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Die Rolle der ORCID iD in der Wissenschaftskommunikation: Der Beitrag des ORCID-Deutschland-Konsortiums und das ORCID-DE-Projekt

2019, Dreyer, Britta, Hagemann-Wilholt, Stephanie, Vierkant, Paul, Strecker, Dorothea, Glagla-Dietz, Stephanie, Summann, Friedrich, Pampel, Heinz, Burger, Marleen

ORCID’s services such as the unambiguous linking of researchers and their research output form the basis of modern scholarly communication. The ORCID Germany Consortium offers a reduced ORCID premium membership fee and supports its members during ORCID integration. Services include a dialogue platform that provides German-language information and additional support services. Another major success factor is an all-encompassing communication strategy: members of the ORCID implementation can resort to established organizational communication channels. Together and with the support of the ORCID DE project they contribute significantly to the successful distribution of ORCID in Germany.

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Curating Scientific Information in Knowledge Infrastructures

2018, Stocker, Markus, Paasonen, Pauli, Fiebig, Markus, Zaidan, Martha A., Hardisty, Alex

Interpreting observational data is a fundamental task in the sciences, specifically in earth and environmental science where observational data are increasingly acquired, curated, and published systematically by environmental research infrastructures. Typically subject to substantial processing, observational data are used by research communities, their research groups and individual scientists, who interpret such primary data for their meaning in the context of research investigations. The result of interpretation is information—meaningful secondary or derived data—about the observed environment. Research infrastructures and research communities are thus essential to evolving uninterpreted observational data to information. In digital form, the classical bearer of information are the commonly known “(elaborated) data products,” for instance maps. In such form, meaning is generally implicit e.g., in map colour coding, and thus largely inaccessible to machines. The systematic acquisition, curation, possible publishing and further processing of information gained in observational data interpretation—as machine readable data and their machine readable meaning—is not common practice among environmental research infrastructures. For a use case in aerosol science, we elucidate these problems and present a Jupyter based prototype infrastructure that exploits a machine learning approach to interpretation and could support a research community in interpreting observational data and, more importantly, in curating and further using resulting information about a studied natural phenomenon.

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Open is not enough

2018, Chen, Xiaoli, Dallmeier-Tiessen, Sünje, Dasler, Robin, Feger, Sebastian, Fokianos, Pamfilos, Gonzalez, Jose Benito, Hirvonsalo, Harri, Kousidis, Dinos, Lavasa, Artemis, Mele, Salvatore, Rodriguez, Diego Rodriguez, Šimko, Tibor, Smith, Tim, Trisovic, Ana, Trzcinska, Anna, Tsanaktsidis, Ioannis, Zimmermann, Markus, Cranmer, Kyle, Heinrich, Lukas, Watts, Gordon, Hildreth, Michael, Lloret Iglesias, Lara, Lassila-Perini, Kati, Neubert, Sebastian

The solutions adopted by the high-energy physics community to foster reproducible research are examples of best practices that could be embraced more widely. This first experience suggests that reproducibility requires going beyond openness.

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IK und KI-ein Herz und eine Seele: Ein Streit über künstliche Intelligenz im Kontext von Informationskompetenz

2019, Burblies, Christine, Pianos, Tamara

[no abstract available]

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Leben und Werk des Karl Hahn

2017, Mensing, Petra

Von 1905 bis zu seinem Lebensende 1946 stellte der Musiklehrer und Botaniker Karl Hahn eine umfangreiche Sammlung der Mecklenburger Flora insbesondere der Moose in der Umgebung von Neukloster und Grabow zusammen. Neben den noch vorhandenen Belegen hat er diverse Veröffentlichungen im Archiv der Freunde der Naturgeschichte in Mecklenburg hinterlassen, die neben der Beschreibung der einzelnen Funde auch Wanderbeschreibungen und Naturbeobachtungen thematisierten. In diesem Beitrag werden alle von ihm als „Neu für Mecklenburg“ bezeichneten Moosarten erstmals in einer Veröffentlichung zusammengetragen sowie Anregungen für zukünftige Arbeiten gegeben.

