From KOSHOFAE at UCMAIL.UC.EDU Mon Feb 3 14:02:36 2020 From: KOSHOFAE at UCMAIL.UC.EDU (Koshoffer, Amy (koshofae)) Date: Mon, 3 Feb 2020 19:02:36 +0000 Subject: [Rdap] =?windows-1252?q?Joint_RDAP_UCGIS_webinar_-_RDAP_=93Ask_me?= =?windows-1252?q?_Anything=94_town_hall__jointly_sponsored_webinar_on_=93?= =?windows-1252?q?Data_Management_for_GIS_projects=22?= Message-ID: Dear RDAPpers, The next webinar in our RDAP ?Ask me Anything? town hall series is entitled ?Data Management for GIS projects?, and is jointly sponsored by RDAP and the University Consortium for Geographic Information Science (UCGIS). UCGIS will host this webinar. Webinar Description: With federal and other funding agencies wanting to ensure long term access to research output, data management planning for GIS projects has great importance. This webinar shares insight on lessons learned through GIS projects and highlights best practices for different steps in project exploration and creation. Also in this webinar a geology researcher using GIS techniques and collecting geospatial data will explain how she communicated her use of best practices through a data management plan for a successfully funded NSF grant. Attendees will understand the importance of well written data management plans, how to put those plans into action through implementing data management planning and reproducible research best practices, and how library engagement can help with data management planning. Presenters: Amy Koshoffer, University of Cincinnati; Jennifer Latessa, University of Cincinnati; and Paula Figueiredo, North Carolina State University Please register for Data Management for GIS Projects on Feb 26, 2020 2:00 PM EST at: https://attendee.gotowebinar.com/register/7664982934109934348 After registering, you will receive a confirmation email containing information about joining the webinar. About UC?GIS: The University Consortium for Geographic Information Science (UCGIS) is a non-profit organization that creates and supports communities of practice for GIScience research, education, and policy endeavors in higher education and with allied institutions. We are the professional hub for the academic GIS community in the United States, with partnerships extending this capacity abroad. Check to see if your institution is a member - https://www.ucgis.org/members Cheers, Amy Koshoffer (she/her) Assistant Director of Research & Data Services | UC Libraries [orcid small]ORCID 0000-0001-8130-103X amy.koshoffer at uc.edu (preferred) | (513) 556-1310 Research & Data Services (Data, GIS, Informatics) -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image001.gif Type: image/gif Size: 169 bytes Desc: image001.gif URL: From joshualdull at gmail.com Thu Feb 6 14:27:51 2020 From: joshualdull at gmail.com (Joshua Dull) Date: Thu, 6 Feb 2020 14:27:51 -0500 Subject: [Rdap] WORKSHOP: Curating for Reproducibility (April 2-3, 2020 at Haverford College) Message-ID: Hello RDAP, I'm sharing an amazing new workshop on data curation for reproducible research. ***Apologies for cross-posting*** We are pleased to announce a workshop on curating for reproducibility at Haverford College on April 2-3, 2020. Research reproducibility is a topic of increasing concern for researchers, funders, publishers, and the public. Reproducibility was recently defined by the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine , as ?obtaining consistent results using the same input data; computational steps, methods, and code; and conditions of analysis.? Project TIER and the CURE consortium have teamed up to offer a workshop on curating for reproducibility. The workshop will explore a model of curation in which the object to be archived is a research compendium that includes not only the paper, but the data, analysis code, and comprehensive documentation that ensure transparency and reproducibility. *Who should attend?* The day-and-a-half CURE-TIER workshop is designed for librarians, archivists, and information professionals who are interested in integrating principles of transparency and reproducibility into data curation activities. *Application deadline is February 21, 2020.* Space is limited! Successful applicants will incur no cost for registration, lodging, or meals. Some financial support for travel is available upon request. For more information and to apply please visit: https://www.projecttier.org/fellowships-and-workshops/cure-tier-workshop/#about-the-cure-tier-workshop . For any questions, please contact info at projecttier.org . The Project TIER and CURE teams -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From KOSHOFAE at UCMAIL.UC.EDU Mon Feb 10 19:09:12 2020 From: KOSHOFAE at UCMAIL.UC.EDU (Koshoffer, Amy (koshofae)) Date: Tue, 11 Feb 2020 00:09:12 +0000 Subject: [Rdap] Innovative STEM library/non-library spaces Message-ID: Dear RDAPpers I am on a committee run by the Director of Science and Engineering libraries at UC to explore how to create an innovative space that will be shared by the library and other academic departments. He asked me to reach out to other librarians. Below is his request for information. If you have something to share please email me at koshofae at ucmail.uc.edu. If you are interested in the results, please let me know. Ted is willing to share. Thank you for any information you have to share. I'm gathering examples of innovative spaces for a future project involving my STEM libraries. Hope you all can help. Our project will integrate some library/research data services functions in a to-be-renovated academic building. We know of many of the higher-profile library spaces. I thought there may be lesser-known cool spaces (in & out of libraries) to have on our radar. Very interested to hear of library and non-library spaces (across any discipline) that you think are interesting. Spaces for research, teaching, study, collaboration/community building, collections/exhibits, emerging technologies or other functions. Also, spaces that integrate unexpected library and non-library functions - and how well they may be working together. I'm casting the net very wide on purpose. We will pull ideas from a lot of sources of inspiration. I can compile for the list if there's interest. Thanks for your insights! Ted Cheers, Amy Koshoffer (she/her) Assistant Director of Research & Data Services | UC Libraries [orcid small]ORCID 0000-0001-8130-103X Join us on April 24th for the 5th UC Data Day amy.koshoffer at uc.edu (preferred) | (513) 556-1310 Research & Data Services (Data, GIS, Informatics) -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image001.gif Type: image/gif Size: 169 bytes Desc: image001.gif URL: From mno at iastate.edu Tue Feb 11 10:19:09 2020 From: mno at iastate.edu (O'Donnell, Megan N [LIB]) Date: Tue, 11 Feb 2020 15:19:09 +0000 Subject: [Rdap] Innovative STEM library/non-library spaces In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: Hey RDAP community, We?re also trying to design a space like this and there are VERY few pictures on library websites showing digital labs/collab spaces. I imagine that patrons would also like to see images ? Megan From: rdap-bounces at kunverj.com On Behalf Of Koshoffer, Amy (koshofae) Sent: Monday, February 10, 2020 6:09 PM To: Research Data Access and Preservation Subject: [Rdap] Innovative STEM library/non-library spaces Dear RDAPpers I am on a committee run by the Director of Science and Engineering libraries at UC to explore how to create an innovative space that will be shared by the library and other academic departments. He asked me to reach out to other librarians. Below is his request for information. If you have something to share please email me at koshofae at ucmail.uc.edu. If you are interested in the results, please let me know. Ted is willing to share. Thank you for any information you have to share. I?m gathering examples of innovative spaces for a future project involving my STEM libraries. Hope you all can help. Our project will integrate some library/research data services functions in a to-be-renovated academic building. We know of many of the higher-profile library spaces. I thought there may be lesser-known cool spaces (in & out of libraries) to have on our radar. Very interested to hear of library and non-library spaces (across any discipline) that you think are interesting. Spaces for research, teaching, study, collaboration/community building, collections/exhibits, emerging technologies or other functions. Also, spaces that integrate unexpected library and non-library functions ? and how well they may be working together. I?m casting the net very wide on purpose. We will pull ideas from a lot of sources of inspiration. I can compile for the list if there?s interest. Thanks for your insights! Ted Cheers, Amy Koshoffer (she/her) Assistant Director of Research & Data Services | UC Libraries [orcid small]ORCID 0000-0001-8130-103X Join us on April 24th for the 5th UC Data Day amy.koshoffer at uc.edu (preferred) | (513) 556-1310 Research & Data Services (Data, GIS, Informatics) -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image001.gif Type: image/gif Size: 169 bytes Desc: image001.gif URL: From KOSHOFAE at UCMAIL.UC.EDU Tue Feb 11 10:47:08 2020 From: KOSHOFAE at UCMAIL.UC.EDU (Koshoffer, Amy (koshofae)) Date: Tue, 11 Feb 2020 15:47:08 +0000 Subject: [Rdap] Innovative STEM library/non-library spaces In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: Thank you for this suggestion! From: rdap-bounces at kunverj.com On Behalf Of O'Donnell, Megan N [LIB] Sent: Tuesday, February 11, 2020 10:19 AM To: Research Data Access and Preservation Subject: Re: [Rdap] Innovative STEM library/non-library spaces Hey RDAP community, We?re also trying to design a space like this and there are VERY few pictures on library websites showing digital labs/collab spaces. I imagine that patrons would also like to see images ? Megan From: rdap-bounces at kunverj.com > On Behalf Of Koshoffer, Amy (koshofae) Sent: Monday, February 10, 2020 6:09 PM To: Research Data Access and Preservation > Subject: [Rdap] Innovative STEM library/non-library spaces Dear RDAPpers I am on a committee run by the Director of Science and Engineering libraries at UC to explore how to create an innovative space that will be shared by the library and other academic departments. He asked me to reach out to other librarians. Below is his request for information. If you have something to share please email me at koshofae at ucmail.uc.edu. If you are interested in the results, please let me know. Ted is willing to share. Thank you for any information you have to share. I?m gathering examples of innovative spaces for a future project involving my STEM libraries. Hope you all can help. Our project will integrate some library/research data services functions in a to-be-renovated academic building. We know of many of the higher-profile library spaces. I thought there may be lesser-known cool spaces (in & out of libraries) to have on our radar. Very interested to hear of library and non-library spaces (across any discipline) that you think are interesting. Spaces for research, teaching, study, collaboration/community building, collections/exhibits, emerging technologies or other functions. Also, spaces that integrate unexpected library and non-library functions ? and how well they may be working together. I?m casting the net very wide on purpose. We will pull ideas from a lot of sources of inspiration. I can compile for the list if there?s interest. Thanks for your insights! Ted Cheers, Amy Koshoffer (she/her) Assistant Director of Research & Data Services | UC Libraries [orcid small]ORCID 0000-0001-8130-103X Join us on April 24th for the 5th UC Data Day amy.koshoffer at uc.edu (preferred) | (513) 556-1310 Research & Data Services (Data, GIS, Informatics) -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image001.gif Type: image/gif Size: 169 bytes Desc: image001.gif URL: From ssherid3 at uwyo.edu Tue Feb 11 11:27:36 2020 From: ssherid3 at uwyo.edu (Shannon Alexandra Sheridan) Date: Tue, 11 Feb 2020 16:27:36 +0000 Subject: [Rdap] Innovative STEM library/non-library spaces In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: Agreed?seeing a final list would be an awesome resource. We?re creating a similar space for digital scholarship in our library, and are on the lookout for how others are creating that space. Shannon Sheridan Data Management Librarian University of Wyoming Libraries (307) 766-6867 ssherid3 at uwyo.edu From: rdap-bounces at kunverj.com On Behalf Of Koshoffer, Amy (koshofae) Sent: Tuesday, February 11, 2020 8:47 AM To: Research Data Access and Preservation Subject: Re: [Rdap] Innovative STEM library/non-library spaces ? This message was sent from a non-UWYO address. Please exercise caution when clicking links or opening attachments from external sources. Thank