Talk on Supporting research with open services at the British Library by Sara Gould, Repository Services Lead, Research Services, The British Library. Presented at OpenCon Oxford, 6th December 2019.
Peter Webster - Digital History - 11 June 2013Digital History
The document discusses web archives as a new source of information for historians. It provides examples of tools that can be used to archive websites yourself. It then summarizes the UK Web Archive, a collection of over 13,000 archived UK websites totaling 20TB. The archive is a collaboration between the British Library, National Library of Wales, and JISC. The document outlines some of the datasets available from the UK Web Archive that have been generated for research purposes and provides examples of search tools that can be used to explore the archived websites. It concludes by discussing some of the methodological challenges in using web archives as historical sources.
An introduction to the British Library's digital collections, resources and partnerships. Presented at the 'Discovering Collections, Discovering Communities' 2015 conference (Salford, 13 October 2015)
The document summarizes the origins and history of the British Library. It discusses how the British Library was formed from the merging of the British Museum Library in 1753, the Patent Office Library in 1855, and the establishment of the British Library as an independent entity in 1973. It also describes the British Library's main locations over time, including its current location at St. Pancras opened in 1997, as well as its science reading rooms and facility in Boston Spa. Finally, it provides information about the British Library's digital services and online resources.
The document summarizes the history and origins of the British Library. It discusses how the British Library was formed from the merging of the British Museum Library in 1753, the Patent Office Library in 1855, and the establishment of the British Library as an independent entity in 1973. It provides information about the library's locations over time, including its current main location at St. Pancras which opened in 1997, and describes some of its key collections and online services available today.
Peter webster interrogating the archived uk webDigital History
This document summarizes a project that analyzes the JISC UK Web Domain Dataset from 1996-2013 to understand the development of UK web space over time. The project aims to establish frameworks for analyzing web archives and explore ethical implications. It will produce tools to support analysis, case studies across disciplines, and training materials. The dataset contains around 300 million resources from the UK web captured by the Internet Archive, but lacks metadata about subjects and dates. The project highlights the value of web archives as historical sources.
The Keepers Registry monitors the digital preservation of journals worldwide by aggregating archiving status data from various archiving agencies. It shares this data with scholars, libraries, and publishers to support archiving efforts for endangered publications. The registry currently tracks information on over 50,000 journal titles. In the future, the Keepers Registry aims to enhance the metadata it collects on archived content and integrate more fully with its ETAS service to provide publishers an archiving referral service. It also seeks to support the preservation of open access journals.
Peter Webster - Digital History - 11 June 2013Digital History
The document discusses web archives as a new source of information for historians. It provides examples of tools that can be used to archive websites yourself. It then summarizes the UK Web Archive, a collection of over 13,000 archived UK websites totaling 20TB. The archive is a collaboration between the British Library, National Library of Wales, and JISC. The document outlines some of the datasets available from the UK Web Archive that have been generated for research purposes and provides examples of search tools that can be used to explore the archived websites. It concludes by discussing some of the methodological challenges in using web archives as historical sources.
An introduction to the British Library's digital collections, resources and partnerships. Presented at the 'Discovering Collections, Discovering Communities' 2015 conference (Salford, 13 October 2015)
The document summarizes the origins and history of the British Library. It discusses how the British Library was formed from the merging of the British Museum Library in 1753, the Patent Office Library in 1855, and the establishment of the British Library as an independent entity in 1973. It also describes the British Library's main locations over time, including its current location at St. Pancras opened in 1997, as well as its science reading rooms and facility in Boston Spa. Finally, it provides information about the British Library's digital services and online resources.
The document summarizes the history and origins of the British Library. It discusses how the British Library was formed from the merging of the British Museum Library in 1753, the Patent Office Library in 1855, and the establishment of the British Library as an independent entity in 1973. It provides information about the library's locations over time, including its current main location at St. Pancras which opened in 1997, and describes some of its key collections and online services available today.
Peter webster interrogating the archived uk webDigital History
This document summarizes a project that analyzes the JISC UK Web Domain Dataset from 1996-2013 to understand the development of UK web space over time. The project aims to establish frameworks for analyzing web archives and explore ethical implications. It will produce tools to support analysis, case studies across disciplines, and training materials. The dataset contains around 300 million resources from the UK web captured by the Internet Archive, but lacks metadata about subjects and dates. The project highlights the value of web archives as historical sources.
The Keepers Registry monitors the digital preservation of journals worldwide by aggregating archiving status data from various archiving agencies. It shares this data with scholars, libraries, and publishers to support archiving efforts for endangered publications. The registry currently tracks information on over 50,000 journal titles. In the future, the Keepers Registry aims to enhance the metadata it collects on archived content and integrate more fully with its ETAS service to provide publishers an archiving referral service. It also seeks to support the preservation of open access journals.
The document discusses the potential value of text and data mining UK theses. It notes that UK theses represent unique cutting-edge research not published elsewhere. The EThOS database contains metadata on over 430,000 UK theses totaling around 6 million pages of research annually. Several examples are provided of text and data mining projects that have extracted useful information from UK theses, such as identifying trends in dementia research and discovering new chemical compounds. While thesis metadata is openly available, accessing the full texts requires permission due to copyright. Overall, the document argues that UK theses represent a valuable untapped resource for text and data mining research.
This document provides an overview of legal research sources available at the Durham University Library. It discusses effective search strategies for databases like Westlaw and Lexis, and sources for finding legislation, cases, and journals. The library catalog allows users to search for books and connect to e-resources. Other sources mentioned include the Law Commission, Hansard, newspapers, and Discover for searching across library collections. Help is available from the enquiries desk, online, or from the Academic Support Team leader Richard Pears.
The document discusses opportunities for academic libraries presented by new physical builds and shared services environments. It notes that deeper cooperation across institutions is needed to achieve significant cost savings while developing new services. Case studies from the University of Stirling describe new library builds that provide better collaboration spaces and integrate services like an enterprise zone and archives. The document advocates for shared procurement, licensing, collections, and staff development to help libraries meet financial challenges. It also discusses opportunities from open access repositories and the SCONUL shared library management system project.
Making best use of Jisc eCollections: Historical Texts, Journal Archives and ...Jisc
Led by Hazel White, account manager and Scott Gibbens, senior service manager (Jisc eCollections) - both Jisc.
in this session you’ll hear about how you can make best use of Jisc eCollections: Historical Texts, Journal Archives and MediaHub.
