In this workshop (Master in Translational Medicine-MSc, University of Barcelona's Faculty of Medicine-Hospital Clínic, 25 May 2020) I summarised the benefits which can be gained from use of social media (specially blogs,Twitter and other repositories) to support research activities, and I provided examples of these innovative emerging socialnetwork sites as tools for scientific communication, as well as resources to increase the diffusion, visibility and impact of the scientific production. Structure of the lecture: Introduction, The digital revolution, Altmetrics, Open science, Active listening, Blogging, Microblogging, Professional networking, Sharing, Health 2.0, , Digital identity building, References to deepen and Conclusions.
Social media for researchers: Increase your research competitiveness using We...Xavier Lasauca i Cisa
In this workshop, adressed to P-Sphere project researchers (European Postdoctoral Research Project, Marie S. Curie Actions, Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, 28th November 2017) I summarised the benefits which can be gained from use of social media (specially blogs, Twitter and other social networks and repositories) to support research activities, and I provided examples of these innovative emerging resources as tools for scientific communication as well as discussed their implications for digital scholarship. Structure of the lecture: Introduction, Altmetrics, It's Europe!, Active listening, Blogging, Microblogging, Networking, Sharing, Health 2.0, Resources, Strategy, The ten commandments, To deepen, Conclusions.
In this workshop (Master in Translational Medicine-MSc, University of Barcelona's Faculty of Medicine-Hospital Clínic, 14 March 2018) I summarised the benefits which can be gained from use of social media (specially blogs, Twitter and other socialnetwork sites) to support research activities, and I provided examples of these innovative emerging resources as tools for scientific communication related to translational medicine, as well as discussed their implications for digital scholarship. Structure of the lecture: Introduction, Altmetrics, Active listening, Blogging, Microblogging, Networking, Sharing, Health 2.0, Resources, The ten commandments, References To deepen, Conclusions
In this workshop (Master in Translational Medicine-MSc, University of Barcelona's Faculty of Medicine-Hospital Clínic, 15 March 2017) I summarised the benefits which can be gained from use of social media (specially blogs, Twitter and other socialnetwork sites) to support research activities, and I provided examples of these innovative emerging resources as tools for scientific communication related to translational medicine, as well as discussed their implications for digital scholarship. Structure of the lecture: Introduction, Active listening, Blogging, Microblogging, Networking, Sharing, Health 2.0, The ten commandments, To deepen, Conclusions
Science dissemination 2.0: Social media for researchers (MTM-MSc 2019)Xavier Lasauca i Cisa
In this workshop (Master in Translational Medicine-MSc, University of Barcelona's Faculty of Medicine-Hospital Clínic, 28 May 2019) I summarised the benefits which can be gained from use of social media (specially blogs,Twitter and other repositories) to support research activities, and I provided examples of these innovative emerging socialnetwork sites as tools for scientific communication, as well as resources to increase the diffusion, visibility and impact of the scientific production. Structure of the lecture: Introduction, The digital revolution, Altmetrics, Open science, Active listening, Blogging, Microblogging, Professional networking, Sharing, Health 2.0, Resources, The ten commandments, References to deepen and Conclusions.
Social media for researchers: Increase your research competitiveness using We...Xavier Lasauca i Cisa
Using social media can benefit researchers in several ways:
- It can increase the visibility and impact of research by engaging other researchers and the public.
- Platforms like blogs, Twitter, and LinkedIn allow researchers to connect with peers, meet potential collaborators, and stay up to date in their fields.
- An online presence establishes a researcher's public profile and reputation, which can improve their competitiveness for funding and opportunities.
Maintaining social media accounts requires strategies like defining objectives, choosing appropriate tools, developing a network, and encouraging discussion around one's work. With practice, social media can help deepen engagement and dissemination of a researcher's work.
El objetivo de esta conferencia, impartida en la Facultat de Ciències de la Comunicació de la Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona el 25.10.2017 en el marco de la Open Access Week, es demostrar los beneficios derivados de la utilización de recursos basados en el web 2.0, como por ejemplo los blogs y las redes sociales como Twitter o Researchgate, para incrementar la difusión, la visibilidad y el impacto de la producción científica de los investigadores, así como para mejorar su reputación digital.
In this workshop (Institut de Ciència de Materials de Barcelona (ICMAB-CSIC), 19 December 2018) I summarised the benefits which can be gained from use of social media (specially blogs, Twitter and other socialnetwork sites) to support research activities, and I provided examples of these innovative emerging resources as tools for scientific communicatio, as well as discussed their implications for digital scholarship. Structure of the lecture: Introduction, Altmetrics, Open science, Active listening, Blogging, Microblogging, Networking, Sharing, The ten commandments, References To deepen, Conclusions.
Science dissemination 2.0: Social media for researchers (MTM-MSc 2021)Xavier Lasauca i Cisa
The document summarizes a presentation on using social media for researchers. It discusses various social media platforms and how researchers can benefit from using them, including increasing the visibility and impact of research, engaging with other researchers, and improving their online reputation. The presentation covers topics like blogging, Twitter, networking and connecting with other researchers online, sharing research outputs through platforms like SlideShare and YouTube, and using social media as part of the research process. Specific tips are provided on using each platform effectively as a researcher.
Social media for researchers: Increase your research competitiveness using We...Xavier Lasauca i Cisa
In this workshop, adressed to P-Sphere project researchers (European Postdoctoral Research Project, Marie S. Curie Actions, Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, 28th November 2017) I summarised the benefits which can be gained from use of social media (specially blogs, Twitter and other social networks and repositories) to support research activities, and I provided examples of these innovative emerging resources as tools for scientific communication as well as discussed their implications for digital scholarship. Structure of the lecture: Introduction, Altmetrics, It's Europe!, Active listening, Blogging, Microblogging, Networking, Sharing, Health 2.0, Resources, Strategy, The ten commandments, To deepen, Conclusions.
In this workshop (Master in Translational Medicine-MSc, University of Barcelona's Faculty of Medicine-Hospital Clínic, 14 March 2018) I summarised the benefits which can be gained from use of social media (specially blogs, Twitter and other socialnetwork sites) to support research activities, and I provided examples of these innovative emerging resources as tools for scientific communication related to translational medicine, as well as discussed their implications for digital scholarship. Structure of the lecture: Introduction, Altmetrics, Active listening, Blogging, Microblogging, Networking, Sharing, Health 2.0, Resources, The ten commandments, References To deepen, Conclusions
In this workshop (Master in Translational Medicine-MSc, University of Barcelona's Faculty of Medicine-Hospital Clínic, 15 March 2017) I summarised the benefits which can be gained from use of social media (specially blogs, Twitter and other socialnetwork sites) to support research activities, and I provided examples of these innovative emerging resources as tools for scientific communication related to translational medicine, as well as discussed their implications for digital scholarship. Structure of the lecture: Introduction, Active listening, Blogging, Microblogging, Networking, Sharing, Health 2.0, The ten commandments, To deepen, Conclusions
Science dissemination 2.0: Social media for researchers (MTM-MSc 2019)Xavier Lasauca i Cisa
In this workshop (Master in Translational Medicine-MSc, University of Barcelona's Faculty of Medicine-Hospital Clínic, 28 May 2019) I summarised the benefits which can be gained from use of social media (specially blogs,Twitter and other repositories) to support research activities, and I provided examples of these innovative emerging socialnetwork sites as tools for scientific communication, as well as resources to increase the diffusion, visibility and impact of the scientific production. Structure of the lecture: Introduction, The digital revolution, Altmetrics, Open science, Active listening, Blogging, Microblogging, Professional networking, Sharing, Health 2.0, Resources, The ten commandments, References to deepen and Conclusions.
