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The world of scholarship is changing rapidly. Increasing demands on scholars, the growing size and complexity of questions and problems to be addressed, and advances in sophistication of data collection, analysis, and presentation require new approaches to scholarship. A ubiquitous, open information infrastructure for scholarship, consisting of linked open data, open-source software tools, and a community committed to sustainability are emerging to meet the needs of scholars today. This book provides an introduction to VIVO, http://vivoweb.org/, a tool for representing information about…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
The world of scholarship is changing rapidly. Increasing demands on scholars, the growing size and complexity of questions and problems to be addressed, and advances in sophistication of data collection, analysis, and presentation require new approaches to scholarship. A ubiquitous, open information infrastructure for scholarship, consisting of linked open data, open-source software tools, and a community committed to sustainability are emerging to meet the needs of scholars today. This book provides an introduction to VIVO, http://vivoweb.org/, a tool for representing information about research and researchers -- their scholarly works, research interests, and organizational relationships. VIVO provides an expressive ontology, tools for managing the ontology, and a platform for using the ontology to create and manage linked open data for scholarship and discovery. Begun as a project at Cornell and further developed by an NIH funded consortium, VIVO is now being established as an open-source project with community participation from around the world. By the end of 2012, over 20 countries and 50 organizations will provide information in VIVO format on more than one million researchers and research staff, including publications, research resources, events, funding, courses taught, and other scholarly activity. The rapid growth of VIVO and of VIVO-compatible data sources speaks to the fundamental need to transform scholarship for the 21st century. Table of Contents: Scholarly Networking Needs and Desires / The VIVO Ontology / Implementing VIVO and Filling It with Life / Case Study: University of Colorado at Boulder / Case Study: Weill Cornell Medical College / Extending VIVO / Analyzing and Visualizing VIVO Data / The Future of VIVO: Growing the Community

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Autorenporträt
Katy Börner is the Victor H. Yngve Professor of Information Science at the School of Library and Information Science, Adjunct Professor at the School of Informatics and Computing, Adjunct Professor at the Department of Statistics in the College of Arts and Sciences, and Founding Director of the Cyberinfrastructure for Network Science Center (http://cns.iu.edu) at Indiana University.Her research focuses on the development of data analysis and visualization techniques for information access, understanding, and management. Within the VIVO project, she led the team at Indiana University and directed the development of social network visualizations Ying Ding is an Assistant Professor at the School of Library and Information Science, Indiana University. Previously, she worked as a senior researcher at the University of Innsbruck, Austria, and as a researcher at the Free University of Amsterdam, the Netherlands. She has been involved in various NIH-funded and European Union-funded Semantic Web projects. She has published 130+ papers in journals, conferences, and workshops.She is the coeditor of a book series called Semantic Web Synthesis from Morgan & Claypool Publishers. She is co-author of the book Intelligent Information Integration in B2B Electronic Commerce and is co-author of book chapters in Spinning the Semantic Web and Towards the Semantic Web: Ontology-driven Knowledge Management. Her current interest areas include social network analysis, Semantic Web, citation analysis, knowledge management, and the application of web technology. Michael Conlon is Associate Director and Chief Operating Officer of the University of Florida Clinical and Translational Science Institute, Director of Biomedical Informatics at the UF College of Medicine, and Principal Investigator of the NIH project "VIVO: Enabling National Network ing of Scientists." His responsibilities include development of academic biomedical informatics, expansion and integration of research and clinicalinformation resources, and strategic planning for academic health and university research. As PI of the VIVO project, Dr. Conlon leads a team of 120 investigators at 7 schools in the development, implementation, and advancement of an open source Semantic Web application for research discovery. He earned his PhD in Statistics from the University of Florida, undergraduate degrees in Mathematics and Economics from Bucknell Uni versity, and is the author of over 150 scholarly publications and presentations. His current interests include enterprise change and organizational issues in the adoption of information technology, or ganization of research resources, and enterprise architecture. See vivo.ufl.edu/individual/mconlon for connections, works, and shared scholarly information. Jon Corson-Rikert is the head of Information Technology Services at Cornell University's Albert R. Mann Library. He was the initial VIVO developer at Cornell starting in 2003 and has served as the development lead and a member of the ontology team for the NIH project "VIVO: Enabling National Networking of Scientists." He holds a Bachelor's degree in Visual and Environmental Studies from Harvard University and worked in cartography, geographic information systems, and computer graphics before joining the Cornell University Library in 2001.