The UK Medical Heritage Library contains 10 highly searchable collections from various institutions focused on medical history. The collections contain rare works on topics like anatomy, obstetrics, tropical medicine, early women physicians, and the beginnings of fields like anesthesia and epidemiology. Visualization tools are being developed to help users explore the collections and uncover connections between historical works, institutions, people, and topics across the diverse content spanning languages, time periods, and perspectives.
British Library Labs, Aly Conteh, Digitisation Programme Manager at British L...The European Library
The British Library Labs project encourages researchers and developers to conduct research and development using the British Library's digital collections. It receives funding from The Andrew Mellon Foundation. The project aims to create an environment for intensive work with digital collections, support innovative uses of the collections through competitions and events, and produce case studies of the research. It provides access to datasets such as books, images, and web archives for text mining, visualization, and other research methods. Two current projects through the Labs involve mixing digital collections like a DJ mixes music and generating samples of 19th century texts that represent the distribution of parameters in bibliographic catalogs.
Mike Mertens, Deputy Executive Director and Data Services Manager, RLUKThe European Library
RLUK became members of The European Library to extend their work on discovery and access from a national to an international context. This would ensure their members' collections are better known through new modes of discovery and linked open data. It provides an additional service to members at no extra cost, broadens the audience of collections beyond higher education, and increases public benefit. Membership offers opportunities for new partnerships, lobbying, and sharing best practices with European libraries through closer collaboration.
Connecting Collections, March 2010. Almut Grűner, UKMCG Medicine At The MoviesCollections Trust
A presentation by Almut Grűner, CEO of the Thackray Museum and Chair of the UK Medical Collections Group, given at the Connecting Collections event, 5 March 2010, BT Centre, London.
Making monographs available: OAPEN Library, Ronald Snijder, Technical Coordin...The European Library
- The OAPEN Library aims to address the declining sales of monographs by providing open access to peer-reviewed academic books. It currently contains over 1,700 books across many subjects and languages.
- Connecting the OAPEN Library to other databases and library systems is crucial. Usage data from 2012-2013 showed nearly 1 million downloads from almost 400,000 unique visitors, with most coming from academic institutions.
- Providing open access to monographs through a collection like the OAPEN Library may be a promising solution to issues facing the traditional monograph publishing model.
This document discusses the roles that libraries can play in supporting researchers. It outlines challenges around digital preservation such as hardware and software obsolescence. It also discusses how the British Library actively preserves digital content through projects like the Flashback Project. The document then examines thesis workflows and how they are becoming more diverse with different file formats. It argues libraries need to more proactively support PhD students through the whole research process. Finally, it proposes roles for libraries at the institutional and national level, including advocacy, infrastructure support, training, and engaging with services like web archives.
Reports from the UKMHL and Historical Texts live lab Jisc
Melissa Terras presented on her work with the UK Medical Heritage Library live lab. She directed a project that analyzed over 60,000 books from the British Library dated between the 17th-19th centuries totaling 224GB of data. Using high performance computing at UCL, she and 4 humanities researchers explored computational queries to answer specific research questions about the texts. The event was hosted by Jisc and the Wellcome Library, and thanked various project team members and consultants.
Lorna Hughes, 'Welsh Newspapers Online' presented at Europeana Newspapers Information Day, ‘Enabling Access to Digitised Historic Newspapers’
British Library, June 9th 2014 #UKinfday
The document announces the launch of Welsh Newspapers Online, a digital archive of over 130,000 newspaper pages from Wales that will be indexed by the Europeana Newspapers project. By sharing the Welsh newspaper collection internationally, it will provide new contexts for research, help expose Welsh language and history, and allow Wales to contribute to the growing critical mass of newspaper content available through Europeana to benefit education, creative industries, and research across Europe. The Welsh Newspapers collection is well positioned technically and topically to be a valuable addition to the Europeana Newspapers index.
Presentation delivered by Gabi Lombardo (European Alliance for SSH), on 25 August 2021, as part of ‘Open Access and the Humanities: A dialogue on future directions for Ireland’, an online workshop hosted by Ireland’s National Open Research Forum (NORF) and the Irish Humanities Alliance (IHA) for researchers in the Arts, Humanities and Social Sciences.
Tanya Szrajber, The British Museum Collection DatabaseAndrew Prescott
Jane Doe (JDoe@thebritishmuseum.ac.uk)
Thank you for your interest in the British Museum collection database. Please get in touch if you have any other questions.
The document discusses the challenges of managing the large and growing amounts of digital data created and collected by the British Museum, including collection data, digital assets, research data, web content, and business records that are in various formats and storage environments and may not have clear documentation on their intended uses and retention periods. It emphasizes the importance of building digital preservation capacity through policies, repositories, workflows, staff support, and cooperation to help data fulfill its purpose of providing evidence and fueling the progress of knowledge and civilization over time.
BL Labs presentation given to the Digital Scholarship Teamlabsbl
The document describes the British Library Labs Digital Scholarship project. The project is funded by the Mellon Foundation for 2 years and aims to encourage scholars to conduct research across the British Library's collections. It will organize competitions and events for researchers, develop new services and tools, and generate case studies from the research. The project manager, Mahendra Mahey, provided details on some of the library's collections that could be used for cross-collection research, such as bibliographic data, web archive data, and digitized books. He encouraged engagement from those responsible for collections and from researchers.
More than just books - British Library Labs Presentation given at MSc Compute...labsbl
The British Library: More than just books
Exploring new ideas and methods to better understand the cultural and historic heritage held by the Library.
MSc CGE: Games Industry Seminar Series 2013-14
Computing, Room NAB 314, New Academic Building,
29 St James Street, Goldsmiths University of London
Mahendra Mahey
Manager of British Library Labs
Tuesday 4th of February 2014, 1400 - 1415
The document discusses the potential value of text and data mining UK theses. It notes that UK theses represent unique cutting-edge research not published elsewhere. The EThOS database contains metadata on over 430,000 UK theses totaling around 6 million pages of research annually. Several examples are provided of text and data mining projects that have extracted useful information from UK theses, such as identifying trends in dementia research and discovering new chemical compounds. While thesis metadata is openly available, accessing the full texts requires permission due to copyright. Overall, the document argues that UK theses represent a valuable untapped resource for text and data mining research.