Social media for researchers: Increase your research competitiveness using We...Xavier Lasauca i Cisa
Using social media can benefit researchers in several ways:
- It can increase the visibility and impact of research by engaging other researchers and the public.
- Platforms like blogs, Twitter, and LinkedIn allow researchers to connect with peers, meet potential collaborators, and stay up to date in their fields.
- An online presence establishes a researcher's public profile and reputation, which can improve their competitiveness for funding and opportunities.
Maintaining social media accounts requires strategies like defining objectives, choosing appropriate tools, developing a network, and encouraging discussion around one's work. With practice, social media can help deepen engagement and dissemination of a researcher's work.
El objetivo de esta conferencia, impartida en la Facultat de Ciències de la Comunicació de la Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona el 25.10.2017 en el marco de la Open Access Week, es demostrar los beneficios derivados de la utilización de recursos basados en el web 2.0, como por ejemplo los blogs y las redes sociales como Twitter o Researchgate, para incrementar la difusión, la visibilidad y el impacto de la producción científica de los investigadores, así como para mejorar su reputación digital.
In this workshop (Institut de Ciència de Materials de Barcelona (ICMAB-CSIC), 19 December 2018) I summarised the benefits which can be gained from use of social media (specially blogs, Twitter and other socialnetwork sites) to support research activities, and I provided examples of these innovative emerging resources as tools for scientific communicatio, as well as discussed their implications for digital scholarship. Structure of the lecture: Introduction, Altmetrics, Open science, Active listening, Blogging, Microblogging, Networking, Sharing, The ten commandments, References To deepen, Conclusions.
Science dissemination 2.0: Social media for researchers (MTM-MSc 2021)Xavier Lasauca i Cisa
The document summarizes a presentation on using social media for researchers. It discusses various social media platforms and how researchers can benefit from using them, including increasing the visibility and impact of research, engaging with other researchers, and improving their online reputation. The presentation covers topics like blogging, Twitter, networking and connecting with other researchers online, sharing research outputs through platforms like SlideShare and YouTube, and using social media as part of the research process. Specific tips are provided on using each platform effectively as a researcher.
In this workshop (Master in Translational Medicine-MSc Cellex, University of Barcelona's Faculty of Medicine, 9 March 2016) I summarised the benefits which can be gained from use of social media (specially blogs, Twitter and other socialnetwork sites) to support research activities, and I provided examples of these innovative emerging resources as tools for scientific communication related to translational medicine, as well as discussed their implications for digital scholarship. Structure of the lecture: Introduction, Blogging, Active listening, Microblogging, Networking, Sharing, Health 2.0, Follow the leaders, To deepen..., Conclusions.
In this workshop (Master in Translational Medicine-MSc Cellex, University of Barcelona-IDIBAPS, 11 March 2015) I summarised the benefits which can be gained from use of social media (specially blogs, Twitter and other socialnetwork sites) to support research activities, and I provided examples of these innovative emerging resources as tools for scientific communication related to translational medicine, as well as discussed their implications for digital scholarship.
In this workshop (Master in Translational Medicine-MSc Cellex, University of Barcelona, 17 June 2014) I summarised the benefits which can be gained from use of social media (specially blogs, Twitter and other socialnetwork sites) to support research activities, and I provided examples of these innovative emerging resources as tools for scientific communication related to translational medicine, as well as discussed their implications for digital scholarship.
Aquesta ponència, impartida a la Facultat de Ciències Polítiques i Sociologia de la UAB el 26.09.2017, en un seminari organitzat pel Grup ISOR (Investigacions en Sociologia de la Religió) tenia per objectiu mostrar recursos relacionats amb el web i els mitjans socials, destinats a incrementar la difusió, la visibilitat i l’impacte de la recerca del grup, així com a millorar la identitat digital del grup i dels investigadors que en formen part.
Science dissemination 2.0: Social media for researchers. Practical workshop. Xavier Lasauca i Cisa
This practical workshop complements the lecture that I gave in University of Barcelona's Faculty of Medicine (Master in Translational Medicine-MSc Cellex, University of Barcelona-Hospìtal Clínic, 9 March 2016) where I summarised the benefits which can be gained from use of social media (specially blogs, Twitter and other socialnetwork sites) to support research activities, and I provided examples of these innovative emerging resources as tools for scientific communication related to translational medicine, as well as discussed their implications for digital scholarship. You can access to the lecture at: http://www.slideshare.net/xavierlasauca/science-dissemination-20-social-media-for-researchers-59551716
Redes sociales para investigadores. Herramientas 2.0 para comunicar la activi...Xavier Lasauca i Cisa
El objetivo de esta ponencia, impartida en el marco de la "Jornada de formación y reflexión para la evaluación del Plan estratégico 2015-2020 del Institut Barcelona Estudis Internacionals" en Sant Cugat del Vallès el 14.06.2018, es demostrar los beneficios derivados de la utilización de recursos basados en el web 2.0, como por ejemplo los blogs y las redes sociales como Twitter o Researchgate, para incrementar la difusión, la visibilidad y el impacto de la producción científica de los investigadores, así como para mejorar su reputación digital.
Xarxes socials i malalties emergents: Un risc? Un suport per a la prevenció?Xavier Lasauca i Cisa
Presentació de la ponència de clausura que vaig impartir el 30 de setembre de 2014 en el Col·legi Oficial de Metges de Barcelona en el marc del IV Taller de malalties emergents, organitzat per la Unitat d'Investigació en Tuberculosi de Barcelona. La presentació consta de dues parts: en la primera part es mostren alguns exemples que demostren la utilitat dels blogs i eines com ara Twitter per comunicar la ciència i incrementar l’impacte de la recerca; en la segona, s'examinen els avantatges de les xarxes socials per a la prevenció, la detecció i el seguiment de les malalties emergents, així com els riscos que comporta el seu mal ús o un ús poc responsable.
In this talk (60th ICREA Colloquium, 11/03/2014) I summarised the benefits which can be gained from use of social media (specially blogs and Twitter) to support research activities. According to some authors there is evidence that using social media can be really beneficial to increase the impact of research papers, get new information, engage with fellow researchers and meet new collaborators, among others utilities. So I provided examples of blogs, Twitter and other resources as tools for scientific communication, as well as discussed their implications for digital scholarship.
Social media workshop for Duke faculty, 2013Cara Rousseau
This document discusses using social media in academics. It begins with an overview of platforms like Twitter, blogs and Facebook. For each platform, it provides examples of how Duke University faculty are using them, such as maintaining blogs related to their fields or using Twitter to enhance classroom discussions. The document concludes with next steps, recommending faculty create interest lists on Facebook and follow peers on Twitter, along with resources for learning more about using social media.
