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Jane Greenberg and Todd Vision from UNC Chapel Hill to Present "The Dryad Repository: A New Path for Data Publication in Scholarly Communication" on 25 April at OCLC in Dublin, Ohio

The public is invited to attend this free OCLC Research presentation in person or online via WebEx. 

The event schedule is as follows:

The Dryad Repository: A New Path for Data Publication in Scholarly Communication

Jane Greenberg
Professor, School of Information and Library Science, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Founder and Director of the SILS Metadata Research Center

Todd J. Vision
Associate Professor of Biology, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Associate Director for Informatics at the National Evolutionary Synthesis Center

Monday, 25 April 2011

8:30-9:00 a.m. EDT (UTC 12:30:00-13:00)
Coffee and Pastry Reception

9:00-10:30 a.m. EDT (UTC 13:00-14:30)
Presentation and Discussion

OCLC Online Computer Library Center, Inc.
Kilgour Building Auditorium
6565 Kilgour Place
Dublin, OH 43017-3395


Overview of presentation

Dryad is an international repository for data underlying peer-reviewed articles in the basic and applied biosciences. Many datasets collected by academic researchers are not shared with the wider community even after findings based upon them are reported in the literature. Dryad is addressing this shortcoming via a consortium of biology journals, and a model linking the publication of data with the publication of associated scholarly articles. Dryad enables scientists to validate published findings, explore new analysis methodologies, repurpose data for research questions unanticipated by the original authors, and perform synthetic studies. A chief aim is to balance a need for low barriers inviting contribution from scientists and higher-level goals supporting data synthesis. Repository development is ongoing, and coincides with daily curatorial activities and a metadata-intensive research agenda.

This two-part presentation will give an overview of the Dryad repository and cover several research activities. Part one will introduce Dryad and discuss components of the repository's model. Attention will be given to the establishment of a permanent, reciprocal, navigable link between the journal article and the data, and handshaking with more specialized disciplinary databases. Part two will present the metadata curation workflow. This segment will also highlight several metadata research activities, including the HIVE (Helping Interdisciplinary Vocabulary Engineering) initiative, a project funded by the Institute of Museum and Library Services (IMLS) that supports dynamic integration of vocabularies during metadata generation.


About the presenters

Jane Greenberg is a professor at the School of Information and Library Science, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, and she is founder and director of the SILS Metadata Research Center. Her research and teaching focus in the areas of metadata, knowledge organization, and the Semantic Web. She is the principal investigator of the HIVE project, and a co-principal investigator on the Dryad project. She was the 2008 recipient of the Frederick G. Kilgour Award for Research in Library and Information Technology, and the 2010 recipient of the Jesse H. Shera Award for Distinguished Published Research.

Todd J. Vision is an associate professor of Biology at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and the Associate Director for Informatics at the National Evolutionary Synthesis Center. His biological interests include the evolution of genomes and the use of computational methods for reasoning over heterogeneous and qualitative biological data. He is the director of the Dryad digital data repository and is on the leadership team of DataONE, a collaboration among many partner organizations with a focus on the environmental sciences that is funded by the US National Science Foundation (NSF). His recent research in the field of data science is aimed at informing science policy and publication practice, in particular how to address the socio-technical barriers to the reuse of data derived from "small science" research, and how to enable machine reasoning over qualitative biological data.

You are welcome to attend this free presentation in person or remotely via WebEx.

To register to attend in person, please e-mail [log in to unmask] or call OCLC Research at (614) 764-6073 and indicate your name, affiliation and telephone number. Maps to OCLC's Dublin Headquarters are available online at http://www.oclc.org/about/maps/campus.htm.

To register to attend online via WebEx, click here:
https://oclc.webex.com/oclc/j.php?ED=152899902&UID=481821437&RT=MiMxMQ%3D%3D

After you register online via WebEx, you will receive an e-mail message that contains instructions for logging on to WebEx, where you will view the meeting slides online through your Web browser (please note that WebEx recommends using Internet Explorer or Firefox, as Chrome and Safari are not supported). When you log in to the webinar, you will be given options for connecting to the presentation audio through your computer headset or phone.

If this is your first time using WebEx, please log on a few minutes early to download the required software.

For WebEx technical support, call:
US/Canada Toll free: (866) 299-3239
International Toll: +1 (408) 435-7088

Presentation slides and a recording of the webinar will be made available online at:
http://www.oclc.org/us/en/community/presentations/guests/default.htm.


More information

Jane Greenberg
http://www.ils.unc.edu/~janeg/

Todd J. Vision
http://www.bio.unc.edu/faculty/vision/

Dryad repository
http://datadryad.org/

Dryad development wiki
https://www.nescent.org/wg_dryad/Main_Page

HIVE demo system
http://hive.nescent.org:9090/home.html

HIVE project wiki
https://www.nescent.org/sites/hive/Main_Page

 
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Wanda Monroe
Director of Communications
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Phone: 919-843-8337
Web: sils.unc.edu
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