This document provides an overview of legal research sources available at the Durham University Library. It discusses effective search strategies for databases like Westlaw and Lexis, and sources for finding legislation, cases, and journals. The library catalog allows users to search for books and connect to e-resources. Other sources mentioned include the Law Commission, Hansard, newspapers, and Discover for searching across library collections. Help is available from the enquiries desk, online, or from the Academic Support Team leader Richard Pears.
The document discusses opportunities for academic libraries presented by new physical builds and shared services environments. It notes that deeper cooperation across institutions is needed to achieve significant cost savings while developing new services. Case studies from the University of Stirling describe new library builds that provide better collaboration spaces and integrate services like an enterprise zone and archives. The document advocates for shared procurement, licensing, collections, and staff development to help libraries meet financial challenges. It also discusses opportunities from open access repositories and the SCONUL shared library management system project.
Making best use of Jisc eCollections: Historical Texts, Journal Archives and ...Jisc
Led by Hazel White, account manager and Scott Gibbens, senior service manager (Jisc eCollections) - both Jisc.
in this session you’ll hear about how you can make best use of Jisc eCollections: Historical Texts, Journal Archives and MediaHub.
The UK Medical Heritage Library contains 10 highly searchable collections from various institutions focused on medical history. The collections contain rare works on topics like anatomy, obstetrics, tropical medicine, early women physicians, and the beginnings of fields like anesthesia and epidemiology. Visualization tools are being developed to help users explore the collections and uncover connections between historical works, institutions, people, and topics across the diverse content spanning languages, time periods, and perspectives.
British Library Labs, Aly Conteh, Digitisation Programme Manager at British L...The European Library
The British Library Labs project encourages researchers and developers to conduct research and development using the British Library's digital collections. It receives funding from The Andrew Mellon Foundation. The project aims to create an environment for intensive work with digital collections, support innovative uses of the collections through competitions and events, and produce case studies of the research. It provides access to datasets such as books, images, and web archives for text mining, visualization, and other research methods. Two current projects through the Labs involve mixing digital collections like a DJ mixes music and generating samples of 19th century texts that represent the distribution of parameters in bibliographic catalogs.
Mike Mertens, Deputy Executive Director and Data Services Manager, RLUKThe European Library
RLUK became members of The European Library to extend their work on discovery and access from a national to an international context. This would ensure their members' collections are better known through new modes of discovery and linked open data. It provides an additional service to members at no extra cost, broadens the audience of collections beyond higher education, and increases public benefit. Membership offers opportunities for new partnerships, lobbying, and sharing best practices with European libraries through closer collaboration.
Connecting Collections, March 2010. Almut Grűner, UKMCG Medicine At The MoviesCollections Trust
A presentation by Almut Grűner, CEO of the Thackray Museum and Chair of the UK Medical Collections Group, given at the Connecting Collections event, 5 March 2010, BT Centre, London.
Making monographs available: OAPEN Library, Ronald Snijder, Technical Coordin...The European Library
- The OAPEN Library aims to address the declining sales of monographs by providing open access to peer-reviewed academic books. It currently contains over 1,700 books across many subjects and languages.
- Connecting the OAPEN Library to other databases and library systems is crucial. Usage data from 2012-2013 showed nearly 1 million downloads from almost 400,000 unique visitors, with most coming from academic institutions.
- Providing open access to monographs through a collection like the OAPEN Library may be a promising solution to issues facing the traditional monograph publishing model.
This document discusses the roles that libraries can play in supporting researchers. It outlines challenges around digital preservation such as hardware and software obsolescence. It also discusses how the British Library actively preserves digital content through projects like the Flashback Project. The document then examines thesis workflows and how they are becoming more diverse with different file formats. It argues libraries need to more proactively support PhD students through the whole research process. Finally, it proposes roles for libraries at the institutional and national level, including advocacy, infrastructure support, training, and engaging with services like web archives.
Reports from the UKMHL and Historical Texts live lab Jisc
Melissa Terras presented on her work with the UK Medical Heritage Library live lab. She directed a project that analyzed over 60,000 books from the British Library dated between the 17th-19th centuries totaling 224GB of data. Using high performance computing at UCL, she and 4 humanities researchers explored computational queries to answer specific research questions about the texts. The event was hosted by Jisc and the Wellcome Library, and thanked various project team members and consultants.
Lorna Hughes, 'Welsh Newspapers Online' presented at Europeana Newspapers Information Day, ‘Enabling Access to Digitised Historic Newspapers’
British Library, June 9th 2014 #UKinfday
The document announces the launch of Welsh Newspapers Online, a digital archive of over 130,000 newspaper pages from Wales that will be indexed by the Europeana Newspapers project. By sharing the Welsh newspaper collection internationally, it will provide new contexts for research, help expose Welsh language and history, and allow Wales to contribute to the growing critical mass of newspaper content available through Europeana to benefit education, creative industries, and research across Europe. The Welsh Newspapers collection is well positioned technically and topically to be a valuable addition to the Europeana Newspapers index.
Presentation delivered by Gabi Lombardo (European Alliance for SSH), on 25 August 2021, as part of ‘Open Access and the Humanities: A dialogue on future directions for Ireland’, an online workshop hosted by Ireland’s National Open Research Forum (NORF) and the Irish Humanities Alliance (IHA) for researchers in the Arts, Humanities and Social Sciences.
Tanya Szrajber, The British Museum Collection DatabaseAndrew Prescott
Jane Doe (JDoe@thebritishmuseum.ac.uk)
Thank you for your interest in the British Museum collection database. Please get in touch if you have any other questions.
The document discusses the challenges of managing the large and growing amounts of digital data created and collected by the British Museum, including collection data, digital assets, research data, web content, and business records that are in various formats and storage environments and may not have clear documentation on their intended uses and retention periods. It emphasizes the importance of building digital preservation capacity through policies, repositories, workflows, staff support, and cooperation to help data fulfill its purpose of providing evidence and fueling the progress of knowledge and civilization over time.
BL Labs presentation given to the Digital Scholarship Teamlabsbl
The document describes the British Library Labs Digital Scholarship project. The project is funded by the Mellon Foundation for 2 years and aims to encourage scholars to conduct research across the British Library's collections. It will organize competitions and events for researchers, develop new services and tools, and generate case studies from the research. The project manager, Mahendra Mahey, provided details on some of the library's collections that could be used for cross-collection research, such as bibliographic data, web archive data, and digitized books. He encouraged engagement from those responsible for collections and from researchers.