Constructing A Professional Presence - HEA Professional Presences For Academi...Thomas Lancaster
This presentation formed part of the HEA workshop on Professional Presences For Academics and looked at the different social sites on which academics should develop an online presence in order to promote themselves, engage students and employers and publicise their research.
This document discusses how social media can help with self-advancement in research. It describes various social media tools like blogs, Twitter, Facebook, SlideShare, and Pinterest. It explains that using social media can help improve traditional metrics like citations and downloads by increasing online visibility. Social media also enhances professional networking by facilitating real-world interactions from online discussions. The document provides advice for new users, like exploring guides, establishing a professional website, finding relevant conversations, and managing information overload. It recommends establishing profiles on LinkedIn, Academia.edu, and ResearchGate to increase findability and exposure.
This is a presentation I gave at the annual meeting of the Society for Experimental Biology 2013 (http://www.sebiology.org/meetings/Valencia/Valencia.html). It contains lots of tips for scientists to use social media appropriately and efficiently. It also highlights examples of social media in academia and types of possible content.
Oh, The Places You'll Go: Creating Streams of Information for Research Pathfi...Buffy Hamilton
Presented to NEFLIN December 16, 2010 via online webinar. Resources for this webinar are available at http://theunquietlibrarian.wikispaces.com/research-pathfinders-neflin2010
Using emerging technologies for open access Best practices for dissemination ...Tiffini Travis
Now that you have created digital projects, how do you generate traffic and reach users that are not starting their research on your library page? This presentation is designed to explore ways to market digital library projects.
research pathfinders 2.0: collaborating to create information streams for s...Buffy Hamilton
Presentation about collaboration and research pathfinders for Dr. Katherine Mason's TOSS/preservice teachers at Kennesaw State University, April 8, 2009.
Presented at the BIGGER 2009 Bibliographic Instruction Group for Georgia’s Eastern Region
Hosted by Zach S. Henderson Library, Georgia Southern University, Statesboro, GA by Buffy Hamilton. Resources are available at http://theunquietlibrarian.wikispaces.com/bigger2009 .
Using Social Media to Increase your Research ImpactMichelle Dalton
This document discusses how using social media can help increase the impact of research. It recommends blogging to build reputation, using Twitter for dissemination and engagement, and tracking altmetrics to measure different types of impact beyond citations. Altmetrics can provide real-time indicators of a paper's impact and capture how research is engaging various audiences. In the future, more types of scholarly contributions will be tracked and valued, beyond traditional citations. Social media is a way for researchers to promote their work, engage with other experts, and discover new topics and potential collaborators.
There are lots of ways that you can use blogging platforms to share your expertise or experiences, so it is important to think strategically about what you want to achieve and how blogging can help you develop as a researcher.
Part of my presentation on how media specialists can use Web 2.0 tools to rev up their research pathfinders and to help students develop their own research portals. Please see http://theunquietlibrarian.wikispaces.com/researchpathfinders2oh .
Science dissemination 2.0: Social media for researchers (MTM-MSc 2022)Xavier Lasauca i Cisa
In this workshop (Master in Translational Medicine-MSc, University of Barcelona's Faculty of Medicine-Hospital Clínic, 25 May 2022) I summarised the benefits which can be gained from use of social media (specially Twitter, blogs and other networks and repositories) to support research activities, and I provided examples of these socialnetwork sites as tools for scientific communication, as well as resources to increase the diffusion, visibility and impact of the scientific production. Structure of the lecture: Introduction,The digital revolution, Altmetrics, Open science, Active listening, Twitter, Professional networking, Blogging, Sharing, Digital identity building, References to deepen and Conclusions.
A workshop from the MmIT 2016 conference "Digital Citizenship - What is the library's role?" held in Sheffield from 12-13 September 2016.
Changes in scholarly publishing have created a requirement for authors to leverage multiple digital tools in order to build their profile, identity, scholarship and impact within and beyond their institutions. This workshop provided an opportunity for delegates to discuss and reflect on tools which can be used to build an online scholarly presence.
In this workshop (Master in Translational Medicine-MSc Cellex, University of Barcelona's Faculty of Medicine, 9 March 2016) I summarised the benefits which can be gained from use of social media (specially blogs, Twitter and other socialnetwork sites) to support research activities, and I provided examples of these innovative emerging resources as tools for scientific communication related to translational medicine, as well as discussed their implications for digital scholarship. Structure of the lecture: Introduction, Blogging, Active listening, Microblogging, Networking, Sharing, Health 2.0, Follow the leaders, To deepen..., Conclusions.
In this workshop (Master in Translational Medicine-MSc Cellex, University of Barcelona-IDIBAPS, 11 March 2015) I summarised the benefits which can be gained from use of social media (specially blogs, Twitter and other socialnetwork sites) to support research activities, and I provided examples of these innovative emerging resources as tools for scientific communication related to translational medicine, as well as discussed their implications for digital scholarship.
In this workshop (Master in Translational Medicine-MSc Cellex, University of Barcelona, 17 June 2014) I summarised the benefits which can be gained from use of social media (specially blogs, Twitter and other socialnetwork sites) to support research activities, and I provided examples of these innovative emerging resources as tools for scientific communication related to translational medicine, as well as discussed their implications for digital scholarship.
Aquesta ponència, impartida a la Facultat de Ciències Polítiques i Sociologia de la UAB el 26.09.2017, en un seminari organitzat pel Grup ISOR (Investigacions en Sociologia de la Religió) tenia per objectiu mostrar recursos relacionats amb el web i els mitjans socials, destinats a incrementar la difusió, la visibilitat i l’impacte de la recerca del grup, així com a millorar la identitat digital del grup i dels investigadors que en formen part.
Science dissemination 2.0: Social media for researchers. Practical workshop. Xavier Lasauca i Cisa
This practical workshop complements the lecture that I gave in University of Barcelona's Faculty of Medicine (Master in Translational Medicine-MSc Cellex, University of Barcelona-Hospìtal Clínic, 9 March 2016) where I summarised the benefits which can be gained from use of social media (specially blogs, Twitter and other socialnetwork sites) to support research activities, and I provided examples of these innovative emerging resources as tools for scientific communication related to translational medicine, as well as discussed their implications for digital scholarship. You can access to the lecture at: http://www.slideshare.net/xavierlasauca/science-dissemination-20-social-media-for-researchers-59551716
Redes sociales para investigadores. Herramientas 2.0 para comunicar la activi...Xavier Lasauca i Cisa
El objetivo de esta ponencia, impartida en el marco de la "Jornada de formación y reflexión para la evaluación del Plan estratégico 2015-2020 del Institut Barcelona Estudis Internacionals" en Sant Cugat del Vallès el 14.06.2018, es demostrar los beneficios derivados de la utilización de recursos basados en el web 2.0, como por ejemplo los blogs y las redes sociales como Twitter o Researchgate, para incrementar la difusión, la visibilidad y el impacto de la producción científica de los investigadores, así como para mejorar su reputación digital.