you for this suggestion! From: rdap-bounces at kunverj.com > On Behalf Of O'Donnell, Megan N [LIB] Sent: Tuesday, February 11, 2020 10:19 AM To: Research Data Access and Preservation > Subject: Re: [Rdap] Innovative STEM library/non-library spaces Hey RDAP community, We?re also trying to design a space like this and there are VERY few pictures on library websites showing digital labs/collab spaces. I imagine that patrons would also like to see images ? Megan From: rdap-bounces at kunverj.com > On Behalf Of Koshoffer, Amy (koshofae) Sent: Monday, February 10, 2020 6:09 PM To: Research Data Access and Preservation > Subject: [Rdap] Innovative STEM library/non-library spaces Dear RDAPpers I am on a committee run by the Director of Science and Engineering libraries at UC to explore how to create an innovative space that will be shared by the library and other academic departments. He asked me to reach out to other librarians. Below is his request for information. If you have something to share please email me at koshofae at ucmail.uc.edu. If you are interested in the results, please let me know. Ted is willing to share. Thank you for any information you have to share. I?m gathering examples of innovative spaces for a future project involving my STEM libraries. Hope you all can help. Our project will integrate some library/research data services functions in a to-be-renovated academic building. We know of many of the higher-profile library spaces. I thought there may be lesser-known cool spaces (in & out of libraries) to have on our radar. Very interested to hear of library and non-library spaces (across any discipline) that you think are interesting. Spaces for research, teaching, study, collaboration/community building, collections/exhibits, emerging technologies or other functions. Also, spaces that integrate unexpected library and non-library functions ? and how well they may be working together. I?m casting the net very wide on purpose. We will pull ideas from a lot of sources of inspiration. I can compile for the list if there?s interest. Thanks for your insights! Ted Cheers, Amy Koshoffer (she/her) Assistant Director of Research & Data Services | UC Libraries [orcid small]ORCID 0000-0001-8130-103X Join us on April 24th for the 5th UC Data Day amy.koshoffer at uc.edu (preferred) | (513) 556-1310 Research & Data Services (Data, GIS, Informatics) -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image001.gif Type: image/gif Size: 169 bytes Desc: image001.gif URL: From mayernik at ucar.edu Tue Feb 11 11:51:51 2020 From: mayernik at ucar.edu (Matthew Mayernik) Date: Tue, 11 Feb 2020 09:51:51 -0700 Subject: [Rdap] Innovative STEM library/non-library spaces In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: I'd also be interested. We have similar ambitions to re-work our physical library spaces in the hopefully near future. Best, Matt Matthew Mayernik NCAR Library National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR) University Corporation for Atmospheric Research (UCAR) Boulder, CO mayernik at ucar.edu On Tue, Feb 11, 2020 at 9:46 AM Shannon Alexandra Sheridan < ssherid3 at uwyo.edu> wrote: > Agreed?seeing a final list would be an awesome resource. We?re creating a > similar space for digital scholarship in our library, and are on the > lookout for how others are creating that space. > > > > *Shannon Sheridan * > > Data Management Librarian > > University of Wyoming Libraries > > (307) 766-6867 > > ssherid3 at uwyo.edu > > > > *From:* rdap-bounces at kunverj.com *On Behalf Of > *Koshoffer, Amy (koshofae) > *Sent:* Tuesday, February 11, 2020 8:47 AM > *To:* Research Data Access and Preservation > *Subject:* Re: [Rdap] Innovative STEM library/non-library spaces > > > > ? This message was sent from a non-UWYO address. Please exercise caution > when clicking links or opening attachments from external sources. > > > > Thank you for this suggestion! > > > > *From:* rdap-bounces at kunverj.com *On Behalf Of > *O'Donnell, Megan N [LIB] > *Sent:* Tuesday, February 11, 2020 10:19 AM > *To:* Research Data Access and Preservation > *Subject:* Re: [Rdap] Innovative STEM library/non-library spaces > > > > Hey RDAP community, > > We?re also trying to design a space like this and there are VERY few > pictures on library websites showing digital labs/collab spaces. > > I imagine that patrons would also like to see images ? > > > > Megan > > > > > > > > *From:* rdap-bounces at kunverj.com *On Behalf Of > *Koshoffer, Amy (koshofae) > *Sent:* Monday, February 10, 2020 6:09 PM > *To:* Research Data Access and Preservation > *Subject:* [Rdap] Innovative STEM library/non-library spaces > > > > Dear RDAPpers > > > > I am on a committee run by the Director of Science and Engineering > libraries at UC to explore how to create an innovative space that will be > shared by the library and other academic departments. He asked me to reach > out to other librarians. Below is his request for information. If you > have something to share please email me at koshofae at ucmail.uc.edu. If > you are interested in the results, please let me know. Ted is willing to > share. Thank you for any information you have to share. > > > > *I?m gathering examples of innovative spaces for a future project > involving my STEM libraries. Hope you all can help. Our project will > integrate some library/research data services functions in a > to-be-renovated academic building. We know of many of the higher-profile > library spaces. I thought there may be lesser-known cool spaces (in & out > of libraries) to have on our radar.* > > > > *Very interested to hear of library and non-library spaces (across any > discipline) that you think are interesting. Spaces for research, teaching, > study, collaboration/community building, collections/exhibits, emerging > technologies or other functions. Also, spaces that integrate unexpected > library and non-library functions ? and how well they may be working > together.* > > > > *I?m casting the net very wide on purpose. We will pull ideas from a lot > of sources of inspiration.* > > > > *I can compile for the list if there?s interest. Thanks for your > insights!* > > > > *Ted* > > > > Cheers, > > *Amy Koshoffer (she/her)* > > Assistant Director of Research & Data Services | UC Libraries > > [image: orcid small]ORCID 0000-0001-8130-103X > > > > > Join us on April 24th for the 5th UC Data Day > > > > > amy.koshoffer at uc.edu (preferred) | (513) 556-1310 > > *Research & Data Services > > (Data, GIS, Informatics)* > > > _______________________________________________ > RDAP mailing list > RDAP at mail.kunverj.com > http://mail.kunverj.com/mailman/listinfo/rdap > -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image001.gif Type: image/gif Size: 169 bytes Desc: not available URL: From eugene.barsky at ubc.ca Tue Feb 11 11:58:00 2020 From: eugene.barsky at ubc.ca (Eugene Barsky) Date: Tue, 11 Feb 2020 08:58:00 -0800 Subject: [Rdap] Innovative STEM library/non-library spaces In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: Amy and All: We have one of these spaces in UBC (with pictures :) and as a Head, I would be happy to answer questions - https://researchcommons.library.ubc.ca/ Eugene On Tue, 11 Feb 2020 at 07:19, O'Donnell, Megan N [LIB] wrote: > Hey RDAP community, > > We?re also trying to design a space like this and there are VERY few > pictures on library websites showing digital labs/collab spaces. > > I imagine that patrons would also like to see images ? > > > > Megan > > > > > > > > *From:* rdap-bounces at kunverj.com *On Behalf Of > *Koshoffer, Amy (koshofae) > *Sent:* Monday, February 10, 2020 6:09 PM > *To:* Research Data Access and Preservation > *Subject:* [Rdap] Innovative STEM library/non-library spaces > > > > Dear RDAPpers > > > > I am on a committee run by the Director of Science and Engineering > libraries at UC to explore how to create an innovative space that will be > shared by the library and other academic departments. He asked me to reach > out to other librarians. Below is his request for information. If you > have something to share please email me at koshofae at ucmail.uc.edu. If > you are interested in the results, please let me know. Ted is willing to > share. Thank you for any information you have to share. > > > > *I?m gathering examples of innovative spaces for a future project > involving my STEM libraries. Hope you all can help. Our project will > integrate some library/research data services functions in a > to-be-renovated academic building. We know of many of the higher-profile > library spaces. I thought there may be lesser-known cool spaces (in & out > of libraries) to have on our radar.* > > > > *Very interested to hear of library and non-library spaces (across any > discipline) that you think are interesting. Spaces for research, teaching, > study, collaboration/community building, collections/exhibits, emerging > technologies or other functions. Also, spaces that integrate unexpected > library and non-library functions ? and how well they may be working > together.* > > > > *I?m casting the net very wide on purpose. We will pull ideas from a lot > of sources of inspiration.* > > > > *I can compile for the list if there?s interest. Thanks for your > insights!* > > > > *Ted* > > > > Cheers, > > *Amy Koshoffer (she/her)* > > Assistant Director of Research & Data Services | UC Libraries > > [image: orcid small]ORCID 0000-0001-8130-103X > > > > > Join us on April 24th for the 5th UC Data Day > > > > > amy.koshoffer at uc.edu (preferred) | (513) 556-1310 > > *Research & Data Services > > (Data, GIS, Informatics)* > > > _______________________________________________ > RDAP mailing list > RDAP at mail.kunverj.com > http://mail.kunverj.com/mailman/listinfo/rdap > -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image001.gif Type: image/gif Size: 169 bytes Desc: not available URL: From katherine.koziar at ucr.edu Tue Feb 11 12:31:45 2020 From: katherine.koziar at ucr.edu (Katherine Koziar) Date: Tue, 11 Feb 2020 17:31:45 +0000 Subject: [Rdap] CFP for the Library Science Symposium at AAAS-PD Message-ID: AAAS, Pacific Division Annual Conference Ashland, OR, June 16-20, 2020 Call For Papers: Library Science Symposium General and Interdisciplinary Section (Conference info: https://aaaspd.sou.edu//MeetingAnnouncement-2020.pdf) Final deadline for submission: April 1, 2020. Submissions will be accepted on a rolling basis, so early submission is highly encouraged! The American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS), Pacific Division is hosting a Library Science Symposium under their General and Interdisciplinary Section. For this symposium, we are interested in any and all topics related to the theory and practice of librarianship in academia, including: * Libraries in the learning environment * Library advocacy and community building * Library leadership and management * Evolving roles of libraries and librarians * Instruction and reference services * Collection development, cataloging, and access * Digitization projects, 3D printing, and institutional repositories * Innovative technologies or techniques applied to academic libraries We will consider proposals for individual presentations, panels organized around a theme, and poster sessions. Oral presentations are typically scheduled for 30 minutes, with 25 minutes for speaking and 5 minutes for questions. However, exceptions can be made. Please contact the symposium coordinators for special arrangements. Student papers, panels, or poster sessions are welcomed and highly encouraged. Format your submission as follows: In a Word or .rtf file, please include this information: Line 1: Presenting author's name, affiliation, address, and long-term e-mail address Line 2: Co-authors' (if any) names, affiliation(s), address(es), and long-term e-mail address(es) Line 3: Submitter's name and e-mail address (if different from above) Line 4: Name of the Pacific Division the symposium to which you are submitting your abstract for review. Line 5: Type of presentation (ORAL or POSTER) Line 6: Is the presenter a student? (STUDENT or NOT A STUDENT). If a student, indicate level (PRE-COLLEGE, UNDERGRADUATE, or GRADUATE) Line 7: Any special equipment needs in addition to standard computer, projector, and PowerPoint? If so, explain on this line. If none, write "NONE" on this line. Line 8: Paper Title Italicized and in Title Case, AUTHOR'S NAME(S) IN ALL CAPS AND BOLD (Full address(es), including institution, mailing address, city, state and zip code, and e-mail address(es)). Line 9: Text of abstract. Limit: 300 words. Include a list of 5 key words at the end of your abstract. Email your submission to: clgoldman at ucsd.edu For more information on the call for abstracts for papers/presentations or poster sessions, please visit: https://aaaspd.sou.edu//MeetingAnnouncement-2020.pdf If you have any questions, please contact one of the symposium coordinators. Please feel free to forward, cross-post, or link to this call for submissions. We look forward to your proposals! Crystal L. Goldman Geisel Library University of California, San Diego 9500 Gilman Dr. La Jolla, CA 92093-0175 clgoldman at ucsd.edu Jim Rible Hannon Library Southern Oregon University 1250 Siskiyou Blvd. Ashland, OR 97520 rible at sou.edu Katherine E. Koziar Orbach Science Library University of California, Riverside 900 University Ave. Riverside, CA 92521 katherine.koziar at ucr.edu Chrissy Hursh Meriam Library California State University, Chico 400 W. First Street Chico, CA 95929-0295 cmhursh at csuchico.edu Katherine E. Koziar Data Librarian UCR | LIBRARY P.O. Box 5900 Orbach Science Library, Room 126 Riverside, CA 92517-5900 Phone 951.827.3529 katherine.koziar at ucr.edu | library.ucr.edu University of California, Riverside -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From KOSHOFAE at UCMAIL.UC.EDU Wed Feb 12 11:55:04 2020 From: KOSHOFAE at UCMAIL.UC.EDU (Koshoffer, Amy (koshofae)) Date: Wed, 12 Feb 2020 16:55:04 +0000 Subject: [Rdap] =?windows-1252?q?Reminder_-__Joint_RDAP_UCGIS_webinar_-_RD?