More than just books - British Library Labs Presentation given at MSc Compute...labsbl
The British Library: More than just books
Exploring new ideas and methods to better understand the cultural and historic heritage held by the Library.
MSc CGE: Games Industry Seminar Series 2013-14
Computing, Room NAB 314, New Academic Building,
29 St James Street, Goldsmiths University of London
Mahendra Mahey
Manager of British Library Labs
Tuesday 4th of February 2014, 1400 - 1415
British library living knowledge cpd25Paul Allchin
The British Library has outlined strategic plans and priorities through 2023 in its Living Knowledge strategy. The strategy focuses on 6 core areas: custodianship, research, business, culture, learning, and international engagement. Major initiatives include digitizing collections, transforming the St. Pancras campus, renewing the Boston Spa facility, and making all digital content accessible. The goals are to preserve the library's collections, support research, engage audiences, and ensure the library remains relevant in the future.
‘Everything Available’ – a vision for the development of the British Library ...Torsten Reimer
Presentation given at the annual RLUK (Research Libraries UK) conference on Thursday 9th March 2017. I discuss the British Library's 'Everything Available' portfolio that aims to transform the Library's research services, in particular around discovery, access and use of content.
British Library Labs Virtual Event - 17 May 2013, 1500GMTlabsbl
Mr. Mahey provides an overview of the British Library Labs project and upcoming competition. The goal of the project is to encourage scholars to conduct research using the Library's digital collections. An initial grant was provided by the Andrew Mellon Foundation. The presentation describes the project team and boards, details of the project and competition, example collections and research methods, and next steps for interested participants. Participants are encouraged to join the mailing list and attend upcoming virtual and in-person events related to the competition.
The document provides an overview of the British Library Labs project in its first year. It discusses key lessons learned including getting content, running the first competition, and other engagement activities. It outlines the various stakeholders involved in Labs, including researchers, developers, curators, and digital collections. Labs aims to encourage research using digital collections through competitions, events, and creating an environment for digital scholarship.
Making the most of metadata Feb 2014 - BNB Linked Data Updatenw13
Presentation given at the 'Making the Most of Metadata' BL Labs event at the British Library, London in February 2014. Provides an update on the BNB LOD service.
‘Everything Available’ – the strategy for the British Library’s research serv...Torsten Reimer
The document outlines the British Library's "Everything Available" strategy for research services in response to disruptions in how libraries operate. The strategy has three main goals: 1) Make all of the Library's collections discoverable and accessible globally; 2) Procure and deliver content through just-in-time models rather than just-in-case; 3) Shift focus from licensed to open content and develop new discovery mechanisms including for data. The strategy's short-term plans include improving discovery, user experience, and open access services while medium-term plans include new infrastructure and shared services. The long-term vision is for exceptional text and data mining capacity and support for the full digital research lifecycle through partnerships.
The document provides an introduction to the British Library and its science collections and services. It summarizes that the British Library has sites in London and Boston Spa that contain collections across all subjects and formats. Readers can register to use the reading rooms and access resources both in print and digitally. The science collections originated from various institutions over time. The document outlines the research resources, tools for discovery, and services available both onsite and offsite.
British Library Labs - Bodleian - University of Oxfordlabsbl
The British Library holds over 150 million items in its collection and is exploring new digital methods to make this cultural heritage more accessible. The presentation discusses the Library's support for digital scholarship through initiatives like British Library Labs, which funds projects to experiment with digital collections. Examples are provided of Labs projects including tools to sample representative texts and mix digital media items. The goal is to engage more researchers through open data and competitions while better understanding how digital tools can unlock new discoveries within the Library's collections.
British Library Labs: Lessons learned in its first yearlabsbl
Presentation given at Online Information 2013
TRACK 2: EXPLOITING SEARCH, RESEARCH & DISCOVERY
Tools and e-resources for researchers
Online Information Show 2013
Victoria Park Plaza Hotel, London, SW1V 1EQ, UK
Wednesday 20th of November, 2013, 1130 - 1200
by Mahendra Mahey, Manager of British Library Labs
British Library Labs - Open University Presentation - 3 April 2014, 1100-1200labsbl
The document summarizes the experiences of the British Library Labs in supporting digital scholarship. It discusses how the British Library works with digital scholars and researchers, providing various resources and tools. The British Library Labs team collaborates with scholars on projects involving digital collections and aims to make more content openly available online through platforms like Flickr. The Labs also runs competitions for researchers to develop tools and applications using library collections.
Ati presentation navigating the bl collections 01rwakefor
This document provides an introduction to the British Library and its science collections and services. It summarizes that the British Library has sites in London and Boston Spa, and collects materials from all subjects and formats through various methods of acquisition. It describes the registration process for readers, access to print and digital resources, research tools available, and services offered both onsite and offsite for accessing and utilizing the collections.
British Library Labs Presentation Given to British Library Stafflabsbl
Presentation given to British Library Staff as part of C21st Curatorship staff talks by Mahendra Mahey (British Library Labs Manager) and Stella Wisdom (Digital Curator)
The document provides an overview of the British Library Labs project and discusses some of the key lessons learned in its first year. It describes British Library Labs as a 2-year project funded by the Andrew Mellon Foundation that encourages scholars to experiment with and research the British Library's digital collections. It discusses the various stakeholders involved, including the project board, advisory board, digital curators, and external researchers. It also outlines some of the engagement activities undertaken by British Library Labs in its first year, such as running its first competition and events.
Similaire à Supporting research with open services at the British Library, Sara Gould, OpenCon Oxford 2019 (20)
Crossref LIVE: The Benefits of Open Infrastructure (APAC time zones) - 29th O...Crossref
In November 2020, Crossref formally adopted the “Principles of Open Scholarly Infrastructure” (POSI). POSI is a list of sixteen commitments that will now guide the board, staff, and Crossref’s development as an organisation into the future.
This webinar took place on the 29th October at 03:00 PM AEST (UTC+10) and covered:
- What are the Principles of Open Scholarly Infrastructure (POSI) and why are they needed?