Xarxes socials i malalties emergents: Un risc? Un suport per a la prevenció?Xavier Lasauca i Cisa
Presentació de la ponència de clausura que vaig impartir el 30 de setembre de 2014 en el Col·legi Oficial de Metges de Barcelona en el marc del IV Taller de malalties emergents, organitzat per la Unitat d'Investigació en Tuberculosi de Barcelona. La presentació consta de dues parts: en la primera part es mostren alguns exemples que demostren la utilitat dels blogs i eines com ara Twitter per comunicar la ciència i incrementar l’impacte de la recerca; en la segona, s'examinen els avantatges de les xarxes socials per a la prevenció, la detecció i el seguiment de les malalties emergents, així com els riscos que comporta el seu mal ús o un ús poc responsable.
In this talk (60th ICREA Colloquium, 11/03/2014) I summarised the benefits which can be gained from use of social media (specially blogs and Twitter) to support research activities. According to some authors there is evidence that using social media can be really beneficial to increase the impact of research papers, get new information, engage with fellow researchers and meet new collaborators, among others utilities. So I provided examples of blogs, Twitter and other resources as tools for scientific communication, as well as discussed their implications for digital scholarship.
Social media workshop for Duke faculty, 2013Cara Rousseau
This document discusses using social media in academics. It begins with an overview of platforms like Twitter, blogs and Facebook. For each platform, it provides examples of how Duke University faculty are using them, such as maintaining blogs related to their fields or using Twitter to enhance classroom discussions. The document concludes with next steps, recommending faculty create interest lists on Facebook and follow peers on Twitter, along with resources for learning more about using social media.
Constructing A Professional Presence - HEA Professional Presences For Academi...Thomas Lancaster
This presentation formed part of the HEA workshop on Professional Presences For Academics and looked at the different social sites on which academics should develop an online presence in order to promote themselves, engage students and employers and publicise their research.
This document discusses how social media can help with self-advancement in research. It describes various social media tools like blogs, Twitter, Facebook, SlideShare, and Pinterest. It explains that using social media can help improve traditional metrics like citations and downloads by increasing online visibility. Social media also enhances professional networking by facilitating real-world interactions from online discussions. The document provides advice for new users, like exploring guides, establishing a professional website, finding relevant conversations, and managing information overload. It recommends establishing profiles on LinkedIn, Academia.edu, and ResearchGate to increase findability and exposure.
This is a presentation I gave at the annual meeting of the Society for Experimental Biology 2013 (http://www.sebiology.org/meetings/Valencia/Valencia.html). It contains lots of tips for scientists to use social media appropriately and efficiently. It also highlights examples of social media in academia and types of possible content.
Oh, The Places You'll Go: Creating Streams of Information for Research Pathfi...Buffy Hamilton
Presented to NEFLIN December 16, 2010 via online webinar. Resources for this webinar are available at http://theunquietlibrarian.wikispaces.com/research-pathfinders-neflin2010
Using emerging technologies for open access Best practices for dissemination ...Tiffini Travis
Now that you have created digital projects, how do you generate traffic and reach users that are not starting their research on your library page? This presentation is designed to explore ways to market digital library projects.
research pathfinders 2.0: collaborating to create information streams for s...Buffy Hamilton
Presentation about collaboration and research pathfinders for Dr. Katherine Mason's TOSS/preservice teachers at Kennesaw State University, April 8, 2009.
Presented at the BIGGER 2009 Bibliographic Instruction Group for Georgia’s Eastern Region
Hosted by Zach S. Henderson Library, Georgia Southern University, Statesboro, GA by Buffy Hamilton. Resources are available at http://theunquietlibrarian.wikispaces.com/bigger2009 .
Using Social Media to Increase your Research ImpactMichelle Dalton
This document discusses how using social media can help increase the impact of research. It recommends blogging to build reputation, using Twitter for dissemination and engagement, and tracking altmetrics to measure different types of impact beyond citations. Altmetrics can provide real-time indicators of a paper's impact and capture how research is engaging various audiences. In the future, more types of scholarly contributions will be tracked and valued, beyond traditional citations. Social media is a way for researchers to promote their work, engage with other experts, and discover new topics and potential collaborators.
There are lots of ways that you can use blogging platforms to share your expertise or experiences, so it is important to think strategically about what you want to achieve and how blogging can help you develop as a researcher.
Part of my presentation on how media specialists can use Web 2.0 tools to rev up their research pathfinders and to help students develop their own research portals. Please see http://theunquietlibrarian.wikispaces.com/researchpathfinders2oh .
Science dissemination 2.0: Social media for researchers (MTM-MSc 2022)Xavier Lasauca i Cisa
In this workshop (Master in Translational Medicine-MSc, University of Barcelona's Faculty of Medicine-Hospital Clínic, 25 May 2022) I summarised the benefits which can be gained from use of social media (specially Twitter, blogs and other networks and repositories) to support research activities, and I provided examples of these socialnetwork sites as tools for scientific communication, as well as resources to increase the diffusion, visibility and impact of the scientific production. Structure of the lecture: Introduction,The digital revolution, Altmetrics, Open science, Active listening, Twitter, Professional networking, Blogging, Sharing, Digital identity building, References to deepen and Conclusions.
A workshop from the MmIT 2016 conference "Digital Citizenship - What is the library's role?" held in Sheffield from 12-13 September 2016.
Changes in scholarly publishing have created a requirement for authors to leverage multiple digital tools in order to build their profile, identity, scholarship and impact within and beyond their institutions. This workshop provided an opportunity for delegates to discuss and reflect on tools which can be used to build an online scholarly presence.
Digital Scholarship: building an online scholarly presenceAlison McNab
This document discusses building an online scholarly presence and digital scholarship. It provides an overview of changes in scholarly publishing and opportunities for open access, open science, and digital research. It discusses tools for finding open access research and measuring research impact. The document also provides guidance on creating an online identity through profiles, collaborations, and disseminating work. Tips are offered on boosting citations and visibility through social media and other online platforms. Throughout, various resources and case studies are referenced to illustrate best practices in digital scholarship.
Disseminating Research and Managing Your Online Reputation Katja Reuter, PhD
This slide deck was presented at the 2017 ACR/ARHP Annual Meeting. It provided a general overview of the topic and addresses the following learning objectives include: (1) Understand the potential and limitations of digital dissemination of research; (2)
Understand relevant health content regulations, guidelines and ethics, (3) Understand the concept of and tools for measuring the results of one’s digital efforts, and (4) Understand the concept of and tools for online reputation management.
Introduction to Social Media for ResearchersHelen Dixon
Slides from the Introduction to Social Media for Researchers course produced by Dr Helen Dixon for Postgraduate Research Students at Queen's University Belfast.
This document discusses new media and digital research literacies. It describes various digital tools and platforms for scholarly communication and research dissemination, including blogs, social networks, slidesharing, and altmetrics. It also addresses how digital technologies can transform research through features like replicability, mutability, connectivity, and portability. Deeper issues are explored around what constitutes "digital" and how digital technologies may alter social interactions and literacies.
1) The document discusses using social media as a tool for researchers. It outlines researchers' typical views of social media as time-consuming and irrelevant for professional use.
2) Alternative metrics and scholarly collaboration networks are presented as ways to track attention and discover content online. Examples of metrics for articles are shown.
3) The document concludes with tasks for participants to check their online profiles, consider strategic social media use, and access additional homework materials.