= =?windows-1252?q?AP_=93Ask_me_Anything=94_town_hall__jointly_sponsored_we?= =?windows-1252?q?binar_on_=93Data_Management_for_GIS_projects=22?= Message-ID: Dear RDAPpers, The next webinar in our RDAP ?Ask me Anything? town hall series is entitled ?Data Management for GIS projects?, and is jointly sponsored by RDAP and the University Consortium for Geographic Information Science (UCGIS). UCGIS will host this webinar. Webinar Description: With federal and other funding agencies wanting to ensure long term access to research output, data management planning for GIS projects has great importance. This webinar shares insight on lessons learned through GIS projects and highlights best practices for different steps in project exploration and creation. Also in this webinar a geology researcher using GIS techniques and collecting geospatial data will explain how she communicated her use of best practices through a data management plan for a successfully funded NSF grant. Attendees will understand the importance of well written data management plans, how to put those plans into action through implementing data management planning and reproducible research best practices, and how library engagement can help with data management planning. Presenters: Amy Koshoffer, University of Cincinnati; Jennifer Latessa, University of Cincinnati; and Paula Figueiredo, North Carolina State University Please register for Data Management for GIS Projects on Feb 26, 2020 2:00 PM EST at: https://attendee.gotowebinar.com/register/7664982934109934348 After registering, you will receive a confirmation email containing information about joining the webinar. About UC?GIS: The University Consortium for Geographic Information Science (UCGIS) is a non-profit organization that creates and supports communities of practice for GIScience research, education, and policy endeavors in higher education and with allied institutions. We are the professional hub for the academic GIS community in the United States, with partnerships extending this capacity abroad. Check to see if your institution is a member - https://www.ucgis.org/members Cheers, Amy Koshoffer (she/her) Assistant Director of Research & Data Services | UC Libraries [orcid small]ORCID 0000-0001-8130-103X amy.koshoffer at uc.edu (preferred) | (513) 556-1310 Research & Data Services (Data, GIS, Informatics) -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image001.gif Type: image/gif Size: 169 bytes Desc: image001.gif URL: From daureen.nesdill at utah.edu Thu Feb 13 12:20:27 2020 From: daureen.nesdill at utah.edu (Daureen Nesdill) Date: Thu, 13 Feb 2020 17:20:27 +0000 Subject: [Rdap] FW: Submit your NMR spectral data in The Journal of Organic Chemistry and Organic Letters In-Reply-To: <17cec28430cb4382b6a04d709a8e506e@1913652004> References: <17cec28430cb4382b6a04d709a8e506e@1913652004> Message-ID: <5f1ec954ce884c93b837a1cc76905d01@utah.edu> Hi all, The way I read this- the tool will zip the NMRs, etc into a zipped file and the researcher will submit it to ACS so it will be available along with the published article. If I?m reading this correctly this is NOT what we want and is not be what the funding agencies (and the worldwide research) are requiring. Data behind a paywall is not shared or FAIR data. I haven?t done an exhaustive search, but I?m assuming by now there are subject-specific open repositories for NMR, etc chemical data where the data are being curated and researchers can actually reuse the data. There may even be a science gateway (sciencegateways.org) for organic chemists. When it comes to data, ACS is out of step with the rest of the world. Daureen Daureen Nesdill, MS, MLIS Research Data Management Librarian The Faculty Center @ the Marriott Library University of Utah 801-585-5975 Daureen.nesdill at utah.edu https://orcid.org/0000-0003-0126-5038 From: ACS Publications [mailto:updates at acspubs.org] Sent: Thursday, February 13, 2020 9:36 AM To: Daureen Nesdill Subject: Submit your NMR spectral data in The Journal of Organic Chemistry and Organic Letters For researchers in organic chemistry, ACS has developed a new tool for the sharing of primary research data, the ACS Research Data Center. If you have trouble viewing this email, read the online version. [http://images.acspubs.org/EloquaImages/clients/AmericanChemicalSociety/%7B1a43364b-f3a6-4c66-beb4-47227ce8fa8d%7D_ACS-ResearchDataCenter-756x200.jpg] Introducing the ACS Research Data Center For researchers in organic chemistry, ACS has developed a new tool for the sharing of primary research data. The ACS Research Data Center is a data packaging tool to assist authors in zipping their FID files, acquisition data, and processing parameters along with other appropriate FAIR metadata such as a SMILES or InChI for submission. This tool is free for any researcher to use and includes instructions for authors on how to upload their data. In addition, author guidelines at The Journal of Organic Chemistry and Organic Letters offer details on how to zip and submit your data (see Primary NMR Data Files under the Supporting Information heading). All zipped files of data should be uploaded as ?Supporting Information for Publication?. Along with the zipped files of NMR data, original Elemental Analysis, HRMS or IR reports are also encouraged and can be included as ?Supporting Information for Publication?. Including data alongside a publication has many benefits for authors, editors, reviewers, and readers. For authors, it will help in compliance with data-management plans and any funder requirements that data be made publicly available. The data will be citable and can be included in grant applications or updates to funders. Readily available data can provide a needed service to the community, much like reviewing, and will improve archiving for the long-term benefit of the scientific community. As an incentive, participating ACS publications identified with FAIR data will include a note in the PDF and HTML that FAIR data is available. For editors and reviewers, it?s valuable to have consistent quality of NMR and other data during the review process. While incidents of unethical behavior are rare, uploading original data can increase safeguarding against fraudulent or manipulated data. Providing data alongside a submission reduces requests from the editorial office for original FID data, for example, when the images uploaded in the SI are of inadequate resolution or appear to be manipulated. For readers, access to primary data files allows for easy and direct comparison to published results. This is helpful when reproducing published work, specifically, to have the ability to evaluate compound purity, as well as zoom, integrate, and interact with the spectra. Please submit your NMR spectral data along with your next manuscript submission to The Journal of Organic Chemistry or Organic Letters and learn more about the ACS Research Data Center by reading the recent editorial in JOC and OL or viewing the FAQs. Visit the ACS Research Data Center Copyright ? 2020 American Chemical Society 1155 Sixteenth Street NW | Washington, DC 20036 This email was sent to daureen.nesdill at utah.edu because it relates to topics in which you expressed an interest or ACS Publications services you have used. Unfollow "ACS Authoring Services" updates. Customize your preferences or stop all emails from ACS Publications. Worth remembering: Any actions taken only relate to the email address stated above. If you forward this email you may be sharing your personal information with others. Changes will not impact account, service or bill-related communications. ACS Privacy Policy [https://s1913652004.t.en25.com/e/FooterImages/FooterImage1?elq=17cec28430cb4382b6a04d709a8e506e&siteid=1913652004] -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From shlake at virginia.edu Thu Feb 13 12:57:20 2020 From: shlake at virginia.edu (Lake, Sherry Heitchew (sah)) Date: Thu, 13 Feb 2020 17:57:20 +0000 Subject: [Rdap] FW: Submit your NMR spectral data in The Journal of Organic Chemistry and Organic Letters In-Reply-To: <5f1ec954ce884c93b837a1cc76905d01@utah.edu> References: <17cec28430cb4382b6a04d709a8e506e@1913652004> <5f1ec954ce884c93b837a1cc76905d01@utah.edu> Message-ID: <64218982-C626-4FE5-9383-4D7F8115882D@virginia.edu> Hi Daureen, FAIR data can be ?closed?. Data doesn?t have to be open to be FAIR. "As open as possible, as closed as necessary" - Coined by the European Commission Horizon 2020: http://ec.europa.eu/research/participants/data/ref/h2020/grants_manual/hi/oa_pilot/h2020-hi-oa-data-mgt_en.pdf Key is that the information on how to access the data needs to be available. I am not giving ACS any excuses. I am sure the FAIR principles expect all data to be open with ?reasonable? excuses for it not. Yes, not sure ACS behind paywall is ?necessary?. Maybe the links to supplemental data will be open? -- Sherry On 2/13/20, 12:32 PM, "rdap-bounces at kunverj.com on behalf of Daureen Nesdill" on behalf of daureen.nesdill at utah.edu> wrote: Hi all, The way I read this- the tool will zip the NMRs, etc into a zipped file and the researcher will submit it to ACS so it will be available along with the published article. If I?m reading this correctly this is NOT what we want and is not be what the funding agencies (and the worldwide research) are requiring. Data behind a paywall is not shared or FAIR data. I haven?t done an exhaustive search, but I?m assuming by now there are subject-specific open repositories for NMR, etc chemical data where the data are being curated and researchers can actually reuse the data. There may even be a science gateway (sciencegateways.org) for organic chemists. When it comes to data, ACS is out of step with the rest of the world. Daureen Daureen Nesdill, MS, MLIS Research Data Management Librarian The Faculty Center @ the Marriott Library University of Utah 801-585-5975 Daureen.nesdill at utah.edu https://orcid.org/0000-0003-0126-5038 From: ACS Publications [mailto:updates at acspubs.org] Sent: Thursday, February 13, 2020 9:36 AM To: Daureen Nesdill Subject: Submit your NMR spectral data in The Journal of Organic Chemistry and Organic Letters For researchers in organic chemistry, ACS has developed a new tool for the sharing of primary research data, the ACS Research Data Center. If you have trouble viewing this email, read the online version. [Image removed by sender.] Introducing the ACS Research Data Center For researchers in organic chemistry, ACS has developed a new tool for the sharing of primary research data. The ACS Research Data Center is a data packaging tool to assist authors in zipping their FID files, acquisition data, and processing parameters along with other appropriate FAIR metadata such as a SMILES or InChI for submission. This tool is free for any researcher to use and includes instructions for authors on how to upload their data. In addition, author guidelines at The Journal of Organic Chemistry and Organic Letters offer details on how to zip and submit your data (see Primary NMR Data Files under the Supporting Information heading). All zipped files of data should be uploaded as ?Supporting Information for Publication?. Along with the zipped files of NMR data, original Elemental Analysis, HRMS or IR reports are also encouraged and can be included as ?Supporting Information for Publication?. Including data alongside a publication has many benefits for authors, editors, reviewers, and readers. For authors, it will help in compliance with data-management plans and any funder requirements that data be made publicly available. The data will be citable and can be included in grant applications or updates to funders. Readily available data can provide a needed service to the community, much like reviewing, and will improve archiving for the long-term benefit of the scientific community. As an incentive, participating ACS publications identified with FAIR data will include a note in the PDF and HTML that FAIR data is available. For editors and reviewers, it?s valuable to have consistent quality of NMR and other data during the review process. While incidents of unethical behavior are rare, uploading original data can increase safeguarding against fraudulent or manipulated data. Providing data alongside a submission reduces requests from the editorial office for original FID data, for example, when the images uploaded in the SI are of inadequate resolution or appear to be manipulated. For readers, access to primary data files allows for easy and direct comparison to published results. This is helpful when reproducing published work, specifically, to have the ability to evaluate compound purity, as well as zoom, integrate, and interact with the spectra. Please submit your NMR spectral data along with your next manuscript submission to The Journal of Organic Chemistry or Organic Letters and learn more about the ACS Research Data Center by reading the recent editorial in JOC and OL or viewing the FAQs. Visit the ACS Research Data Center Copyright ? 