- Why POSI is important for Crossref and how it will help realise the Research Nexus
- Open metadata and infrastructure services from Crossref
Presented in English by Cameron Neylon, Professor of Research Communications, Centre for Culture and Technology, at Curtin University, Amanda Bartell, Head of Member Experience at Crossref, and Vanessa Fairhurst, Community Engagement Manager at Crossref.
Crossref LIVE Chinese网络研讨会——Crossref简介 – 14 Oct 2021 Crossref
Crossref使研究成果易于查找、引用、链接、评估以及重复利用。我们是一个非营利性会员组织,其存在是为了使学术交流变得更好。
施普林格·自然旗下Atlantis Press图书部门编辑总监、Crossref大使党冉女士将与万方数据的郭晓峰女士携手介绍Crossref的概况,主要包括:
Crossref的简要历史
我们的会员
数字对象唯一标识符(DOI)和元数据的重要性
加入Crossref的好处
如何加入并开始工作
本次网络研讨会与新会员、出版商、研究人员、图书馆员、编辑以及任何想了解如何与Crossref合作的人有关。
本次网络研讨会将以中文进行,包括提问时间共持续60分钟。
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Presented on the 14th October 2021, Ran Dang, Editorial Director of Atlantis Press Books, Springer Nature and Crossref Ambassador, together with Guo Xiaofeng of WanFang Data, provide an overview of Crossref including:
A brief history of Crossref
Our membership
Persistent identifiers (DOI) and the importance of metadata
The benefits of joining Crossref
How to join and get started
This webinar is relevant for new members, publishers, researchers, librarians, editors, and anyone who would like to know more about how to work with Crossref.
The webinar is presented in Chinese and lasts 60 minutes including time for questions.
En este webinario veremos una descripción general de nuestro servicio Crossmark, que incluye:
Qué es Crossmark
Cómo usar el servicio
La importancia de mantener el contenido actualizado
Cómo encontrar más ayuda y soporte
Working with ROR as a Crossref member: what you need to knowCrossref
Webinar focusing on the importance of ROR and how to implement that as a Crossref member.
Covers:
What is ROR?
Why is Crossref supporting ROR?
Publisher use cases for ROR (from Hindawi)
How to become a ROR adopter
Discussion/Q&A
A recording of the presentation is available on the Crossref YouTube channel: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D9Mtqb64OEk
Преимущества и варианты использования метаданных в Crossref / The Value and ...Crossref
Онлайн-трансляция организована при поддержке НЭИКОН в рамках Специального мероприятия “Научная информация и научные ресурсы в условиях локдауна 2020-2021”.
Во время трансляции будут обсуждаться следующие вопросы:
регистрация контента в Crossref;
важность метаданных для Crossref: качество и количество;
как улучшить метаданные?
где получить помощь и поддержку.
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The webinar was held on September 17, 2021 at 10.00 (Moscow time UTC+3).
This online event was organized in collaboration with NEICON and takes place within the framework of the wider conference “Scientific information and scientific resources in the conditions of the lockdown 2020-2021”.
During the webinar we cover:
- Content Registration at Crossref
- The importance of Crossref metadata: Quality and Quantity
- How to improve your metadata
- Where to find further help and support
The webinar lasts approximately 60 minutes including time for questions. Presented in Russian.
Seminario web ‘Similarity Check’, en españolCrossref
Similarity Check es una herramienta de Turnitin que ayuda a los editores a detectar plagio mediante la comparación de documentos con una gran base de datos de más de 70 mil millones de páginas web y 135 millones de artículos. Los editores pueden cargar documentos en iThenticate para obtener un informe de similitud que analiza las coincidencias y les ayuda a determinar si existe plagio o no. Cualquier editor puede participar pagando una tarifa administrativa y tarifas de verificación de documentos.
Crossref LIVE Indonesia: One Search Platform (Drs. Muhammad Syarif Bando pres...Crossref
Indonesia One Search merupakan portal satu pintu untuk mencari koleksi publik yang dimiliki perpustakaan dan lembaga penyedia lainnya di Indonesia. Saat ini telah terkumpul lebih dari 10 juta judul koleksi seperti buku, tesis, jurnal, video, gambar, dan dokumen teks lengkap dari berbagai perpustakaan yang tergabung. Indonesia One Search terus dikembangkan untuk menambah fitur seperti ekstraksi teks penuh, analisis konten, de
Crossref LIVE Indonesia: The Future of Indonesian Journal Policy (with Dr. Lu...Crossref
Dr. Lukman provides an overview of journal publishing in Indonesia. Presented in Bahasa Indonesian.
This webinar was presented as part of the Crossref LIVE Indonesia webinar series from the 13th - 15th July 2021.
Crossref LIVE Indonesia: The Value and Use of Crossref Metadata, CRLIVE-ID 15...Crossref
This webinar was presented in English by Crossref staff Vanessa Fairhurst and Ginny Hendricks on the 15th July 2021 as part of a series of Crossref LIVE Indonesia webinars.
This webinar covers:
- A quick re-cap of content registration
- What metadata you can send to Crossref
- How your metadata is used in Crossref tools and services and in the wider academic community
- How you can use our Participation Reports tool to assess and improve your metadata records at Crossref
The content is relevant for Crossref members, particularly new members, and anyone who would like to know more about how to work with Crossref and how we fit into the wider scholarly community.
Crossref LIVE Indonesia: Content Registration at Crossref, CRLIVE-ID 14 July ...Crossref
This webinar was presented in English by Crossref staff Vanessa Fairhurst and Amanda Bartell on the 14th July 2021 as part of a series of Crossref LIVE Indonesia webinars.
This webinar covers:
- What is a DOI
- What do we mean by metadata
- Different content types you can register at Crossref
- Different ways for you to register your content at Crossref (including a demo of the web deposit form and OJS Crossref plug-in)
- How to make corrections or additions to your metadata
- What happens if content moves to a different publisher
The content is relevant for Crossref members, particularly new members, and anyone who would like to know more about how to work with Crossref and how we fit into the wider scholarly community.
Crossref LIVE Indonesia: An Introduction to Crossref, CRLIVE-ID 13 July 2021Crossref
This webinar was presented by Crossref staff Vanessa Fairhurst and Rachael Lammey on the 13th July 2021 as part of a series of Crossref LIVE Indonesia webinars.
This webinar covers:
- A brief history of Crossref
- Who are our members
- How to join Crossref
- Persistent identifiers (DOI) and related metadata
- What are the benefits of joining Crossref?
- Why publishers (and other organizations) around the world join Crossref
The content is relevant for Crossref members, particularly new members, and anyone who would like to know more about how to work with Crossref and how we fit into the wider scholarly community.
Crossref İçerik Kaydı Webinarı, Türkçe | Content Registration at Crossref , ...Crossref
Content Registration at Crossref. Webinar held on Tuesday, June 8th at 14:00 Turkey (UTC+3).
Presented by Crossref Turkish Ambassador Haydar Oruç, the webinar included an overview of how to register content at Crossref and the importance and use of scholarly metadata.
Agenda:
- Content registration tools
- Importance of accurate, comprehensive and up-to-date metadata
- How to update and fix metadata records
- Ways to get further help and support
Webinar held on 8 June 2021
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"Çapraz Referans İçerik Kaydı". Webinar 8 Haziran Salı günü Türkiye saati ile 14:00'te (UTC+3) gerçekleştirildi.
Crossref Türkiye Büyükelçisi Haydar Oruç'un yapacağı sunumda; Crossref'e içeriğin nasıl kaydedileceği, bilimsel metadatanın önemi ve kullanımı hakkında genel bir bakış sunulacak ve konular aşağıdaki gibi olacaktır:
- İçerik kaydetme araçları
- Doğru, kapsamlı ve güncel üst verinin önemi
- Meta veri kayıtları nasıl güncellenir ve düzeltilir
- Daha fazla yardım ve destek almanın yolları
Web semineri, Crossref ile nasıl çalışılacağını öğrenmek ve Crossref içeriğini daha geniş akademik toplulukla, özellikle Crossref üyeleriyle (özellikle yeni üyeler) alakalı hale getirmek isteyen herkese açıktır.
Los Metadatos Para la Comunidad de InvestigacionCrossref
Los miembros del equipo de la comunidad Crossref presentarán un taller para discutir:
• Introducción a Crossref
• DOI y registro de contenido
• Los metadatos para la comunidad de investigación
تسجيل المحتوي مع كروس رف – ندوة عبر الانترنت باللغة العربية | Content Registr...Crossref
This webinar was held on Wednesday 17 March 2021 at 14.00 UAE (UTC+4).
Mohamad Mostafa, Publishing Editor at Knowledge E and Crossref Ambassador, provided an overview of how to register content with Crossref including:
- Tools for registering content
- The importance of accurate, comprehensive and up-to-date metadata
- How to make updates and corrections to metadata records
- The importance of conflict and resolution reports
- Ways to get further help and support
This webinar content is relevant for Crossref members, publishing service providers, researchers, librarians, editors, and anyone who would like to know more about how to work with Crossref.
سيقوم محمد مصطفي، محرر النشر لدي نوليدچ إي وسفير كروس رف بتقديم نظرة شاملة حول كيفية تسجيل المحتوى لدى كروس رف تتضمن النقاط التالية:
- أدوات تسجيل المحتوى
- أهمية ان تكون البيانات الوصفية دقيقة، شاملة وحديثة
- كيفية إجراء تحديت وتصحيح للبيانات الوصفية المسجلة سابقًا
- أهمية تقارير المشاركة والتضارب
- طرق طلب المزيد من المساعدة والدعم
المحتوي مناسب لأعضاء كروس رف، ومقدمو خدمات النشر، والباحثين، وأمناء المكتبات والمحررين وكل من لديه الرغبة في معرفة المزيد حول كيفية العمل مع كروس رف.
Presented by Vanessa Fairhurst, Paul Davis and Rachael Lammey on March 3rd 2021.
The webinar covers how to create and correctly display a DOI, the importance of metadata and the various tools for content registration including the web deposit form, Metadata Manager and OJS plug-ins.
This document provides an overview of CrossMark, a CrossRef initiative to help readers determine if a scholarly work has been updated. CrossMark uses a logo to identify publisher-maintained versions of content. Clicking the logo tells the reader if there have been any updates and directs them to the publisher's version. It can also display additional publication record information like funding sources, conflicts of interest, or peer review details. The CrossMark pilot launched in summer 2011 and is being implemented more widely, with marketing support and training webinars for publishers.
Participation reports webinar December 2020Crossref
During this webinar we’ll take you on a tour of our Participation Reports, which give Crossref members and the wider scholarly community a clear, visual snapshot of the metadata that each one of our members is registering with Crossref.
Registering richer metadata makes your content more useful and more discoverable to researchers and the wider scholarly community. This webinar was held on 8th December 2020.
Participation reports webinar November 2020Crossref
During this webinar we’ll take you on a tour of our Participation Reports, which give Crossref members and the wider scholarly community a clear, visual snapshot of the metadata that each one of our members is registering with Crossref.
Registering richer metadata makes your content more useful and more discoverable to researchers and the wider scholarly community. This webinar was held on 18 November 2020,
Introduction to Crossmark/Crossmark: O que é e como usarCrossref
"Crossmark: O que é e como usar" – O webinário será apresentado em português (do Brasil) - 14 de Outubro de 2020.
O Crossmark oferece às revistas uma forma padronizada de comunicar importantes atualizações no conteúdo e garantir que as informações do artigo divulgado são atuais e seguras.
A apresentação mostrará o que é necessário para implementar o Crossmark, requisitos técnicos e, claro, oportunidade para sanar dúvidas.
O conteúdo é interessante para quem é membro da Crossref, empresas de serviços editoriais, pesquisadores, bibliotecários, agências de fomento e membros de comitês editoriais de periódicos científicos.
A apresentação ficará por conta dos embaixadores da Crossref no Brasil, Bruna Erlandsson e Edilson Damasio.
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"Crossmark: What it is and how to use it" - The webinar will be presented in Brazilian Portuguese - October 14, 2020.
Crossmark provides publishers with a standardized way of communicating important updates to content and ensuring that the information in the published article is current and secure.
The presentation will show what is needed to implement the Crossmark, technical requirements and the opportunity to answer questions.
The content is interesting for those who are members of Crossref, publishing services companies, researchers, librarians, funding agencies and members of editorial committees of scientific journals.
The presentation will provided by Crossref ambassadors in Brazil, Bruna Erlandsson and Edilson Damasio.
Webinar held 6 October 2020.