This document discusses new digital research literacies for legal educators. It outlines scholarly peer networks like SSRN and ResearchGate that can help build an academic profile. Publishing platforms like blogs, slideshares, and Twitter are discussed as ways to disseminate research. The document also discusses altmetrics as an alternative to traditional metrics like citation counting and journal impact factors. It provides examples of how digital research can transform features like replicability, mutability, and connectivity. Finally, it encourages legal educators to engage with emerging technologies to collaborate openly and consider diverse voices.
Altmetrics Day Workshop - Internet Librarian International 2014Andy Tattersall
Altmetrics in the Academy - Implementing strategies in the library for better academic engagement, dissemination and measurement
Workshop abstract:
Altmetrics are increasingly gaining support and interest as an alternative way of disseminating and measuring scholarly output. Championed by early career researchers, librarians and information professionals, Altmetrics are to research as MOOCs are to learning. Like MOOCs most still do not understand their potential or how they could fit with or replace existing modes of delivery and assessment.
The first half of the workshop will help delegates gain an understanding of what Altmetrics are and how they can fit within academic library services. The second half of the session will deliver case studies, tools and techniques to help LIS professionals encourage better usage of Altmetrics.
10:00: What do you want from the day? What are your experiences of Altmetrics
10.40am: Altmetrics: an overview or Altmetrics and the day/where are we now?
A history, roadmap, how it fits in
11 am: Altmetrics within institutions: data, IR integration/other tools/library catalogue integration
what data is there? coverage of articles/datasets/other research outputs, mendeley demographic data
case studies of uses
examples of IR integration/motivations
primo/summon/other ones..
altmetric for institutions - integration with existing platforms
free explorer (and we’ll explore the data using this later)
11.30 Break
12.00pm Altmetrics in the Academy - getting academics and librarians on board
12.40 Brainstorming session: Value in Altmetrics: what questions do people have around this? what are their biggest concerns?
13.00 Lunch
2 pm: Getting familiar with the tools - practical session experimenting with the Altmetric explorer - half an hour (set tasks - eg create a list, pull out the most interesting mentions)
Good practice, guidelines, tips
2:45pm: At the coal face - experiences of a researcher using Altmetrics in practice
3.30pm: Break
3.45 pm: Getting mobile, how using mobile apps can help you engage more with Altmetrics
4.05 pm What’s on the horizon? What does the future for scholarly dissemination and impact.
4.40 wrap up and questions
Building and Managing Social Media CollectionsJason Casden
Presenters:
Laura Wrubel
Jason Casden
Presented at DLF Forum 2015 on October 27th, 2015.
As venues for discourse and creation, social media platforms such as Twitter and Instagram are important source material for scholarly research. Future access to social media data will allow researchers to develop historical assessments based on materials representing the voices of a large and diverse set of participants. Much of this critical and ephemeral content may be lost if cultural heritage institutions are not collecting and preserving it, yet creating and managing these collections presents challenges around collecting mechanisms, curation, legal and ethical issues, and preservation.
This workshop will include the following components:
• A review of technical tools for collecting and guidelines for selecting an approach that works best for your institution and users
• A guided discussion of ethical and legal considerations in taking on this work and parallels with established archival practices
• A review of some existing use cases of libraries' social media data collecting followed by a group discussion of possible community-specific use cases and needs for supporting services.
• A demonstration of possible archival collecting workflows using NCSU Libraries' Social Media Combine collecting system (which includes NCSU Libraries' lentil system for Instagram harvesting and George Washington University's Social Feed Manager for Twitter harvesting). Participants who wish to follow along with their own instance may install it ahead of time.
Participants will leave with an awareness of the major components of a new social media collecting program, including available tools, research use cases, ethical and legal considerations, supporting resources, as well as a better understanding of how to integrate social media into existing practices and workflows. There will be opportunities to share collecting ideas with each other at the end of the workshop.
This document discusses how researchers can become successful digital scholars by leveraging online tools and platforms. It provides examples of researchers who have used blogs to secure funding, crowdfunding to support research projects, and social media to disseminate findings and increase the reach and impact of their work. The document also outlines best practices for using tools like altmetrics and analytics platforms to track and measure the online engagement and influence of research.
WEBINAR: Joining the "buzz": the role of social media in raising research vi...HELIGLIASA
Joining the ‘buzz’ : the role of social media in raising research visibility: Traditional bibliometric methods of evaluating academic research, such as journal impact factors and article citations, have been supplemented in the past 5-10 years by the development of altmetrics (alternative metrics/article level metrics). Altmetrics measures aspects of the impact of a work, such as references in data and knowledge bases, article views, downloads and mentions in social media and news media.
This webinar (based on a presentation of the same name at the LIASA conference on 24th September 2014) gives a brief background to altmetrics and demonstrates how Rhodes University, Grahamstown, librarians are using social media to raise the visibility of the research output of their institution.
Presented by Eileen Shepherd, Principal Librarian, Science & Pharmacy, Rhodes University Library
Rethinking Metrics of International Growth and Impact of Open Access Leslie Chan
This document discusses the need to rethink metrics used to measure the impact and growth of open access research, especially from developing countries. Currently, metrics like the Journal Impact Factor prioritize research seen as "new" by Western standards, despite important research being done elsewhere. Open access helps disseminate this diverse research but structural barriers remain. The document calls for aligning funding policies with new, broader metrics of impact that consider local knowledge and problems, in order to build a truly global and equitable scholarly system.
The Digital Academic: The opportunities for scholarly communication, discussi...Andy Tattersall
The document discusses the changing landscape of academic scholarship in the digital age. New opportunities include open access publishing, altmetrics, research data management, and using social media and online platforms to collaborate and disseminate work more broadly. While technologies offer benefits, academics are advised to thoughtfully consider how and why to adopt new tools. Overall, digital tools can help increase the impact and visibility of research if used strategically.
This document discusses how open access and social media can work together to increase the visibility and impact of academic research. It provides examples of how altmetrics, which measure scholarly impact through social media mentions and shares, can supplement traditional bibliometric measures. The presentation then demonstrates how Rhodes University librarians are using Twitter and blogs to promote Rhodes research outputs and raise their online visibility and visibility within relevant scholarly communities. By tagging articles with hashtags and reposting on subject-specific Twitter accounts, the library aims to increase dissemination and discovery of Rhodes University research.
PhD researchers are using social media in various ways to support their academic identities and activities. They engage in practices like updating their profiles, searching for relevant materials, networking to build collaborations, and disseminating their work. Their digital engagement can be conceptualized not through rigid typologies but rather as variations in orientations shaped by individual agency and contexts. Regarding digital identity, PhD researchers navigate disclosing or not disclosing information, weaving or splitting personal and professional identities, and emulating or distancing themselves from successful examples. They search for space in digital engagement by converging or choosing a drop-in approach, and manage their time through tinkering with strategies or fragmenting their engagement for individual or collective benefits.
Similaire à Science dissemination 2.0: Social media for researchers (MTM-MSc 2020) (20)
Presentació de la conferència impartida en el Punt Científic de la Sala Polivalent de Montbau el 9 de gener de 2024 en el marc de les conferències d'Aules d’extensió universitària. Estructura de la conferència:
1- Definició de ciència i ètica i evolució històrica de la relació entre aquests dos conceptes al llarg del temps
2- Revisió de casos recents de males praxis sobre recerca i ètica, i paper dels comitès d’ètica per fer-hi front..