2020 American Chemical Society 1155 Sixteenth Street NW | Washington, DC 20036 This email was sent to daureen.nesdill at utah.edu because it relates to topics in which you expressed an interest or ACS Publications services you have used. Unfollow "ACS Authoring Services" updates. Customize your preferences or stop all emails from ACS Publications. Worth remembering: Any actions taken only relate to the email address stated above. If you forward this email you may be sharing your personal information with others. Changes will not impact account, service or bill-related communications. ACS Privacy Policy [Image removed by sender.] -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From shlake at virginia.edu Thu Feb 13 12:57:20 2020 From: shlake at virginia.edu (Lake, Sherry Heitchew (sah)) Date: Thu, 13 Feb 2020 17:57:20 +0000 Subject: [Rdap] FW: Submit your NMR spectral data in The Journal of Organic Chemistry and Organic Letters In-Reply-To: <5f1ec954ce884c93b837a1cc76905d01@utah.edu> References: <17cec28430cb4382b6a04d709a8e506e@1913652004> <5f1ec954ce884c93b837a1cc76905d01@utah.edu> Message-ID: <64218982-C626-4FE5-9383-4D7F8115882D@virginia.edu> Hi Daureen, FAIR data can be ?closed?. Data doesn?t have to be open to be FAIR. "As open as possible, as closed as necessary" - Coined by the European Commission Horizon 2020: http://ec.europa.eu/research/participants/data/ref/h2020/grants_manual/hi/oa_pilot/h2020-hi-oa-data-mgt_en.pdf Key is that the information on how to access the data needs to be available. I am not giving ACS any excuses. I am sure the FAIR principles expect all data to be open with ?reasonable? excuses for it not. Yes, not sure ACS behind paywall is ?necessary?. Maybe the links to supplemental data will be open? -- Sherry On 2/13/20, 12:32 PM, "rdap-bounces at kunverj.com on behalf of Daureen Nesdill" on behalf of daureen.nesdill at utah.edu> wrote: Hi all, The way I read this- the tool will zip the NMRs, etc into a zipped file and the researcher will submit it to ACS so it will be available along with the published article. If I?m reading this correctly this is NOT what we want and is not be what the funding agencies (and the worldwide research) are requiring. Data behind a paywall is not shared or FAIR data. I haven?t done an exhaustive search, but I?m assuming by now there are subject-specific open repositories for NMR, etc chemical data where the data are being curated and researchers can actually reuse the data. There may even be a science gateway (sciencegateways.org) for organic chemists. When it comes to data, ACS is out of step with the rest of the world. Daureen Daureen Nesdill, MS, MLIS Research Data Management Librarian The Faculty Center @ the Marriott Library University of Utah 801-585-5975 Daureen.nesdill at utah.edu https://orcid.org/0000-0003-0126-5038 From: ACS Publications [mailto:updates at acspubs.org] Sent: Thursday, February 13, 2020 9:36 AM To: Daureen Nesdill Subject: Submit your NMR spectral data in The Journal of Organic Chemistry and Organic Letters For researchers in organic chemistry, ACS has developed a new tool for the sharing of primary research data, the ACS Research Data Center. If you have trouble viewing this email, read the online version. [Image removed by sender.] Introducing the ACS Research Data Center For researchers in organic chemistry, ACS has developed a new tool for the sharing of primary research data. The ACS Research Data Center is a data packaging tool to assist authors in zipping their FID files, acquisition data, and processing parameters along with other appropriate FAIR metadata such as a SMILES or InChI for submission. This tool is free for any researcher to use and includes instructions for authors on how to upload their data. In addition, author guidelines at The Journal of Organic Chemistry and Organic Letters offer details on how to zip and submit your data (see Primary NMR Data Files under the Supporting Information heading). All zipped files of data should be uploaded as ?Supporting Information for Publication?. Along with the zipped files of NMR data, original Elemental Analysis, HRMS or IR reports are also encouraged and can be included as ?Supporting Information for Publication?. Including data alongside a publication has many benefits for authors, editors, reviewers, and readers. For authors, it will help in compliance with data-management plans and any funder requirements that data be made publicly available. The data will be citable and can be included in grant applications or updates to funders. Readily available data can provide a needed service to the community, much like reviewing, and will improve archiving for the long-term benefit of the scientific community. As an incentive, participating ACS publications identified with FAIR data will include a note in the PDF and HTML that FAIR data is available. For editors and reviewers, it?s valuable to have consistent quality of NMR and other data during the review process. While incidents of unethical behavior are rare, uploading original data can increase safeguarding against fraudulent or manipulated data. Providing data alongside a submission reduces requests from the editorial office for original FID data, for example, when the images uploaded in the SI are of inadequate resolution or appear to be manipulated. For readers, access to primary data files allows for easy and direct comparison to published results. This is helpful when reproducing published work, specifically, to have the ability to evaluate compound purity, as well as zoom, integrate, and interact with the spectra. Please submit your NMR spectral data along with your next manuscript submission to The Journal of Organic Chemistry or Organic Letters and learn more about the ACS Research Data Center by reading the recent editorial in JOC and OL or viewing the FAQs. Visit the ACS Research Data Center Copyright ? 2020 American Chemical Society 1155 Sixteenth Street NW | Washington, DC 20036 This email was sent to daureen.nesdill at utah.edu because it relates to topics in which you expressed an interest or ACS Publications services you have used. Unfollow "ACS Authoring Services" updates. Customize your preferences or stop all emails from ACS Publications. Worth remembering: Any actions taken only relate to the email address stated above. If you forward this email you may be sharing your personal information with others. Changes will not impact account, service or bill-related communications. ACS Privacy Policy [Image removed by sender.] -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From skarcher at maxwell.syr.edu Thu Feb 13 13:24:09 2020 From: skarcher at maxwell.syr.edu (Sebastian Karcher) Date: Thu, 13 Feb 2020 18:24:09 +0000 Subject: [Rdap] FW: Submit your NMR spectral data in The Journal of Organic Chemistry and Organic Letters In-Reply-To: <64218982-C626-4FE5-9383-4D7F8115882D@virginia.edu> References: <17cec28430cb4382b6a04d709a8e506e@1913652004> <5f1ec954ce884c93b837a1cc76905d01@utah.edu> <64218982-C626-4FE5-9383-4D7F8115882D@virginia.edu> Message-ID: Thanks Sherry, Really important point that FAIR is really a pretty limited concept focusing on best technical practices for making data available. (There?s an interesting blogpost by Dan Katz with the great title ?FAIR is not fair enough? about this: https://danielskatzblog.wordpress.com/2017/06/22/fair-is-not-fair-enough/ comment by one of the original FAIR article?s authors at the bottom) From the looks of it, supplementary data on ACS are not paywalled, either, so that wouldn?t be a major concern here, see e.g. https://pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/acs.joc.9b02747?goto=supporting-info But interestingly, while this is free of charge to access, at least the current display of supplementary files fails most FAIR principles and it?s rather odd/sad that they?d say FAIR 15 times in their announcement. Let?s run through this, for the sake of #LoveData20: Findable F1. (Meta)data are assigned a globally unique and persistent identifier ? NOPE (the DOI is for the article) F2. Data are described with rich metadata (defined by R1 below) ? They claim their tool does this, so let?s give this a YES F3. Metadata clearly and explicitly include the identifier of the data they describe - NOPE F4. (Meta)data are registered or indexed in a searchable resource ? NOT SEEING WHERE THAT?d BE Accessible Once the user finds the required data, she/he needs to know how can they be accessed, possibly including authentication and authorisation. A1. (Meta)data are retrievable by their identifier using a standardised communications protocol - NOPE A1.1 The protocol is open, free, and universally implementable - NOPE A1.2 The protocol allows for an authentication and authorisation procedure, where necessary - NA A2. Metadata are accessible, even when the data are no longer available ? PROBABLY NOT Interoperable The data usually need to be integrated with other data. In addition, the data need to interoperate with applications or workflows for analysis, storage, and processing. I1. (Meta)data use a formal, accessible, shared, and broadly applicable language for knowledge representation. ? Let?s give this a generous YES I2. (Meta)data use vocabularies that follow FAIR principles ? Again, YES, being generous here. I3. (Meta)data include qualified references to other (meta)data ? PROBABLY NO; how would they do this with just a file upload? Reusable The ultimate goal of FAIR is to optimise the reuse of data. To achieve this, metadata and data should be well-described so that they can be replicated and/or combined in different settings. R1. Meta(data) are richly described with a plurality of accurate and relevant attributes - Generous YES again R1.1. (Meta)data are released with a clear and accessible data usage license ? NO; the ?license? is some copyright mumbo-jumbo R1.2. (Meta)data are associated with detailed provenance ? POSSIBLY ? the tool could potentially do this R1.3. (Meta)data meet domain-relevant community standards -- YES For those counting, that?s 8 NOs, one NA, 1 POSSIBLY and 5 YES I think it?s fair to say, that?s not a great score? That said ? the tool ACS advertises is free and sounds like you could take your data wherever you want, so you could use it to produce metadata and then put this, say, on Zenodo or a more suitable domain repository should it exist. Happy LDW everyone! Sebastian From: rdap-bounces at kunverj.com On Behalf Of Lake, Sherry Heitchew (sah) Sent: Thursday, February 13, 2020 12:57 PM To: Research Data Access and Preservation Cc: rdap at mail.kunverj.com Subject: Re: [Rdap] FW: Submit your NMR spectral data in The Journal of Organic Chemistry and Organic Letters Hi Daureen, FAIR data can be ?closed?. Data doesn?t have to be open to be FAIR. "As open as possible, as closed as necessary" - Coined by the European Commission Horizon 2020: http://ec.europa.eu/research/participants/data/ref/h2020/grants_manual/hi/oa_pilot/h2020-hi-oa-data-mgt_en.pdf Key is that the information on how to access the data needs to be available. I am not giving ACS any excuses. I am sure the FAIR principles expect all data to be open with ?reasonable? excuses for it not. Yes, not sure ACS behind paywall is ?necessary?. Maybe the links to supplemental data will be open? -- Sherry On 2/13/20, 12:32 PM, "rdap-bounces at kunverj.com on behalf of Daureen Nesdill" on behalf of daureen.nesdill at utah.edu> wrote: Hi all, The way I read this- the tool will zip the NMRs, etc into a zipped file and the researcher will submit it to ACS so it will be available along with the published article. If I?m reading this correctly this is NOT what we want and is not be what the funding agencies (and the worldwide research) are requiring. Data behind a paywall is not shared or FAIR data. I haven?t done an exhaustive search, but I?m assuming by now there are subject-specific open repositories for NMR, etc chemical data where the data are being curated and researchers can actually reuse the data. There may even be a science gateway (sciencegateways.org) for organic chemists. When it comes to data, ACS is out of step with the rest of the world. Daureen Daureen Nesdill, MS, MLIS Research Data Management Librarian The Faculty Center @ the Marriott Library University of Utah 801-585-5975 Daureen.nesdill at utah.edu https://orcid.org/0000-0003-0126-5038 From: ACS Publications [mailto:updates at acspubs.org] Sent: Thursday, February 13, 2020 9:36 AM To: Daureen Nesdill > Subject: Submit your NMR spectral data in The Journal of Organic Chemistry and Organic Letters For researchers in organic chemistry, ACS has developed a new tool for the sharing of primary research data, the ACS Research Data Center. If you have trouble viewing this email, read the online version. [Image removed by sender.] Introducing the ACS Research Data Center For researchers in organic chemistry, ACS has developed a new tool for the sharing of primary research data. The ACS Research Data Center is a data packaging tool to assist authors in zipping their FID files, acquisition data, and processing parameters along with other appropriate FAIR metadata such as a SMILES or InChI for submission. This tool is free for any researcher to use and includes instructions for authors on how to upload their data. In addition, author guidelines at The Journal of Organic Chemistry and Organic Letters offer details on how to zip and submit your data (see Primary NMR Data Files under the Supporting Information heading). All zipped files of data should be uploaded as ?Supporting Information for Publication?. Along with the zipped files of NMR data, original Elemental Analysis, HRMS or IR reports are also encouraged and can be included as ?Supporting Information for Publication?. Including data alongside a publication has many benefits for authors, editors, reviewers, and readers. For authors, it will help in compliance with data-management plans and any funder requirements that data be made publicly available. The data will be citable and can be included in grant applications or updates to funders. Readily available data can provide a needed service to the community, much like reviewing, and will improve archiving for the long-term benefit of the scientific community. As an incentive, participating ACS publications identified with FAIR data will include a note in the PDF and HTML that FAIR data is available. For editors and reviewers, it?s valuable to have consistent quality of NMR and other data during the review process. While incidents of unethical behavior are rare, uploading original data can increase safeguarding against fraudulent or manipulated data. Providing data alongside a submission reduces requests from the editorial office for original FID data, for example, when the images uploaded in the SI are of inadequate resolution or appear to be manipulated. For readers, access to primary data files allows for easy and direct comparison to published results. This is helpful when reproducing published work, specifically, to have the ability to evaluate compound purity, as well as zoom, integrate, and interact with the spectra. Please submit your NMR spectral data along with your next manuscript submission to The Journal of Organic Chemistry or Organic Letters and learn more about the ACS Research Data Center by reading the recent editorial in JOC and OL or viewing the FAQs. Visit the ACS Research Data Center Copyright ? 2020 American Chemical Society 1155 Sixteenth Street NW | Washington, DC 20036 This email was sent to daureen.nesdill at utah.edu because it relates to topics in which you expressed an interest or ACS Publications services you have used. Unfollow "ACS Authoring Services" updates. Customize your preferences or stop all emails from ACS Publications. Worth remembering: Any actions taken only relate to the email address stated above. If you forward this email you may be sharing your personal information with others. Changes will not impact account, service or bill-related communications. ACS Privacy Policy [Image removed by sender.] -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From tmorrell at caltech.edu Thu Feb 13 13:50:54 2020 From: tmorrell at caltech.edu (Morrell, Thomas E. (Tom)) Date: Thu, 13 Feb 2020 18:50:54 +0000 Subject: [Rdap] Submit your NMR spectral data in The Journal of Organic Chemistry and Organic Letters In-Reply-To: References: <17cec28430cb4382b6a04d709a8e506e@1913652004> <5f1ec954ce884c93b837a1cc76905d01@utah.edu> <64218982-C626-4FE5-9383-4D7F8115882D@virginia.edu> Message-ID: Thanks for the great analysis Sebastian! ACS also copies their supplemental information to Figshare. In theory this could improve the FAIRness of the data. However the current implementation (https://figshare.com/articles/Regioselective_C_H_Sulfonylation_of_2_i_H_i_Indazoles_by_Electrosynthesis/11845209) is broken. Figshare assigns an identifier (https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.joc.9b03330.s001), but it?s not an actual DOI. So it?s anti-FAIR? Chemistry doesn?t have as many well-developed disciplinary repositories, as ACS acknowledges in their new authors guide (https://pubs.acs.org/doi/full/10.1021/acsguide.30104). It?s not surprising publishers want to get into this space, but we should point out when they don?t meet community standards. Thanks for sharing the announcement, Tom Morrell | Research Data Specialist | Caltech Library Mail Code 2-32, Pasadena CA 91125 | 626-395-3827 | data.caltech.edu On Feb 13, 2020, at 10:24 AM, Sebastian Karcher > wrote: Thanks Sherry, Really important point that FAIR is really a pretty limited concept focusing on best technical practices for making data available. (There?s an interesting blogpost by Dan Katz with the great title ?FAIR is not fair enough? about this: https://danielskatzblog.wordpress.com/2017/06/22/fair-is-not-fair-enough/ comment by one of the original FAIR article?s authors at the bottom) From the looks of it, supplementary data on ACS are not paywalled, either, so that wouldn?t be a major concern here, see e.g. https://pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/acs.joc.9b02747?goto=supporting-info But interestingly, while this is free of charge to access, at least the current display of supplementary files fails most FAIR principles and it?s rather odd/sad that they?d say FAIR 15 times in their announcement. Let?s run through this, for the sake of #LoveData20: Findable F1. (Meta)data are assigned a globally unique and persistent identifier ? NOPE (the DOI is for the article) F2. Data are described with rich metadata (defined by R1 below) ? They claim their tool does this, so let?s give this a YES F3. Metadata clearly and explicitly include the identifier of the data they describe - NOPE F4. (Meta)data are registered or indexed in a searchable resource ? NOT SEEING WHERE THAT?d BE Accessible Once the user finds the required data, she/he needs to know how can they be accessed, possibly including authentication and authorisation. A1. (Meta)data are retrievable by their identifier using a standardised communications protocol - NOPE A1.1 The protocol is open, free, and universally implementable - NOPE A1.2 The protocol allows for an authentication and authorisation procedure, where necessary - NA A2. Metadata are accessible, even when the data are no longer available ? PROBABLY NOT Interoperable The data usually need to be integrated with other data. In addition, the data need to interoperate with applications or workflows for analysis, storage, and processing. I1. (Meta)data use a formal, accessible, shared, and broadly applicable language for knowledge representation. ? Let?s give this a generous YES I2. (Meta)data use vocabularies that follow FAIR principles ? Again, YES, being generous here. I3. (Meta)data include qualified references to other (meta)data ? PROBABLY NO; how would they do this with just a file upload? Reusable The ultimate goal of FAIR is to optimise the reuse of data. To achieve this, metadata and data should be well-described so that they can be replicated and/or combined in different settings. R1. Meta(data) are richly described with a plurality of accurate and relevant attributes - Generous YES again R1.1. (Meta)data are released with a clear and accessible data usage license ? NO; the ?license? is some copyright mumbo-jumbo R1.2. (Meta)data are associated with detailed provenance ? POSSIBLY ? the tool could potentially do this R1.3. (Meta)data meet domain-relevant community standards -- YES For those counting, that?s 8 NOs, one NA, 1 POSSIBLY and 5 YES I think it?s fair to say, that?s not a great score? That said ? the tool ACS advertises is free and sounds like you could take your data wherever you want, so you could use it to produce metadata and then put this, say, on Zenodo or a more suitable domain repository should it exist. Happy LDW everyone! Sebastian From: rdap-bounces at kunverj.com > On Behalf Of Lake, Sherry Heitchew (sah) Sent: Thursday, February 13, 2020 12:57 PM To: Research Data Access and Preservation > Cc: rdap at mail.kunverj.com Subject: Re: [Rdap] FW: Submit your NMR spectral data in The Journal of Organic Chemistry and Organic Letters Hi Daureen, FAIR data can be ?closed?. Data doesn?t have to be open to be FAIR. "As open as possible, as closed as necessary" - Coined by the European Commission Horizon 2020: http://ec.europa.eu/research/participants/data/ref/h2020/grants_manual/hi/oa_pilot/h2020-hi-oa-data-mgt_en.pdf Key is that the information on how to access the data needs to be available. I am not giving ACS any excuses. I am sure the FAIR principles expect all data to be open with ?reasonable? excuses for it not. Yes, not sure ACS behind paywall is ?necessary?. Maybe the links to supplemental data will be open? -- Sherry On 2/13/20, 12:32 PM, "rdap-bounces at kunverj.com on behalf of Daureen Nesdill" on behalf of daureen.nesdill at utah.edu> wrote: Hi all, The way I read this- the tool will zip the NMRs, etc into a zipped file and the researcher will submit it to ACS so it will be available along with the published article. If I?m reading this correctly this is NOT what we want and is not be what the funding agencies (and the worldwide research) are requiring. Data behind a paywall is not shared or FAIR data. I haven?t done an exhaustive search, but I?m assuming by now there are subject-specific open repositories for NMR, etc chemical data where the data are being curated and researchers can actually reuse the data. There may even be a science gateway (sciencegateways.org) for organic chemists. When it comes to data, ACS is out of step with the rest of the world. Daureen Daureen Nesdill, MS, MLIS Research Data Management Librarian The Faculty Center @ the Marriott Library University of Utah 801-585-5975 Daureen.nesdill at utah.edu https://orcid.org/0000-0003-0126-5038 From: ACS Publications [mailto:updates at acspubs.org] Sent: Thursday, February 13, 2020 9:36 AM To: Daureen Nesdill > Subject: Submit your NMR spectral data in The Journal of Organic Chemistry and Organic Letters For researchers in organic chemistry, ACS has developed a new tool for the sharing of primary research data, the ACS Research Data Center. If you have trouble viewing this email, read the online version. [Image removed by sender.] Introducing the ACS Research Data Center For researchers in organic chemistry, ACS has developed a new tool for the sharing of primary research data. The ACS Research Data Center is a data packaging tool to assist authors in zipping their FID files, acquisition data, and processing parameters along with other appropriate FAIR metadata such as a SMILES or InChI for submission. This tool is free for any researcher to use and includes instructions for authors on how to upload their data. In addition, author guidelines at The Journal of Organic Chemistry and Organic Letters offer details on how to zip and submit your data (see Primary NMR Data Files under the Supporting Information heading). All zipped files of data should be uploaded as ?Supporting Information for Publication?. Along with the zipped files of NMR data, original Elemental Analysis, HRMS or IR reports are also encouraged and can be included as ?Supporting Information for Publication?. Including data alongside a publication has many benefits for authors, editors, reviewers, and readers. For authors, it will help in compliance with data-management plans and any funder requirements that data be made publicly available. The data will be citable and can be included in grant applications or updates to funders. Readily available data can provide a needed service to the community, much like reviewing, and will improve archiving for the long-term benefit of the scientific community. As an incentive, participating ACS publications identified with FAIR data will include a note in the PDF and HTML that FAIR data is available. For editors and reviewers, it?s valuable to have consistent quality of NMR and other data during the review process. While incidents of unethical behavior are rare, uploading original data can increase safeguarding against fraudulent or manipulated data. Providing data alongside a submission reduces requests from the editorial office for original FID data, for example, when the images uploaded in the SI are of inadequate resolution or appear to be manipulated. For readers, access to primary data files allows for easy and direct comparison to published results. This is helpful when reproducing published work, specifically, to have the ability to evaluate compound purity, as well as zoom, integrate, and interact with the spectra. Please submit your NMR spectral data along with your next manuscript submission to The Journal of Organic Chemistry or Organic Letters and learn more about the ACS Research Data Center by reading the recenteditorial in JOC and OL or viewing the FAQs. Visit the ACS Research Data Center Copyright ? 