The webinar is relevant for new and existing Crossref members, publishers, editors, researchers, service
providers, hosting platforms, funders, librarians; really anyone interested in finding out a bit more about what
Crossref is and does.
This webinar covers:
• How to register content with Crossref
• How to make updates to your metadata in order to make changes, corrections, or to add more detail
• Participation reports
• Additional services and where to find help.
Sessions presented in English by Crossref staff.
Suzanne Lagerweij - Influence Without Power - Why Empathy is Your Best Friend...Suzanne Lagerweij
This is a workshop about communication and collaboration. We will experience how we can analyze the reasons for resistance to change (exercise 1) and practice how to improve our conversation style and be more in control and effective in the way we communicate (exercise 2).
This session will use Dave Gray’s Empathy Mapping, Argyris’ Ladder of Inference and The Four Rs from Agile Conversations (Squirrel and Fredrick).
Abstract:
Let’s talk about powerful conversations! We all know how to lead a constructive conversation, right? Then why is it so difficult to have those conversations with people at work, especially those in powerful positions that show resistance to change?
Learning to control and direct conversations takes understanding and practice.
We can combine our innate empathy with our analytical skills to gain a deeper understanding of complex situations at work. Join this session to learn how to prepare for difficult conversations and how to improve our agile conversations in order to be more influential without power. We will use Dave Gray’s Empathy Mapping, Argyris’ Ladder of Inference and The Four Rs from Agile Conversations (Squirrel and Fredrick).
In the session you will experience how preparing and reflecting on your conversation can help you be more influential at work. You will learn how to communicate more effectively with the people needed to achieve positive change. You will leave with a self-revised version of a difficult conversation and a practical model to use when you get back to work.
Come learn more on how to become a real influencer!
This presentation by Professor Alex Robson, Deputy Chair of Australia’s Productivity Commission, was made during the discussion “Competition and Regulation in Professions and Occupations” held at the 77th meeting of the OECD Working Party No. 2 on Competition and Regulation on 10 June 2024. More papers and presentations on the topic can be found at oe.cd/crps.
This presentation was uploaded with the author’s consent.
This presentation by OECD, OECD Secretariat, was made during the discussion “Pro-competitive Industrial Policy” held at the 143rd meeting of the OECD Competition Committee on 12 June 2024. More papers and presentations on the topic can be found at oe.cd/pcip.
This presentation was uploaded with the author’s consent.
This presentation by Professor Giuseppe Colangelo, Jean Monnet Professor of European Innovation Policy, was made during the discussion “The Intersection between Competition and Data Privacy” held at the 143rd meeting of the OECD Competition Committee on 13 June 2024. More papers and presentations on the topic can be found at oe.cd/ibcdp.
This presentation was uploaded with the author’s consent.
This presentation by OECD, OECD Secretariat, was made during the discussion “Competition and Regulation in Professions and Occupations” held at the 77th meeting of the OECD Working Party No. 2 on Competition and Regulation on 10 June 2024. More papers and presentations on the topic can be found at oe.cd/crps.
This presentation was uploaded with the author’s consent.
This presentation by Nathaniel Lane, Associate Professor in Economics at Oxford University, was made during the discussion “Pro-competitive Industrial Policy” held at the 143rd meeting of the OECD Competition Committee on 12 June 2024. More papers and presentations on the topic can be found at oe.cd/pcip.
This presentation was uploaded with the author’s consent.
This presentation by Juraj Čorba, Chair of OECD Working Party on Artificial Intelligence Governance (AIGO), was made during the discussion “Artificial Intelligence, Data and Competition” held at the 143rd meeting of the OECD Competition Committee on 12 June 2024. More papers and presentations on the topic can be found at oe.cd/aicomp.
This presentation was uploaded with the author’s consent.
This presentation by Katharine Kemp, Associate Professor at the Faculty of Law & Justice at UNSW Sydney, was made during the discussion “The Intersection between Competition and Data Privacy” held at the 143rd meeting of the OECD Competition Committee on 13 June 2024. More papers and presentations on the topic can be found at oe.cd/ibcdp.
This presentation was uploaded with the author’s consent.
Why Psychological Safety Matters for Software Teams - ACE 2024 - Ben Linders.pdfBen Linders
Psychological safety in teams is important; team members must feel safe and able to communicate and collaborate effectively to deliver value. It’s also necessary to build long-lasting teams since things will happen and relationships will be strained.
But, how safe is a team? How can we determine if there are any factors that make the team unsafe or have an impact on the team’s culture?
In this mini-workshop, we’ll play games for psychological safety and team culture utilizing a deck of coaching cards, The Psychological Safety Cards. We will learn how to use gamification to gain a better understanding of what’s going on in teams. Individuals share what they have learned from working in teams, what has impacted the team’s safety and culture, and what has led to positive change.
Different game formats will be played in groups in parallel. Examples are an ice-breaker to get people talking about psychological safety, a constellation where people take positions about aspects of psychological safety in their team or organization, and collaborative card games where people work together to create an environment that fosters psychological safety.
This presentation by Yong Lim, Professor of Economic Law at Seoul National University School of Law, was made during the discussion “Artificial Intelligence, Data and Competition” held at the 143rd meeting of the OECD Competition Committee on 12 June 2024. More papers and presentations on the topic can be found at oe.cd/aicomp.
This presentation was uploaded with the author’s consent.
The importance of sustainable and efficient computational practices in artificial intelligence (AI) and deep learning has become increasingly critical. This webinar focuses on the intersection of sustainability and AI, highlighting the significance of energy-efficient deep learning, innovative randomization techniques in neural networks, the potential of reservoir computing, and the cutting-edge realm of neuromorphic computing. This webinar aims to connect theoretical knowledge with practical applications and provide insights into how these innovative approaches can lead to more robust, efficient, and environmentally conscious AI systems.
Webinar Speaker: Prof. Claudio Gallicchio, Assistant Professor, University of Pisa
Claudio Gallicchio is an Assistant Professor at the Department of Computer Science of the University of Pisa, Italy. His research involves merging concepts from Deep Learning, Dynamical Systems, and Randomized Neural Systems, and he has co-authored over 100 scientific publications on the subject. He is the founder of the IEEE CIS Task Force on Reservoir Computing, and the co-founder and chair of the IEEE Task Force on Randomization-based Neural Networks and Learning Systems. He is an associate editor of IEEE Transactions on Neural Networks and Learning Systems (TNNLS).