3- Impacte que la IA pot tenir en l’àmbit de l’ètica i la ciència i possibles perills de la utilització de la IA generativa per fer recerca.
4- Conclusions i referències d’articles i webs per aprofundir-hi.
Xarxes socials per al personal investigador. Eines 2.0 per comunicar l'activi...Xavier Lasauca i Cisa
Aquest taller, impartit al Tecnocampus-Mataró de la UPF (21 de març de 2023), tenia per objectiu exposar els beneficis de la utilització dels mitjans de comunicació social (com ara Twitter o els blogs) per part del personal investigador per, d’una banda, comunicar la recerca i socialitzar el coneixement i, de l’altra, millorar la reputació digital del personal investigador i incrementar la difusió, la visibilitat i l’impacte de la seva recerca.
Continguts:
-Introducció
-La revolució digital
-Les mètriques alternatives (Altmetrics)
-Ciència oberta
-Eines per practicar l'escolta activa
-Twitter
-Xarxes acadèmiques per fer networking
-Blogging
-Recursos per compartir el coneixement
-La construcció de la identitat digital
-Referències per aprofundir-hi
-Conclusions.
Recercaires 2.0: Comunicar recerca en l’era de la ciència obertaXavier Lasauca i Cisa
En aquesta ponència, presentada en la taula rodona “Les Biblioteques com a agents clau de la Ciència Oberta”, dintre de la 3a Jornada sobre Ciència Oberta: Biblioteques i Ciència Ciutadana (Museu de Ciències Naturals de Barcelona, 6 d'octubre de 2022), s'exposa per què és important per al personal investigador la comunicació de la recerca utilitzant les xarxes socials, quin és el suport normatiu que acompanya aquest encàrrec de comunicar la recerca i com es pot, des de les biblioteques, donar suport als investigadors per tal de donar compliment a aquest mandat.
Science dissemination 2.0: Social media for researchers. Practical workshop.Xavier Lasauca i Cisa
This practical workshop complements the lecture that I gave in IDIBAPS (Master in Translational Medicine-MSc Cellex, University of Barcelona-Hospìtal Clínic, 11 March 2015) where I summarised the benefits which can be gained from use of social media (specially blogs, Twitter and other socialnetwork sites) to support research activities, and I provided examples of these innovative emerging resources as tools for scientific communication related to translational medicine, as well as discussed their implications for digital scholarship. You can access to the lecture at: http://www.slideshare.net/xavierlasauca/presentacio-master-medtransubrecerca202015
Presentació de la xerrada que vaig impartir el 22 de maig de 2015 a la Facultat de Lletres de la Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, en el marc del seminari sobre "Dinàmiques en/de la xarxa: història i recerca 2.0" organitzat pel Grup de Recerca Manuscrits del Departament d’Història Moderna i Contemporània de la UAB. La presentació mostra alguns exemples que demostren la utilitat dels blogs i eines com ara Twitter i altres xarxes socials i repositoris per, d’una banda, comunicar la recerca i socialitzar el coneixement -especialment en l'àmbit de les humanitats- i, de l’altra, millorar la identitat digital dels investigadors i incrementar la difusió, la visibilitat i l’impacte de la seva recerca.
Presentació de la xerrada que vaig impartir el 13 de maig de 2015 a la Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, en el marc del quart Working Doctoral Group del programa de Doctorat en Sociologia de la UAB. La presentació mostra alguns exemples que demostren la utilitat dels blogs i eines com ara Twitter i altres xarxes socials i repositoris per, d’una banda, comunicar la recerca i socialitzar el coneixement i, de l’altra, millorar la identitat digital dels investigadors i incrementar la difusió, la visibilitat i l’impacte de la seva recerca.
Recull d'una selecció personal de 32 piulades de poesia, amb versos de Vinyoli, M. M. Marçal, Estellés, Abelló, Martí i Pol, Ferrater, Brossa, F. Garriga, D'Efak, Parcerisas.
Las actividades de gestión de redes de un profesor universitario: (auto)promo...Xavier Lasauca i Cisa
Extracto del capítulo 4 del "Manual para los atribulados profesores universitarios" (Los Libros de la catarata), del profesor Carles Ramió (Universitat Pompeu Fabra). Ramió hace un repaso crítico, pero también ameno e, incluso, divertido, sobre las competencias que debe desarrollar un profesor universitario. Ha sido un placer y un privilegio poder colaborar con el profesor Ramió en la elaboración de este capítulo, destinado a las competencias 2.0 que debe dominar un profesor universitario para ejercer la (auto)promoción de su investigación, practicar la escucha activa, cultivar el networking e incrementar su reputación digital.
Presentació de la xerrada que vaig impartir el 27 de novembre de 2014 a la Universitat Oberta de Catalunya, convidat per l'per l’Oficina de Suport a la Recerca i la Transferència, en el marc del cicle "Dijous amb l’OSRT". La presentació mostra alguns exemples que demostren la utilitat dels blogs i eines com ara Twitter i altres xarxes socials i repositoris per, d’una banda, comunicar la ciència i socialitzar el coneixement i, de l’altra, millorar la identitat digital dels investigadors i incrementar la difusió, la visibilitat i l’impacte de la seva recerca.
Presentació de la xerrada que vaig impartir el 3 de novembre de 2014 a l'Institut d'Estudis Catalans, en el marc de les tertúlies que organitzen la Institució Catalana d’Estudis Agraris i l’Associació Catalana de Ciències de l’Alimentació. La presentació mostra alguns exemples que demostren la utilitat dels blogs i eines com ara Twitter i altres xarxes socials per, d’una banda, comunicar la ciència i socialitzar el coneixement i, de l’altra, incrementar la difusió, la visibilitat i l’impacte de la recerca. També tracta l'àmbit de les xarxes socials i la salut, i finalment es fa ressò de la transformació 2.0 de la nostra Administració.
Presentació de la xerrada que vaig impartir el 19 de maig de 2014 a la Universitat de Vic, en el marc dels seminaris que organitza l'Escola Politècnica Superior de la UVic (EPS Seminars). La presentació mostra alguns exemples que demostren la utilitat dels blogs i eines com ara Twitter i altres xarxes socials per, d’una banda, comunicar la ciència i socialitzar el coneixement i, de l’altra, incrementar la difusió, la visibilitat i l’impacte de la recerca.
Xarxes socials i revistes científiques, com difondre la recercaXavier Lasauca i Cisa
Presentació de la xerrada que vaig impartir el 25 d'abril de 2014 a l'Escola d'Administració Pública de Catalunya sobre com com els blogs i les xarxes socials estan transformant les publicacions científiques, sobretot pel que fa a la seva difusió, visibilitat i impacte.
Presentació de la xerrada, impartida a l’Escola d’Administració Pública de Catalunya el 8 de gener de 2014, sobre com els blogs i les xarxes socials estan transformant les publicacions acadèmiques, sobretot pel que fa a la seva difusió, visibilitat i impacte. També s’argumenta la utilitat de la presència de l’Administració a les xarxes socials per donar suport institucional a les publicacions editades per les diferents unitats administratives.
STUDY ON THE DEVELOPMENT STRATEGY OF HUZHOU TOURISMAJHSSR Journal
ABSTRACT: Huzhou has rich tourism resources, as early as a considerable development since the reform and
opening up, especially in recent years, Huzhou tourism has ushered in a new period of development
opportunities. At present, Huzhou tourism has become one of the most characteristic tourist cities on the East
China tourism line. With the development of Huzhou City, the tourism industry has been further improved, and
the tourism degree of the whole city has further increased the transformation and upgrading of the tourism
industry. However, the development of tourism in Huzhou City still lags far behind the tourism development of
major cities in East China. This round of research mainly analyzes the current development of tourism in
Huzhou City, on the basis of analyzing the specific situation, pointed out that the current development of
Huzhou tourism problems, and then analyzes these problems one by one, and put forward some specific
solutions, so as to promote the further rapid development of tourism in Huzhou City.
KEYWORDS:Huzhou; Travel; Development
UR BHatti Academy dedicated to providing the finest IT courses training in the world. Under the guidance of experienced trainer Usman Rasheed Bhatti, we have established ourselves as a professional online training firm offering unparalleled courses in Pakistan. Our academy is a trailblazer in Dijkot, being the first institute to officially provide training to all students at their preferred schedules, led by real-world industry professionals and Google certified staff.
Science dissemination 2.0: Social media for researchers (MTM-MSc 2020)
1. Master in Translational Medicine-MSc
University of Barcelona, 25/5/2020
Science dissemination 2.0
Social media
for researchers
Xavier Lasauca i Cisa
@xavierlasauca
5. • Introduction
• Feedly
• Blogging
• Twitter
• Networking
• Sharing
• Health 2.0
• Digital identity building
• Further reading
• Conclusions
• Questions time
Structure of the session
6. • To get new information
• To increase the impact and visibility of research
papers
• To engage with fellow researchers and meet new
collaborators
• To improve a researcher's public profile, build your on
line reputation and thus competitiveness
• As part of the research process
Using social media can be really beneficial…
https://www.flickr.com/photos/mkhmarketing/8540717756
25. Altmetric is part of the Digital Science portfolio of
companies all working together to help researchers make
a difference.
They think that:
• Authors should be able to see the attention that their
articles are receiving in real-time, and what people
are saying about their work.
• Researchers should be able to see which recent
research their peers think is interesting.
• Publishers should be able to show authors, readers
and their own internal teams the conversations
surrounding their content.
26.
27.
28. Why are many researchers beginning to
embrace altmetrics?
• Track the dissemination of research beyond academia
• Show the attention, reception, and response to a published
work prior to it being cited
• Can be applied to non-traditional research outputs like data-
sets and blog posts
• Show research impact in real-time — scholars and journals
don’t have to wait for their score to be released, like in the
Journal Citation Reports
Source: Enter Alternative Metrics: Indicators that capture the value of research and
richness of scholarly discourse
29.
30. • Adams J, Loach T. (2015). Altmetric mentions and the communication
of medical research.
• Maggio LA, Leroux T, Meyer HS, Artino AR. (2018). Exploring the
relationship between altmetrics and traditional measures of
dissemination in health professions education.
• Wooldridge J, King MB. (2018). Altmetric scores: An early indicator of
research impact.
• Lemke S., Peters I., Mazarakis A. (2019, March 20). “If you use social
media then you are not working” – How do social scientists perceive
altmetrics and online forms of scholarly communication? [Blog post].
• Williams C. (2020, February 19). The altmetrics of Coronavirus – How
research has shaped our understanding [Blog post].
References about altmetrics
33. Publications + Research Data Accessible
Reproducibility
Reuse of results
Transparency
Visibility
Impact
Scientific progress
34. “Science is moving towards a
greater openness, in terms of not
just data but also publications,
computer code and workflows.
Yet researchers who are learning
to navigate the open-science
arena face a thicket of thorny
issues. “
Nature 569, 445-447 (2019)
doi: 10.1038/d41586-019-01506-x
39. • Public Consultation: ‘Science 2.0’: Science in Transition. European Commission
(EC). 2014
• Communicating EU research and innovation guidance for project participants.
EC. 2014
• Emerging reputation mechanisms for scholars. EC. 2015
• Making Open Science a Reality. OECD. 2015
• Open Innovation, Open Science, Open to the World: a vision for Europe. EC. 2016
• Next generation metrics. EC. 2017
• Providing researchers with the skills and competencies they need to practice
Open Science. EC. 2017
• Evaluation of research careers fully acknowledging Open Science practices.
Rewards, incentives and/or recognition for researchers practicing Open Science.
EC. 2017
• H2020 Programme. Guidance. Social media guide for EU funded R&I projects
EC. 2018
• OSPP-REC. Open Science Policy Platform Recommendations. EC. 2018
• Indicator frameworks for fostering open knowledge practices in science and
scholarship . EC. 2018
EU references about open science
40. • Open science: Sharing is caring, but is privacy theft?, David Mehler and Kevin
Weiner. PLOS Neuro Community blog. 2018.
• Qué es la ciencia abierta?, Lluís Anglada and Ernest Abadal. Anuario ThinkEPI, vol.
12. 2018.
• Open science is all very well but how do you make it FAIR in practice?, Rachel Bruce
and Bas Cordewener. JISC blog. 2018.
• Mapping Open Science Tools, Lettie Y. Conrad. The Scholarly Kitchen blog. 2018.
• Monográfico InfoDoc sobre Ciencia Abierta. Universidad de Salamanca. 2018.
• Open Science: Sharing Your Research with the World: MOOC of the University of
Delft. 2018.
• Open Science MOOC: MOOC of the University of Leiden. 2018.
• The Open Science Training Handbook. 2018.
• Una aproximació al concepte de ciència oberta (i 25 recursos per aprofundir-hi),
Xavier Lasauca i Cisa. L’ase quàntic blog. 2018.
• Ciencia abierta. Cómo han evolucionado la denominación y el concepto. Lluís
Anglada and Ernest Abadal. Anales De Documentación, 23(1). 2020.
Other references about open science
41. “This is me and my digital circumstance.”
Miquel Duran
57. Motive A: Visibility Motive B: Networking Motive C: Information
increase own impact connect with peers be up to date
be found by peers and
other stakeholders
stay in touch with
colleagues
be part of a conversation
present self/own work
be(come) part of a
community
anticipate trends
Source: (Micro)blogging Science? Notes on Potentials and Constraints of New Forms of
Scholarly Communication, by Cornelius Puschmann
60. Ready to become a blogger?
http://www.fromthelabbench.com/from-the-lab-bench-science-blog/blogging-tips-for-science-bloggers-from-science-bloggers
61. Blogging Tips for Science Bloggers
• Covering the basics of new scientific research papers is a
good starting point.
• Let your voice be heard.
• Your blog will evolve over time...
• Focus on a few key topics.
• Make your science blog a place for open dialogue.
• Highlight what the real 'open questions' are in your area of
science.
• Use visuals!
• Connect with other bloggers on Twitter.
• Cite your sources.