2020 American Chemical Society 1155 Sixteenth Street NW | Washington, DC 20036 This email was sent to daureen.nesdill at utah.edu because it relates to topics in which you expressed an interest or ACS Publications services you have used. Unfollow "ACS Authoring Services" updates. Customize your preferences or stop all emails from ACS Publications. Worth remembering: Any actions taken only relate to the email address stated above. If you forward this email you may be sharing your personal information with others. Changes will not impact account, service or bill-related communications. ACS Privacy Policy [Image removed by sender.] _______________________________________________ RDAP mailing list RDAP at mail.kunverj.com http://mail.kunverj.com/mailman/listinfo/rdap -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From skarcher at maxwell.syr.edu Mon Feb 17 08:53:29 2020 From: skarcher at maxwell.syr.edu (Sebastian Karcher) Date: Mon, 17 Feb 2020 13:53:29 +0000 Subject: [Rdap] Today: IASSIST Webinar of free QDAS tools Message-ID: <4f116d693cb348e0a051b278b59f9073@maxwell.syr.edu> Dear all, IASSIST is hosting a webinar about the free&libre QDAS tools Taguette and qcoder today. Typically these webinars are for IASSIST members only, but we have successfully advocated for this instance to be open to the public - I hope it'll be of interest to some here (and sorry for the late notice!). Full announcement below Sebastian You are invited to attend the next IASSIST community webinar on February 17, 2020 (noon-1pm EST). This is a reminder to reserve your spot today. This webinar is open to IASSIST members and also the community-at-large - so please share this announcement. Thank you, Amy **************************************** Register now: http://myumi.ch/lxg27 Title: Free Qualitative Data Analysis with Taguette and qcoder! (an IASSIST webinar) Presenter: Vicky Steeves is an academic librarian and open* advocate and a member of the Taguette team. Description: Qualitative researchers have long suffered from a lack of free tools for their analysis work; researchers with no access to research funds either have to pay out-of-pocket or create inventive hacks (like cutting/pasting into Excel!) to get their work done. It's not right or fair that qualitative researchers without funds cannot afford the basic software to do their research. So, to bolster a fair and equitable entry into qualitative methods, we've made qcoder and Taguette! Taguette is a free and open source qualitative analysis tool that works on desktop and in-browser to enable collaboration with colleagues. qcoder is a free and open source R package for qualitative analysis that works with the entire R ecosystem. Participants in this webinar will learn more how to use qcoder and Taguette for their qualitative work. Sebastian Karcher, Ph.D. | Associate Director Qualitative Data Repository Moynihan Institute | Maxwell School 346H Eggers Hall Syracuse, New York 13244 p 315.443.1634 e skarcher at syr.edu SYRACUSE UNIVERSITY syr.edu | qdr.syr.edu -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From Justin.Day at pnnl.gov Mon Feb 17 11:54:51 2020 From: Justin.Day at pnnl.gov (Day, Justin) Date: Mon, 17 Feb 2020 16:54:51 +0000 Subject: [Rdap] Opening: Research Librarian - Computer Sciences and Data Literacy Message-ID: Hello everyone, The closing date for this position has been extended. Please share widely. Thanks! Pacific Northwest National Laboratory has a position open for a Research Librarian with a focus in computer sciences and data literacy. The PNNL PubCenter is seeking an entrepreneurial candidate who would thrive on developing themselves into a liaison-like role between the PNNL Publishing Lifecycle and scientists and engineers in computational sciences. The candidate will also be responsible for creating a data literacy component within the PubCenter that integrates and aligns with the FAIR Data Principles. The successful candidate is expected to develop and lead sustainable PubCenter services for PNNL's computer science research community, provide 1:1 consultation to researchers, and be an advocate for the role data has in PNNL's Publishing Lifecycle. For the full description and requirements, please go to: https://pnnl.jobs/richland-wa/research-librarian-computer-sciences-and-data-literacy/682BE51358F346B3A0C2A0C0F803802E/job/ Closing date: March 19, 2020 ____________________________________ Justin Day, MLIS PubCenter Senior Research Librarian Pacific Northwest National Laboratory -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From alop at vt.edu Tue Feb 18 11:25:00 2020 From: alop at vt.edu (Andi Ogier) Date: Tue, 18 Feb 2020 11:25:00 -0500 Subject: [Rdap] Job Posting - Metadata Analysis Librarian Message-ID: **insert usual meaningless apology for cross posting here** Hi RDAP! I wanted to pass along this job ad we just posted for a Metadata Analysis Librarian. Organizationally, metadata work is now a part of Data Services, and we're trying to build up production work to better serve the (slowly growing) diversity of our community. Our team is strongly committed to mentoring, supporting our faculty's research, and establishing safe spaces where early career librarians from underrepresented groups can grow and thrive. Thanks, Andi Working Title: Metadata Analysis Librarian Rank: Lecturer Job Number: 512845 Job Description: The Metadata Analysis Librarian is an entry-level position that focuses on the creation, maintenance, analysis and enrichment of metadata representing the Library?s collections. The Librarian also works on high priority, unique projects, such as: analysis of themes relevant to diversity, inclusiveness, and equity within the Library?s collections; recommendations for increasing the ability of the Library?s collections in service of its most marginalized communities; and development of policy to enhance the accessibility of metadata creation processes. The Librarian is expected to communicate effectively about projects with colleagues and the professional community. Required Qualifications: - Graduate of an ALA-accredited master?s degree program in library and/or information science or early career information professional or related field - Professional commitment to equity, diversity, and inclusion. - Evidence of strong analytical and problem solving skills; - Working knowledge of at least one metadata creation and editing tool (e.g. OpenRefine); - Familiarity with at least one non-MARC metadata standard (e.g. Dublin Core) - Experience working with metadata in a digital library environment; - Familiarity with or knowledge of Linked Data; - Excellent time management and ability to successfully handle multiple priorities; - Effective interpersonal, communication and presentation skills; - Demonstrated ability to work autonomously; - Ability to establish and build collaborative working relationships with a wide range of people; - Demonstrated ability to work effectively within a collaborative team environment. Preferred Qualifications: - Demonstrated commitment to service; - Demonstrated commitment to inclusion and diversity; - Familiarity with archival descriptive standards (especially DACS) and/or encoding standards (especially EAD and EAC-CPF); - Demonstrated skills with tools for data manipulation, such as Open Refine, XSLT, or a scripting language such as Python or Ruby. Employment Conditions: - Must have background Check How to apply for this job: Applications must be submitted online at https://careers.pageuppeople.com Quick Link: http://careers.pageuppeople.com/968/cw/en-us/job/512845/metadata-analysis-librarian Employee Category: Administrative & Professional Percent Employment: Full-time Pay Range: $52,000 Department: Library Work Location: Blacksburg, VA Review Date: 3/12/2020 Regards, Lisa Smith Library Dean's Office Admin Assistant and HR Support (0434) lisas9 at vt.edu 540-231-5595 -- Andrea L. Ogier (she/her) Director, Data Services University Libraries Virginia Tech alop at vt.edu (540) 231-9255 Google Calendar -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From mno at iastate.edu Tue Feb 18 11:28:50 2020 From: mno at iastate.edu (O'Donnell, Megan N [LIB]) Date: Tue, 18 Feb 2020 16:28:50 +0000 Subject: [Rdap] FW: [SPARC] Community call to discuss US government draft repository characteristics In-Reply-To: <86B9176A-EF7F-4E82-A6F0-7508410754B8@sparcopen.org> References: <2596EBA7-E9C8-4FF4-8A91-81675737EAA6@gmail.com> <86B9176A-EF7F-4E82-A6F0-7508410754B8@sparcopen.org> Message-ID: COAR (Coalition of Open Access Repositories) has recently become more involved with data repositories and IRs that serve as data repositories. If your institution is a member you may want to join the mailing list. They?re ab international group and they have members on every continent (except Antarctica). I won?t be able to make the call in the email below but hopefully someone else from RDAP can! Megan O?Donnell Iowa State Univ. From: Heather Joseph Sent: Tuesday, February 18, 2020 8:41 AM To: sparc-members at sparcopen.org Cc: m.kathleen.shearer at gmail.com Subject: [SPARC] Community call to discuss US government draft repository characteristics Hi All, For those of you who are considering submitting comments on the OSTP ?Request for Input? (RFI) on desirable characteristics of data repositories, our good colleagues at COAR are hosting a community call on Thursday to discuss possible responses - details below. If you are interested in joining, please contact Kathleen Shearer at: m.kathleen.shearer at gmail.com for details! All best, Heather Heather Joseph, Executive Director, SPARC Begin forwarded message: The US Office of Science and Technology Policy has developed a proposed set of desirable characteristics of data repositories for data resulting from Federally-funded research in US. The proposed characteristics could apply to repositories operated by government or non-governmental entities. We want to ensure that the characteristics represent good practice and are also feasible for the repository community broadly (as the criteria adopted in the US could be adopted in other jurisdictions) and COAR will work with SPARC to provide input to this consultation. We also want to try to align our input with other organizations, so we can have a greater impact. To that end, COAR is hosting a community call at 2pm EST on Thursday, February 20 for organizations that are preparing input. The aim is to exchange information across organizations and identify areas of alignment. If you are interested in participating in this call, please send me a message at m.kathleen.shearer at gmail.com and I will send you the connection details. Please also feel free to share this message with colleagues who are not COAR members, but are preparing to submit comments. They are welcome to participate. Thanks and best, Kathleen Kathleen Shearer Executive Director Confederation of Open Access Repositories (COAR) www.coar-repositories.org -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "SPARC Members" group. To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to sparc-members+unsubscribe at sparcopen.org. To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/a/sparcopen.org/d/msgid/sparc-members/86B9176A-EF7F-4E82-A6F0-7508410754B8%40sparcopen.org. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From jwd at iu.edu Wed Feb 19 10:58:16 2020 From: jwd at iu.edu (Dunn, Jon William Butcher) Date: Wed, 19 Feb 2020 15:58:16 +0000 Subject: [Rdap] Registration now open for Open Repositories 2020 Message-ID: <3df7dc0679e247508d7b9aafc937ad2c@BL-CCI-D2S08.ads.iu.edu> Registration now open for Open Repositories 2020! The 15th International Conference on Open Repositories, OR2020, will be held in Stellenbosch, South Africa, from 1-4 June 2020. The organisers are pleased to announce that registration opened on 17 February 2020. Click to register: https://or2020.sun.ac.za/registration/ This year's conference theme is: Open for all In today's world, access to knowledge by all is viewed by some as a fundamental freedom and human right. In our societies, open knowledge for all can enable sustainable development and growth on many levels. How well do repositories support knowledge in the service of society? How well do they enable local knowledge sharing and support not only academic use, but also use in education and practice? OR2020 will provide an opportunity to explore and reflect on the ways repositories enable openness for all. We hope that this discussion will give the participants new insights and inspiration, which will help them to play a key role in developing, supporting and sharing an open agenda and open tools for research and scholarship. Enquiries Website / Twitter / Facebook / #openrepos2020 -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From cbishoff at umn.edu Wed Feb 19 17:37:35 2020 From: cbishoff at umn.edu (Carolyn Bishoff) Date: Wed, 19 Feb 2020 16:37:35 -0600 Subject: [Rdap] Innovative STEM library/non-library spaces In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: There are several spaces like what you?re describing at University of Minnesota. Most have photos or renderings. I think. :) Makerspaces https://www.lib.umn.edu/services/makerspaces Collaboration studio https://www.lib.umn.edu/wilsonstudio SMART Learning Commons Integrates tutoring, library support for student-produced media. Partnership between Libraries and Office of Undergraduate Education. https://www.lib.umn.edu/smart Toaster Innovation Hub (opened Monday) https://www.continuum.umn.edu/2019/12/making-the-toaster/ https://www.lib.umn.edu/walter/toaster/space Health Sciences Library spaces (opening this year) https://www.continuum.umn.edu/2019/04/the-spaces-of-the-new-health-sciences-libraries/ On Tue, Feb 11, 2020 at 11:09 Eugene Barsky wrote: > Amy and All: > > We have one of these spaces in UBC (with pictures :) and as a Head, I > would be happy to answer questions - > https://researchcommons.library.ubc.ca/ > > Eugene > > On Tue, 11 Feb 2020 at 07:19, O'Donnell, Megan N [LIB] > wrote: > >> Hey RDAP community, >> >> We?re also trying to design a space like this and there are VERY few >> pictures on library websites showing digital labs/collab spaces. >> >> I imagine that patrons would also like to see images ? >> >> >> >> Megan >> >> >> >> >> >> >> >> *From:* rdap-bounces at kunverj.com *On Behalf >> Of *Koshoffer, Amy (koshofae) >> *Sent:* Monday, February 10, 2020 6:09 PM >> *To:* Research Data Access and Preservation >> *Subject:* [Rdap] Innovative STEM library/non-library spaces >> >> >> >> Dear RDAPpers >> >> >> >> I am on a committee run by the Director of Science and Engineering >> libraries at UC to explore how to create an innovative space that will be >> shared by the library and other academic departments. He asked me to reach >> out to other librarians. Below is his request for information. If you >> have something to share please email me at koshofae at ucmail.uc.edu. If >> you are interested in the results, please let me know. Ted is willing to >> share. Thank you for any information you have to share. >> >> >> >> *I?m gathering examples of innovative spaces for a future project >> involving my STEM libraries. Hope you all can help. Our project will >> integrate some library/research data services functions in a >> to-be-renovated academic building. We know of many of the higher-profile >> library spaces. I thought there may be lesser-known cool spaces (in & out >> of libraries) to have on our radar.* >> >> >> >> *Very interested to hear of library and non-library spaces (across any >> discipline) that you think are interesting. Spaces for research, teaching, >> study, collaboration/community building, collections/exhibits, emerging >> technologies or other functions. Also, spaces that integrate unexpected >> library and non-library functions ? and how well they may be working >> together.* >> >> >> >> *I?m casting the net very wide on purpose. We will pull ideas from a lot >> of sources of inspiration.* >> >> >> >> *I can compile for the list if there?s interest. Thanks for your >> insights!* >> >> >> >> *Ted* >> >> >> >> Cheers, >> >> *Amy Koshoffer (she/her)* >> >> Assistant Director of Research & Data Services | UC Libraries >> >> [image: orcid small]ORCID 0000-0001-8130-103X >> >> >> >> >> Join us on April 24th for the 5th UC Data Day >> >> >> >> >> amy.koshoffer at uc.edu (preferred) | (513) 556-1310 >> >> *Research & Data Services >> >> (Data, GIS, Informatics)* >> >> >> _______________________________________________ >> RDAP mailing list >> RDAP at mail.kunverj.com >> http://mail.kunverj.com/mailman/listinfo/rdap >> > _______________________________________________ > RDAP mailing list > RDAP at mail.kunverj.com > http://mail.kunverj.com/mailman/listinfo/rdap > -- -- Carolyn Bishoff Innovation Lead and Physics, Astronomy, & Earth Sciences Librarian | University Libraries 117 Pleasant Street S.E. 108 Walter Library University of Minnesota | 612-625-0317 she, her -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image001.gif Type: image/gif Size: 169 bytes Desc: not available URL: From fernandapeset at gmail.com Thu Feb 20 05:09:34 2020 From: fernandapeset at gmail.com (Fernanda Peset (UPV)) Date: Thu, 20 Feb 2020 11:09:34 +0100 Subject: [Rdap] CfP: Special Issue on Reuse data and SDG In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: [With apologies for cross-posting] Hi everyone, this is a kind reminder about the imminent deadline of the CfP on Data Reuse for Sustainable Development Goals https://www.mdpi.com/journal /data/special_issues/Data_reuse Have you a manuscript about this? Don't hesitate to contact us! ----------- Have you reused data that contributes to the Sustainable Development Goals? This special issue of DATA journal collects works that use data with a transdisciplinary orientation, in the style of the SDG themselves. Such ambitious challenges need to be illustrated with concrete contributions. Descriptions of use cases, data infrastructures, or concrete solutions complete the political discourse and pave the way forward. Think big, start small. Send us your manuscript before 1 March to https://www.mdpi.com/ journal/data/special_issues/Data_reuse Keywords: Data reuse, Sustanaible Development Goals, Inclusive science, Digital divide, Researchers engagement, Internet of FAIR data and services, Metadata and standards [image: image.png] -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image.png Type: image/png Size: 92310 bytes Desc: not available URL: From jpetters at vt.edu Mon Feb 17 10:19:14 2020 From: jpetters at vt.edu (Jonathan Petters) Date: Mon, 17 Feb 2020 10:19:14 -0500 Subject: [Rdap] part-time Data Management Consultant position at Virginia Tech Message-ID: Please disseminate as you see fit! Find below a posting and link to a part-time Data Management Consultant position here at Virginia Tech . The chosen candidate will work with us here to support Virginia Tech researchers in their data management planning, archiving/sharing of research datasets, and improving our consulting and archiving processes. This should be a great position for a) folks new to the field of research data services looking to gain experience, b) folks in research data services looking for part-time work, or c) both a) and b)! Remote work is an option. Happy to answer questions about the position as I can (or I will route them to our HR rep). -Jon -- Jonathan Petters Ph.D. Data Management Consultant and Curation Services Coordinator Data Services, University Libraries Virginia Tech (540) 232-8682 https://lib.vt.edu/research-teaching/data-services.html ORCID: 0000-0002-0853-5814 Link to the job posting Data Mgmt Consultant Apply now *Job no:* 512847 *Work type:* Hourly Wage/Part-Time *Senior management:* Dean of Libraries *Department:* Library *Location:* Blacksburg Area *Categories:* Library *Job Description* Under the direction of the Data Management and Curation Services Coordinator, the Data Management Consultant will provide consultative support to Virginia Tech researchers including evaluation of data planning needs, assessing options for sharing data, tailoring recommendations to specific granting agency or publisher requirements, and editing data management plans. They will be responsible for triaging and routing other research data management inquires and support requests to appropriate personnel within Data Services, managing short and long-term communications and relationships with researchers, PIs, and students, and developing guidance on data management best practices. *Required Qualifications* ? Bachelor's degree ? Demonstrated experience in service provision/working with clients ? Coursework or experience using data in an academic research setting ? Demonstrated experience in working in a collaborative team-based environment *Preferred Qualifications* - Masters Degree - Demonstrated experience conducting scholarly or scientific research using data, either on a personal project or on a funded project. Must be able to talk about depth of involvement in the project, details about methods/code used, and analysis metrics. - Experience in research data curation and data publication - Experience in data management planning and writing/reviewing of data management plans for funding proposals - Experience in assessment related to program performance - Experience in program planning and development *Salary Information* $16.50 dependent on qualifications and expertise *Review Date* 2/25/2020 *Additional Information* Average of 30 hours per week; between the hours or M-F 8am-5pm. These are include summer and school break hours. This position has the possibility for remote work. The successful Candidate will be required to have a criminal conviction check The members of the University Libraries at Virginia Tech strive individually and collectively to create, sustain, and share inclusive ways of knowing in conscientious community with each other and all the people we serve in every space we shape. In keeping with our Aspirational Identity and the Virginia Tech Principles of Community , the University Libraries commit to build and maintain enduring climates of mutual care, respect, and responsibility. *About Virginia Tech* Virginia Tech is a public land-grant university, committed to teaching and learning, research, and outreach to the Commonwealth of Virginia, the nation, and the world. Building on its motto of Ut Prosim (that I may serve), Virginia Tech is dedicated to InclusiveVT?serving in the spirit of community, diversity, and excellence. We seek candidates who adopt and practice the Principles of Community, which are fundamental to our on-going efforts to increase access and inclusion, and to create a community that nurtures learning and growth for all of its members. Virginia Tech actively seeks a broad spectrum of candidates to join our community in preparing leaders for the world. Virginia Tech does not discriminate against employees, students, or applicants on the basis of age, color, disability, sex (including pregnancy), gender, gender identity, gender expression, genetic information, national origin, political affiliation, race, religion, sexual orientation, or veteran status, or otherwise discriminate against employees or applicants who inquire about, discuss, or disclose their compensation or the compensation of other employees or applicants, or on any other basis protected by law. If you are an individual with a disability and desire accommodation please contact the hiring department. *Advertised:* February 10, 2020 *Applications close:* Open until filled -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From fernandapeset at gmail.com Wed Feb 19 06:17:02 2020 From: fernandapeset at gmail.com (Fernanda Peset (UPV)) Date: Wed, 19 Feb 2020 12:17:02 +0100 Subject: [Rdap] CfP: Special Issue on Reuse data and SDG Message-ID: [With apologies for cross-posting] Hi everyone, this is a kind reminder about the imminent deadline of the CfP on Data Reuse for Sustainable