This presentation by Thibault Schrepel, Associate Professor of Law at Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam University, was made during the discussion “Artificial Intelligence, Data and Competition” held at the 143rd meeting of the OECD Competition Committee on 12 June 2024. More papers and presentations on the topic can be found at oe.cd/aicomp.
This presentation was uploaded with the author’s consent.
This presentation by Tim Capel, Director of the UK Information Commissioner’s Office Legal Service, was made during the discussion “The Intersection between Competition and Data Privacy” held at the 143rd meeting of the OECD Competition Committee on 13 June 2024. More papers and presentations on the topic can be found at oe.cd/ibcdp.
This presentation was uploaded with the author’s consent.
This presentation by OECD, OECD Secretariat, was made during the discussion “Artificial Intelligence, Data and Competition” held at the 143rd meeting of the OECD Competition Committee on 12 June 2024. More papers and presentations on the topic can be found at oe.cd/aicomp.
This presentation was uploaded with the author’s consent.
3. www.bl.uk
British Library research
• Exhibitions
• Collections-based research
• Assess & interpret new collection items
• Preservation & conservation
• Big data e.g. Living with Machines
• Library infrastructure – metadata, data exchange, scholarly
comms, web archiving
3
4. www.bl.uk
Open deposit policy for staff
• Wider accessibility of publicly-funded research, combined with
flexible re-use conditions, will raise the social, economic and
cultural impact of UK research
• Requires staff to make research openly available
• ORCiD identifier is encouraged
4
15. Repository aims
• Make Library’s research more discoverable
• Promote the research undertaken by Library staff
• Improve the research profile of individual staff
• Supports BL Open Access policy
• A place to put your research outputs
• Meet funder requirements
• Further collaboration and potential funding opportunities
17. Shared Research Repository: pilot partners
National Museums Scotland Tate British Museum
Museum of London Archaeology
(MOLA)
Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew
19. Tate case study: potential repository content
This is a very rough estimate
of research outputs produced
by Tate or authored by Tate
staff in the last 15 years.
Journal articles 442
Magazine articles 500
Blog articles 28
Books 364
Video recordings 80
Audio recordings 2,500
Exhibition items 1,000
Total c. 5,000
20.
21. Tate: what the repository can help with...
• It allows for:
• rich metadata
• versioning
• link to other datasets
• link to publications
• link to projects
• acknowledgment of multiple funders
• different degrees of accessibility (e.g. private, institutional,
embargoed)
• publishing rich metadata-only records (e.g. files on request)
BL as research organisation – what we’re doing to make outputs more visible & more open
BL services to support researchers, moving increasingly to open
Research underpins all core purposes of the British Library. We play a key role in the UK research community and work with national and international partners to support and stimulate research of all kinds.
We lead and support research projects, supervise a range of collaborative PhDs, research placements and fellowships, and run a regular programme of training events. Our staff have extensive research expertise and we contribute actively to the development of research policy.
Our own research activity
No place to put, record, make available or celebrate staff research; quite hidden.
2018 – Research Services, focus on research infrastructure & support. Get our own approach sorted out first –
Open deposit policy for staff research outputs. Not contractual, highly encouraged.
So we built a repos- more in a minute but first, open services for researchers:
522,964 titles. Every HEI. 56% have FT available. 2-3000 added every month.
208000 held in EThOS – plus links to IRs.
One of BL’s most heavily used services for researchers - >50k theses accessed via EThOS a month.
2. EThOS:
We also have various open research services, providing open access for our users to key research content.
EThOS here … 500k m/d records (a dataset in its own right); 200k files mainly pdf
EThOS is not currently OA – downloads behind a login – but will be in new system.
Note this is based on Ethos data, hence 2018 still coming in.
56% - more than half of all theses ever written are available for immediate d/l. V impressive – v popular service.
Four possible statuses for the full text – change to this display 2 yrs ago was great, now v clear and embargoes correctly displayed (where known)
Dewey > broad subject headings
Dept names, Jacs,, LC all mapped to Dewey
Data.bl.uk – mixed bag, cat cards, keylogging data, csv files of m/d.
Challenge to migrate was size of files. Open datasets available for immediate free download, around 110 sets with total 5TB, ranging from tiny files (folders with lots of tiny files) to 400gb. Breakdown = 30% <10gb; 30% 10 -100gb; 30% >100gb.
Set up by BL Labs, focus is on the datasets – descriptive bibliographic metadata sometimes takes second place to descriptions of file formats, file sizes & best unzipping tools.
All have DOIs assigned by DataCite (BL is UK agency). Current service has issues due to size of files – throttling, multiple warnings of file sizes, zipped files, not findable in google.
Both EThOS and Data.bl.uk in dire need of new platforms.
RECOPY PAGE
Is open – webbpages, fully accessible without barriers. But not a ‘proper’ OA journal – editorial board, clear licence terms articulated.
More imp – not discoverable through research routes – indexing services etc.
BL repo. Currently 500 items, 50+ BL staff.
Learning from HE experience, new for BL
One example of content - bviously for us (and other cultural heritage orgs), exhibitions are an important channel for us to communicate the value of our collections – and an enormous amount of research goes into each one. Exhibition labels, exhibition boards, exhibit lists, associated events can all be recorded here.
The repository system we’re using supports use of UV – ties in nicely with the Library’s participation in the UV programme.
So we need somewhere to do this
BL=IRO – If we are doing this for ourselves, why not offer it as a service for other similarly-placed organisations as well.
Offer shared repos services; benefits – i) combined resource will have more impact & higher volumes of traffic; ii) modern product more suited to range of research (sound, video … geomapping data, code); iii) for others, BL has the expertise and is the logical org to host this; iv) if public funding then mandated OA.
Start with IROs; strong interest, has potential to expand as a service.
There are, of course, several issues, e.g. copyright, image rights, authorship, confidentiality, file type and size… some are common challenges, some others are specific to certain outputs
… but this is the easiest part!
Heavily used Tate website, but house journal and Tate research not discoverable through research channels.
So we are liaising with our UKWA colleagues to adjust settings where needed, then we will work with Jane and her colleagues to get this added into the metadata, by creating a field for an archival URL.
Having a OA Repository is a strong incentive to improve internal practices of data management and stewardship and to allocate more resources into that