• Respect your audience.
• ALWAYS do a last check for grammar and spelling before
clicking 'publish'.
Blogging Tips for Science Bloggers, From Science Bloggers. From the Lab Bench Blog.
68. • LSE Impact Blog. (2012, February 24). Five minutes with Patrick Dunleavy
and Chris Gilson: “Blogging is quite simply, one of the most important
things that an academic should be doing right now”. [Blog post].
• Dunleavy, P. (2014, December 28). Shorter, better, faster, free: Blogging
changes the nature of academic research, not just how it is
communicated [Blog post].
• Dunleavy, P. (2016, January 25). How to write a blogpost from your
journal article in eleven easy steps. [Blog post].
• Carrigan, M. (2016, April 26) 40 reasons why you should blog about your
research [Blog post].
• Mollett A., Brumley C., Gilson C., Williams S. (2017, May 25). So you’ve
decided to blog? These are the things you should write about. [Blog
post].
http://maxpixel.freegreatpicture.com/Internet-Report-Information-Blogging-Blogger-Blog-970722
References about blogging
82. • As a source of information: it’s a great way
to get information you otherwise
wouldn’t.
• As a tool to disseminate our research: the
way we translate information is changing.
• For lecturers, Twitter can contribute to
discussions and deepen understanding.
• At conferences, Twitter is invaluable for
stimulating discussion and finding out
what is happening in other sessions.
https://www.flickr.com/photos/47400163@N05/7846842772
Why a researcher 2.0 should use Twitter?
89. Microblogging Tips for Science Twitterers
• Make content of value and easy to read!
• Add an image and fill the bio of your profile.
• To select followers, take a look to a researcher’s profile
with the same interests as you.
• Structure of the tweet: text + URL + hashtags.
• Be very careful with spelling.
• Include an image or a video.
• Content: dissemination of papers published recently,
conferences, congresses, grants, news, blog posts…
• Try to tweet regularly.
• Publish according to timezone of target audience.
• Reply to mentions!
• Monitor your activity with Tweetdeck or Hootsuite.
• Organize the profiles that you are interested in by lists.
94. • Emily S. Darling et al (2013). The role of twitter in the life cycle of a scientific
publication.
• Qing Ke, Yong-Yeol Ahn and Cassidy R. Sugimoto (2017). A systematic
identification and analysis of scientists on Twitter.
• Monya Baker (2015). Social media: A network boost.
• Wheeler, T. (2015, August 21). Permission to tweet? The underlying principles of
good science communication are all about sharing. [Blog post].
• Haustein, S. & Costas, R. (2015). Identifying Twitter audiences: who is tweeting
about scientific papers?
• Ortega, JL. (2017, December 4). Academic journals with a presence on Twitter
are more widely disseminated and receive a higher number of citations. [Blog
post].
• Vidal-Alaball, J. et al (2019). A New Tool for Public Health Opinion to Give Insight
Into Telemedicine: Twitter Poll Analysis
References about Twitter
104. “Each of us finds his
unique vehicle for
sharing with others
his bit of wisdom.”
Ram Dass
https://www.flickr.com/photos/wefi_official/26959617928
105. Articles and presentations
(Slideshare, issuu)
Social bookmarking (Diigo)
Images (flickr, Instagram) and videos
(YouTube)
Bibliographic data management
(Zotero, Mendeley)
Video chats (Skype, Google meet)
111. • Gill, J. (2013, 2 January). Six ways to use Google + Hangouts for
academic productivity. [Blog post].
• Noruzi, A. (2017). YouTube in scientific research: A bibliometric
analysis.
• Diner E. (2019, 25 January). Should academics share their
presentations? [Blog post].
• Jorda, K. (2019). From Social Networks to Publishing Platforms: A
Review of the History and Scholarship of Academic Social Network
Sites.
References about connecting and
sharing
116. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/?term=25124281
Based on
observations in this
study and the
increased usage of
social media, we
posit that online
illness reports could
complement
traditional
surveillance systems
by providing near
real-time
information on
foodborne illnesses,
implicated foods
and locations.
119. Strategy
• Define objectives about online presence
(as individual researcher or research group)
• Explore the tools and choose the most
appropriate
• Develop your network
• Encourage feedback and discussion
http://www.flickr.com/photos/ybot84/7850997682/
122. 10 Simple Steps to Building a Reputation
as a Researcher, in Your Early Career
1. Register for an ORCID identifier
2. Register for information hubs: LinkedIN, Slideshare, and a domain name of your
own
3. Register for Twitter
4. Write and share a 1-paragraph bio
5. Describe your research program in 2 paragraph
6. Create a CV and share it
7. Share (on Twitter & LinkedIN) news about something you did or published; an
upcoming event in which you will participate; interesting news and publications in
your field
8. Make writing; data; publication; software available as Open Access
9. Set up tracking of your citations, mentions, and topics you are interested in using
Google scholar and Google alert,
10. Find your Klout score, H-index.
Source:MicahAltman,sBlog
http://nepalireporter.com/21956/paul-van-dyk-returns-uae/
123. Top 10 tips to get started
1. Explore online guides (start with this).
2. Do some “lurking” (look at examples of good practice).
3. Locate pertinent and relevant online sources (e.g. who to follow on
Twitter, interesting bloggers).
4. Start using content aggregation and curation tools (e.g. RSS, Diigo).
5. Identify a few key tools and start with those – know your limits!
6. Develop your network (e.g. LinkedIn, Twitter).
7. Join academic social network sites (e.g. ResearchGate, Mendeley).
8. Create your own website
9. Start blogging and twittering about your research (or whatever else
takes your fancy!).
10. Keep your purpose and audience in mind.
Source:IntroductiontoSocialMediaforresearchers,byGillesCouzin
http://www.forbes.com/pictures/eeel45jfeg/1-tiesto-22-million/
124. “Social media provides more than just a
channel for disseminating personal brand
content: it provides the content itself. In
fact, it is possible to develop a social
media presence without expressing a
single original idea, simply by re-posting
content created by others. This means
that, with relatively minimal effort, users
can use social media platforms to
reinvent themselves.”
Oestreicher-Singer G., Geva H. and Saar-Tsechansky M. (2019, April 29). Building online
personas: Has social media become an exercise in self-branding? . [Blog post]
125. • Konkiel, S. (2016, July 8). A ‘quick and dirty’ guide to building your online
reputation. [Blog post]
• Herman, E. and Nicholas, D. (2019). Scholarly reputation building in the
digital age: an activity-specific approach.
• Social Media in Higher Education: Case Studies, Reflections and Analysis.
Edited by Chris Rowell (2019).
References about digital identity building
131. • Bik HM, Goldstein MC (2013). An Introduction to Social Media for
Scientists
• Digital tools for researchers. Thomas Crouzier.
• Innovations in Scholarly Communication. Universiteit Utrecht.
• Social media en investigación. Lydia Gil.
https://www.flickr.com/photos/frosch50/21492514468
References to deepen
134. “Be open, my friend.”
“Let the contents come to me.“
“Spread the word.“
“Lo bueno, si breve, dos veces bueno.“
“Connect with one another.”
“Each of us finds his unique vehicle for sharing
with others his bit of wisdom.”
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