Development Goals https://www.mdpi.com/journal /data/special_issues/Data_reuse Have you a manuscript about this? Don't hesitate to contact us! ----------- Have you reused data that contributes to the Sustainable Development Goals? This special issue of DATA journal collects works that use data with a transdisciplinary orientation, in the style of the SDG themselves. Such ambitious challenges need to be illustrated with concrete contributions. Descriptions of use cases, data infrastructures, or concrete solutions complete the political discourse and pave the way forward. Think big, start small. Send us your manuscript before 1 March to https://www.mdpi.com/ journal/data/special_issues/Data_reuse Keywords: Data reuse, Sustanaible Development Goals, Inclusive science, Digital divide, Researchers engagement, Internet of FAIR data and services, Metadata and standards [image: image.png] -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image.png Type: image/png Size: 92310 bytes Desc: not available URL: From cameron.cook at wisc.edu Wed Feb 19 11:55:48 2020 From: cameron.cook at wisc.edu (Cameron Cook) Date: Wed, 19 Feb 2020 16:55:48 +0000 Subject: [Rdap] Reminder: Register for RDAP 2020 Summit Message-ID: Hello, Just sharing a reminder that registration is now open for the RDAP (Research Data Access and Preservation Association) 2020 Summit in Santa Fe, NM! The Summit, which will take place at the Santa Fe Convention Center, will run March 11 and 12, with an additional day of workshops on March 13. Registration for the Summit is $209; workshops are an additional $50 each, although one is being provided free of charge thanks to a grant from the Institute of Museum and Library Services. You can also now view our program schedule, including on Sched. You can reserve a room at one of our two conference hotels. We look forward to seeing you there! -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From jpetters at vt.edu Sun Feb 23 19:53:58 2020 From: jpetters at vt.edu (Jonathan Petters) Date: Sun, 23 Feb 2020 19:53:58 -0500 Subject: [Rdap] Fwd: [CODATA-international] Publication of 'Sustainable and FAIR Data Sharing in the Humanities' (ALLEA) In-Reply-To: <71CAF389-8EA0-42A8-963E-E526CC061168@ria.ie> References: <71CAF389-8EA0-42A8-963E-E526CC061168@ria.ie> Message-ID: For those of working with humanities researchers (or looking to do so).... -Jon ---------- Forwarded message --------- From: Natalie Harrower Date: Fri, Feb 21, 2020 at 11:12 AM Subject: [CODATA-international] Publication of 'Sustainable and FAIR Data Sharing in the Humanities' (ALLEA) To: codata-international at lists.codata.org < codata-international at lists.codata.org> Dear Colleagues, You may be interested in the publication of Sustainable and FAIR Data Sharing in the Humanities , a new ALLEA report authored by the working group E-Humanities. It provides a series of recommendations tailored to humanities researchers to produce data and other research outputs along FAIR principles, and it was developed through an open consultation process. Press release below. Kind Regards, Natalie * * * * * * *Let?s be FAIR! ALLEA presents recommendations for sustainable data sharing in the humanities* A new ALLEA report provides key recommendations to make digital data in the humanities ?Findable, Accessible, Interoperable and Reusable?, in line with the FAIR principles. The document is designed as a practical guide to help scholars, research funders, professionals and policymakers navigate the shift towards a sustainable data sharing culture. In a digital world, the abundance of data offers new opportunities for all research fields, including the humanities, where the digitisation of texts, images, sounds, video recordings and other data types can significantly contribute to advancing research, while also transforming methodologies and scholarly communications. But data requires management, and data management requires common guidelines for good implementation. In recent years, the FAIR principles have been widely adopted as best practice in data management for research and other professional fields. For instance, they are quickly gaining ground in galleries, libraries, archives, and museums, whose data collections hold crucial resources for scholars in the humanities. Addressing these developments, the ALLEA report ?Sustainable and FAIR Data Sharing in the Humanities ? helps translate these principles into practice. It proposes technical, legal and ethical considerations to construct, store, present, disseminate and preserve data in such a way that they can be retrieved, accessed, reused, and interoperable. *?To exploit the true potential of humanities scholarship, and to share and combine data across disciplines to address big challenges, we need an awareness and common understanding of the FAIR principles and the nuances of their implementation. It is clear from ongoing discussions in scholarly communication and through the development and rapid proliferation of the Open Science paradigm that the FAIR principles are having a sustained impact on research practice. To support scholars and institutions aiming to produce FAIR data, this report combines practical advice on how to align with the principles, with a focus on practical guidance from a humanities perspective. We hope they prove useful in the collective effort to move towards more a more open research landscape,?* states Dr. Natalie Harrower, Chair of the ALLEA E-Humanities Working Group. *Data management lifecycle* Following the data management lifecycle, the report is structured in five stages: (1) identify, (2) plan, (3) collect/produce, structure & store, (4) deposit for preservation, cite & share, and (5) disseminate. For each phase, a set of practical recommendations and further reading are presented. The authors consider the differences among data sharing cultures across disciplines in the humanities but also encourage pathways towards interdisciplinary data practices. *Launch and Public Consultation* The publication was prepared by the ALLEA E-Humanities Working Group and builds upon the most recent developments in the FAIR and EU research policy landscape. A public consultation to seek feedback from researchers and practitioners was launched at ALLEA?s General Assembly, the annual meeting of European Academies, in May 2019. The working group received more than 200 suggestions, which were carefully considered and incorporated. The report was launched at the 15th International Digital Curation Conference in Dublin on 18th February 2020. *_______________* *Dr. Natalie Harrower Director, Digital Repository of Ireland Royal Irish Academy n.harrower at ria.ie | @natalieharrower www.dri.ie | @dri_ireland* The Academy is subject to the FOI Act 2014, the Data Protection Acts 1988-2003 and 2018, GDPR (EU 2016/679) and S.I. No. 336/2011, EC Privacy & Electronic Communications Regulations. For further information see our website www.ria.ie/privacy-and-data-protection _______________________________________________ CODATA-international mailing list CODATA-international at lists.codata.org http://lists.codata.org/mailman/listinfo/codata-international_lists.codata.org -- Jonathan Petters Ph.D. Data Management Consultant and Curation Services Coordinator Data Services, University Libraries Virginia Tech (540) 232-8682 https://lib.vt.edu/research-teaching/data-services.html ORCID: 0000-0002-0853-5814 -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: dri_logo_only_super_tight_cropped.jpg Type: image/jpeg Size: 23716 bytes Desc: not available URL: From julie_goldman at harvard.edu Mon Feb 24 15:42:50 2020 From: julie_goldman at harvard.edu (Goldman, Julie) Date: Mon, 24 Feb 2020 20:42:50 +0000 Subject: [Rdap] Job Opportunity: Data Services Librarian for the Sciences at Harvard Library (Cambridge, MA) Message-ID: <03038917-CDAF-4860-A61F-CD4AA33854FF@hms.harvard.edu> **Please excuse cross-posting** Hi everyone, Come work with us at Harvard Library in the role of Data Services Librarian for the Science! See details below: Harvard Library is seeking a creative and self-motivated individual to help develop and coordinate research data services focused on the sciences and engineering. The Data Services Librarian for the Sciences (DSLS) will work with relevant stakeholders in developing guidelines and workflows of data management services to ensure good research practice, protection of intellectual property, proper storage and security of research data, compliance with relevant regulations, and appropriate access to research data. New outreach and programming developed by the DSLS will demonstrate an understanding of the research landscape, the role of campus partnerships, and the capabilities and limits of library support. Reporting to the Head of Collection Development for the Division of Sciences and Engineering Services, and working in close collaboration with the manager of Harvard Library?s Research Data Management Program (HL-RDM), the Data Services Librarian for the Sciences will provide data and digital curation support, services, and training to members of the Harvard sciences and engineering community. This role will also advance the mission and objectives of Cabot Library, the Division of Sciences and Engineering Services, and the HL-RDM by building and sustaining relationships with partners across the research data lifecycle, and participating in relevant library-wide and Harvard-wide committees, working groups, projects, and events. More information in the job posting and please feel free to reach out with any questions. Best, Julie Julie Goldman | Research Data Services Librarian | Harvard Library Countway Library #242 | Harvard Medical School | Boston MA 02115 email: julie_goldman at harvard.edu orcid: 0000-0001-8037-0623 datamanagement.hms.harvard.edu -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From hgunderm at andrew.cmu.edu Thu Feb 27 20:47:54 2020 From: hgunderm at andrew.cmu.edu (Hannah C. Gunderman) Date: Fri, 28 Feb 2020 01:47:54 +0000 Subject: [Rdap] Call for Submissions: Artificial Intelligence for Data Discovery and Reuse 2020 Message-ID: <1e43b00ce9a64e88b9b8d261798c53ee@andrew.cmu.edu> Dear RDAP, We're excited to be hosting this conference again at CMU! Please see our call for submissions below: --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Submit an Abstract by March 31, 2020 for this symposium at CMU AIDR Symposium 2020: Artificial Intelligence for Data Discovery and Reuse May 11, 2020 Carnegie Mellon University Pittsburgh, PA Co-organized by Carnegie Mellon University Libraries and School of Computer Science, AIDR Symposium 2020 aims to find innovative solutions to accelerate the dissemination and reuse of scientific data in the data revolution using the power of AI. The explosion in the volume and complexity of scientific data has made it increasingly challenging to find high quality data, evaluate data quality, integrate datasets, reproduce results, and reuse data for new discoveries. Last year, the NSF-supported inaugural AIDR 2019 engaged many lively discussions from a wide range of communities to talk about innovative AI tools, algorithms and applications to make data more discoverable and reusable. This year, we are following up with a one-day AIDR Symposium to continue these conversations and build interdisciplinary collaborations. We invite AI researchers and practitioners, the scientific data community and the data management community to send abstract submissions that share applications of AI/ML to challenges related to the discovery, reuse and management of data across disciplinary boundaries. We especially encourage sharing work-in-progress and novel initiatives that can stimulate discussions and collaborations. Abstract submissions will be accepted for short talks, lightning talks, posters and digital demos, and panel discussions. To submit, to register or to learn more, visit: https://events.library.cmu.edu/aidr2020/ We hope you will be able to join us at AIDR Symposium 2020, and have a chance to share your thoughts on how we can work together to build a healthy data ecosystem. Please do not hesitate to contact aidr at andrew.cmu.edu with questions. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Warmly, Hannah C. Gunderman, Ph.D. Geography (she/her/hers) Research Data Management Consultant | University Libraries Faculty Lead, Research Data Services Carnegie Mellon University 410A Hunt Library | 412-268-7258 4909 Frew Street, Pittsburgh, PA 15213 hgunderm at andrew.cmu.edu LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/hannahcgunderman/ ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-7710-7055 No trees were killed in the sending of this message. However, a large number of electrons were terribly inconvenienced. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: