LM SCR). They are looking for an Emerging Technologies Coordinator (job description attached). Job duties include course development, classroom instruction and virtual instruction. This position will serve as the subject liaison to the region in the areas of technology, emerging technologies, e-Science, big data and program planning. If you are interested in emerging technologies in health sciences, instruction, and have some knowledge of research data services, this might be the position for you. The job includes ~30% travel to the five states served by the Regional Medical Library. The job description specifies 2 years experience, but they are willing to consider candidates with less experience. Also, Lisa is happy to answer questions about the position before you apply. Please direct inquiries to Lisa Smith at: Gibson D. Lewis Health Science Library University of North Texas Health Science Center 3500 Camp Bowie Blvd. Fort Worth, Texas 76107 lisa.smith at unthsc.edu 817-735-2601 Best, Heather Coates, MLS, MS Digital Scholarship and Data Management Librarian Liaison to the Richard M. Fairbanks School of Public Health University Library @ IUPUI Phone: (317) 278-7125 Email: hcoates at iupui.edu http://ulib.iupui.edu/digitalscholarship "Ever tried. Ever failed. No matter. Try again. Fail again. Fail better." --Samuel Beckett -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: Emerging Technology Coordinator_JOB_Description.rtf Type: application/rtf Size: 99431 bytes Desc: Emerging Technology Coordinator_JOB_Description.rtf URL: From stacykonkiel at fastmail.fm Wed Apr 27 14:41:14 2016 From: stacykonkiel at fastmail.fm (Stacy Konkiel) Date: Wed, 27 Apr 2016 12:41:14 -0600 Subject: [Rdap] Keynote suggestions In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: <1461782474.578101.591491553.09100FE8@webmail.messagingengine.com> Elizabeth Iorns of Science Exchange is always a pleasure to listen to, and she would be great to speak on the Reproducibility Initiative http://blogs.plos.org/everyone/2012/08/14/plos-one-launches-reproducibility-initiative/ -- Stacy Konkiel stacykonkiel at fastmail.fm On Wed, Apr 27, 2016, at 12:30 PM, Rinehart, Amanda K. wrote: > Brian Nosek and Marcia McNutt spoke on a transparency panel at AAAS > 2016 (link to their abstract below). They both had interesting > perspectives from the ?Center for Open Science and Science Magazine, > respectively. > > https://aaas.confex.com/aaas/2016/webprogram/Session12060.html > > best of luck! > > Amanda > > The Ohio State University > *Amanda Rinehart* > https://orcid.org/sites/default/files/images/orcid_16x16(1).gif > http://orcid.org/0000-0002-9987-0131 Data Management Services > Librarian University Libraries 175 W. 18th Ave, Columbus, OH 43210 614-292- > 3336 Office rinehart.64 at osu.edu osu.edu[1] > > > > *From:* Rdap [mailto:rdap-bounces at asis.org] *On Behalf Of *Ratajeski, > Melissa Anne *Sent:* Wednesday, April 27, 2016 1:12 PM *To:* Research > Data, Access and Preservation *Subject:* [Rdap] Keynote suggestions > > Hello, > > I?m gathering keynote speaker ideas for the broad topic: ??Enhancing > Reproducibility through Rigor and Transparency?. > > Anyone that you have seen speak on the topic that was amazing or > anyone that you have been dying to hear? > > Thanks in advance for thoughts. > > Melissa > > *Melissa Ratajeski, MLIS, AHIP, RLAT* > Coordinator of Data Management Services; > IACUC Liaison > > Health Sciences Library System, > University of Pittsburgh > 200 Scaife Hall, 3550 Terrace Street, Pittsburgh, PA 15261 > Phone: 412-648-1971 > Fax: 412-648-8819 > email: mar at pitt.edu** > _________________________________________________ > Rdap mailing list > Rdap at mail.asis.org > http://mail.asis.org/mailman/listinfo/rdap > Email had 2 attachments: > * image001.png? 5k (image/png) > * image002.gif? 2k (image/gif) Links: 1. http://osu.edu/ -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... 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