Cameron – OpenPub https://openpub.nceas.ucsb.edu A collection of thoughts and links from the NCEAS Future of Publishing Working Group Thu, 23 Aug 2012 17:05:46 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.0.3 Something very apposite to the discussion of reputation/credit and building a personal brand https://openpub.nceas.ucsb.edu/2012/06/27/something-very-apposite-to-the-discussion-of-reputationcredit-and-building-a-personal-brand/ https://openpub.nceas.ucsb.edu/2012/06/27/something-very-apposite-to-the-discussion-of-reputationcredit-and-building-a-personal-brand/#comments Wed, 27 Jun 2012 16:31:33 +0000 http://openpub.nceas.ucsb.edu/?p=321 Continue reading ]]> This builds on a range of posts and commentary that have happened recently but is getting a lot of activity on twitter at the moment. Some of that interest is obviously circular, people who are on social media like the idea that social media is helping them.

http://www.historypunk.com/2012/06/managing-your-online-reputation-guide.html?spref=tw

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Use of literature – do we take in narratives or grab granules https://openpub.nceas.ucsb.edu/2012/06/25/use-of-literature-do-we-take-in-narratives-or-grab-granules/ https://openpub.nceas.ucsb.edu/2012/06/25/use-of-literature-do-we-take-in-narratives-or-grab-granules/#respond Mon, 25 Jun 2012 19:21:50 +0000 http://openpub.nceas.ucsb.edu/?p=240 Continue reading ]]> My talk at UKSG where I talk about how I actually solved a series of research information problems: http://river-valley.tv/the-transformation-is-already-here-%E2%80%93-its-just-unevenly-distributed/

Lots of discussion of personal experience but this is necessarily biased. There is a lot of research on how readers actually take in literature, how long they are reading for, and what their purpose has also been, in large part by Carol.

Tenopir, C, Allard S, Douglass K, Aydinoglu A U, Wu L, Manoff M, Read E, Frame M.  2011.  Data Sharing by Scientists: Practices and Perceptions. Public Library of Science (PLoS) ONE. 6(6)

Tenopir, C, Allard S, Bates B, Levine KJ, King DW, Birch B, Mays R, Caldwell C.  2011.  Perceived Value of Scholarly Articles. Learned Publishing. 24:123-132.

Tenopir, C, Mays R, Wu L.  2011.  Journal Article Growth and Reading Patterns. New Review of Information Networking. 16(1):4-22.

Tenopir, C, Wilson CS, Vakkari P, Talja S, King DW.  2010.  Cross country comparison of scholarly e-reading patterns in Australia, Finland and the United States. Australian Academic & Research Libraries (AARL). 41(1):26-41

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Question on computational tools in Ecology and related sciences https://openpub.nceas.ucsb.edu/2012/06/25/question-on-computational-tools-in-ecology-and-related-sciences/ https://openpub.nceas.ucsb.edu/2012/06/25/question-on-computational-tools-in-ecology-and-related-sciences/#comments Mon, 25 Jun 2012 18:41:28 +0000 http://openpub.nceas.ucsb.edu/?p=152 Continue reading ]]> What are the main tools and computational frameworks used in the Ecological sciences. I have an interest in building “executable papers” and have been looking at iPython Notebook as a toolset that might enable us to do this quickly. Is Python widely used? Are workflow tools useful in this space?

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Link economies and reputation economies https://openpub.nceas.ucsb.edu/2012/06/25/link-economies-and-reputation-economies/ https://openpub.nceas.ucsb.edu/2012/06/25/link-economies-and-reputation-economies/#comments Mon, 25 Jun 2012 17:14:25 +0000 http://openpub.nceas.ucsb.edu/?p=227 Continue reading ]]> I made the point that Jarret’s diagram as it stands at the moment doesn’t include linking, aggregation and the way that is important in supporting discovery as Edward said. Another way of viewing this is through the lens of a “link economy”, by analogy with Page Rank algorithms and this links through to how reputation economies are mediated. Is reputation simply appearing at the top of the relevant list of search results? Is it more granular. The two interact quite closely but I don’t have any simple ways of teasing them apart.

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