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Open Science und die Bibliothek – Aktionsfelder und Berufsbild

2019, Blümel, Ina, Drees, Bastian, Hauschke, Christian, Heller, Lambert, Tullney, Marco

Eine durch die Digitalisierung veränderte und auf Open Science ausgerichtete Wissenschaftspraxis benötigt angepasste Infrastrukturen und Services. Daraus ergeben sich verschiedene neue oder veränderte Aktionsfelder für wissenschaftliche Bibliotheken und Infrastruktureinrichtungen. Zu nennen sind zum Beispiel die nicht-textuellen Materialien wie Forschungsdaten, AV-Medien oder Software und die Umsetzung der FAIR-Prinzipien. Hinzu kommen neue Aufgaben im Bereich der Forschungsinformationen, zum Beispiel in der Unterstützung institutioneller Forschungsinformationssysteme, die Gestaltung von Open Access, die Unterstützung kollaborativen wissenschaftlichen Arbeitens sowie die Schaffung von offenen Infrastrukturen. In diesem Artikel werden diese Felder kurz vorgestellt und sich daraus abzeichnende Anforderungen an das bibliothekarische Berufsbild skizziert.

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Experience: Open fiscal datasets, common issues, and recommendations

2018, Musyaffa, Fathoni A., Engels, Christiane, Vidal, Maria-Esther, Orlandi, Fabrizio, Auer, Sören

A pre-print paper detailing recommendation for publishing fiscal data, including assessment framework for fiscal datasets. This paper has been accepted at ACM Journal of Data and Information Quality (JDIQ) in 2018.

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14 Years of PID services at the German National Library of Science and Technology (TIB): Connected frameworks, research data and lessons learned from a National Research Library perspective

2017, Kraft, Angelina, Dreyer, Britta, Löwe, Peter, Ziedorn, Frauke

In an ideal research world, any scientific content should be citable and the coherent content, as well as the citation itself, should be persistent. However, today’s scientists do not only produce traditional research papers – they produce comprehensive digital resources and collections. TIB’s mission is to develop a supportive framework for a sustainable access to such digital content – focusing on areas of engineering as well as architecture, chemistry, information technology, mathematics and physics. The term digital content comprises all digitally available resources such as audiovisual media, databases, texts, images, spreadsheets, digital lab journals, multimedia, 3D objects, statistics and software code. In executing this mission, TIB provides services for the management of digital content during ongoing and for finished research. This includes: • a technical and administrative infrastructure for indexing, cataloguing, DOI registration and licensing for text and digital objects, namely the TIB DOI registration which is active since 2005, • the administration of the ORCID DE consortium, an institutional network fostering the adoption of ORCID across academic institutions in Germany, • training and consultancy for data management, complemented with a digital repository for the deposition and provision of accessible, traceable and citable research data (RADAR), • a Research and Development Department where innovative projects focus on the visualization and the sustainable access to digital information, and • the development of a supportive framework within the German research data community which accompanies the life cycle of scientific knowledge generation and transfer. Its goal is to harmonize (meta)data display and exchange primarily on a national level (LEIBNIZ DATA project).

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“When was this picture taken?” – Image date estimation in the wild

2017, Müller, E., Springstein, M., Ewerth, R.

The problem of automatically estimating the creation date of photos has been addressed rarely in the past. In this paper, we introduce a novel dataset Date Estimation in the Wild for the task of predicting the acquisition year of images captured in the period from 1930 to 1999. In contrast to previous work, the dataset is neither restricted to color photography nor to specific visual concepts. The dataset consists of more than one million images crawled from Flickr and contains a large number of different motives. In addition, we propose two baseline approaches for regression and classification, respectively, relying on state-of-the-art deep convolutional neural networks. Experimental results demonstrate that these baselines are already superior to annotations of untrained humans.

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Survey vs Scraped Data: Comparing Time Series Properties of Web and Survey Vacancy Data

2019, De Pedraza, P., Visintin, S., Tijdens, K., Kismihók, G.

This paper studies the relationship between a vacancy population obtained from web crawling and vacancies in the economy inferred by a National Statistics Office (NSO) using a traditional method. We compare the time series properties of samples obtained between 2007 and 2014 by Statistics Netherlands and by a web scraping company. We find that the web and NSO vacancy data present similar time series properties, suggesting that both time series are generated by the same underlying phenomenon: the real number of new vacancies in the economy. We conclude that, in our case study, web-sourced data are able to capture aggregate economic activity in the labor market.