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VIVO: Enabling National Networking of Scientists at AgNIC Annual Conference

This presentation at the AgNIC Annual Conference explains VIVO, an open-source web application that enables the discovery of research and scholarship across disciplines. It discusses the data sources, storage, and potential uses of VIVO profiles and highlights the benefits of integrating VIVO into the Linked Data cloud.

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VIVO: Enabling National Networking of Scientists at AgNIC Annual Conference

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  1. VIVO • Enabling National Networking of Scientists • Presented at the AgNIC Annual Conference • Beltsville, MD on April 17, 2011. Valrie Davis UF Implementation Lead University of Florida

  2. University of Florida Mike Conlon (VIVO and UF PI) Beth Auten Chris Barnes Cecilia Botero Kerry Britt Erin Brooks Amy Buhler Ellie Bushhousen Linda Butson Chris Case Christine Cogar Valrie Davis Mary Edwards Nita Ferree Rolando Garcia-Milan George Hack Chris Haines Sara Henning Rae Jesano Margeaux Johnson Meghan Latorre Yang Li Paula Markes Hannah Norton Narayan Raum Alexander Rockwell Sara Russell Gonzalez Nancy Schaefer Dale Scheppler Nicholas Skaggs Syraj Syed Matthew Tedder Michele R. Tennant Alicia Turner Stephen Williams Indiana University Katy Borner (IU PI) Kavitha Chandrasekar Bin Chen Shanshan Chen Ryan Cobine Jeni Coffey Suresh Deivasigamani Ying Ding Russell Duhon Jon Dunn Poornima Gopinath Julie Hardesty Brian Keese Namrata Lele Micah Linnemeier Nianli Ma Robert H. McDonald Asik Pradhan Gongaju Mark Price Michael Stamper Yuyin Sun Chintan Tank Alan Walsh Brian Wheeler Feng Wu Angela Zoss VIVO Collaboration Cornell University Dean Krafft (Cornell PI) Manolo Bevia Jim Blake Nick Cappadona Brian Caruso Jon Corson-Rikert Elly Cramer Medha Devare Elizabeth Hines Huda Khan Brian Lowe Joseph McEnerney Holly Mistlebauer Stella Mitchell Anup Sawant Christopher Westling Tim Worrall Rebecca Younes Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis Rakesh Nagarajan (WUSTL PI) Kristi L. Holmes Caerie Houchins George Joseph Sunita B. Koul Leslie D. McIntosh Weill Cornell Medical College Curtis Cole (Weill PI) Paul Albert Victor Brodsky Mark Bronnimann Adam Cheriff Oscar Cruz Dan Dickinson Richard Hu Chris Huang Itay Klaz Kenneth Lee Peter Michelini Grace Migliorisi John Ruffing Jason Specland Tru Tran Vinay Varughese Virgil Wong The Scripps Research Institute Gerald Joyce (Scripps PI) Catherine Dunn Brant Kelley Paula King Angela Murrell Barbara Noble Cary Thomas Michaeleen Trimarchi Ponce School of Medicine Richard J. Noel, Jr. (Ponce PI) Ricardo Espada Colon Damaris Torres Cruz Michael Vega Negrón This project is funded by the National Institutes of Health, U24 RR029822 "VIVO: Enabling National Networking of Scientists”

  3. Current challenges

  4. What is VIVO? An open-source semantic web application that enables the discovery of research and scholarship across disciplines in an institution. Populated with detailed profiles of faculty and researchers; displaying items such as publications, teaching, service, and professional affiliations. A powerful search functionality for locating people and information within or across institutions.

  5. VIVO harvests data from verified sources Faculty and unit administrators can then add additional information to their profile. (M) • Internal data sources (I): • HR Directory • Office of Sponsored Research • Institutional Repositories • Registrar System • Faculty Activity Systems • Events and Seminars • Images • External data sources (I): • Publication warehouses- e.g. PubMed, Web of Science, and more. • Grant databases: e.g. NSF/ NIH • National Organizations: AAAS, AMA, etc. Data stored as RDF triples using standard ontology VIVO data is available for reuse by web pages, applications, and other consumers both within and outside the institution.

  6. How does VIVO store data? • Information is stored using the Resource Description Framework (RDF) . • Data is structured in the form of “triples” as subject-predicate-object. • Concepts and their relationships use a shared ontology to facilitate the harvesting of data from multiple sources. Plant Pathology IFAS is member of Jane Smith Genetics Institute has affiliations with Journal article author of Book Book chapter Subject Predicate Object

  7. Using VIVO data • By storing data in VIVO in RDF and using standard ontologies, the information in VIVO can either be displayed in a human readable web page or delivered directly to other systems as RDF. This allows the open researcher data in VIVO to be harvested, aggregated, and integrated into the Linked Open Data cloud. http://richard.cyganiak.de/2007/10/lod/lod-datasets_2010-09-22_colored.html • VIVO enables authoritative data about researchers to become part of the Linked Data cloud.

  8. What does a VIVO profile look like? vivo.wustl.edu

  9. A VIVO profile allows one to: Find potential colleagues by research area, authorship, and collaborations. Showcasecredentials, expertise, skills, and professional achievements. Connectwithin focus areas and geographic expertise. Simplifyreporting tasks and Linkdata to external applications – e.g., to generate biosketches or CVs. Publishthe URL or link the profile to other applications. Displayvisualizations of complex research networks and relationships.

  10. Who can use VIVO?

  11. Visualizations about people

  12. Temporal visualizations

  13. SciMaps

  14. Visualizing scholars and their efforts across platforms

  15. Implementation: some considerations • Prepare your plan • scope, • time, • resources, • data • Build your team and execute plan • system administration, • data curation, • policy/governance, • user support, • project management • Post Implementation: transition to operations • Getting the word out

  16. Why A Library-based Support Model? Libraries: • Are a trusted, neutral entity • Have a tradition of service and support • Strive to serve all missions of the institution • Are technology centers and have IT and data expertise Library Staff: • Have skills—information organization, instruction, usability, subject expertise • Have close relationships with their clients (buy in) • Understand user needs • Understand the importance of collaboration and know how to bring people together • Have knowledge of institution, research, education, clinical landscape

  17. Data, Tools and Scientists

  18. Moving forward

  19. VIVO Projects Collaborative Research Projects – • These awards offered funding for people outside the VIVO Collaboration to develop tools using VIVO data or code. • Awardees: • VIVO Widgets – Duke University • Digital Vita Documents for VIVO – University of Pittsburgh • VIVO and Open Researcher & Contributor ID – ORCID • UMLS Ontology and VIVO – Stony Brook University • HUBzero and Joomla! VIVO applications – Indiana University • Google Refine and VIVO – Weill Cornell Medical College

  20. Possible Collaborations • Land-grant Discovery System • University of Arizona leadership (Barb Hutchinson) through Rangelands Project • USAIN/AgNIC/NAL collaboration? • Coordinated IR deposit and linking? • Links with VIVO? • Single Search? • Motivation for deposit • Challenges of strategic archiving • Interested institutions? • AgNIC Alliance Single Search • Profiles for implementing institutions • AgNIC implementation for non-participating?

  21. Nationwide Semantic Search

  22. Nationwide Semantic Search

  23. Nationwide Semantic Search

  24. Open software, open ontology, open process

  25. Federal agencies – USDA, CENDI, OSTP, NIH, NLM, NSF, VA, FDP, STAR Metrics, … Publishers and Aggregators – Elsevier/Collexis, Thomson Reuters, ORCID, CiteSeer, Arxiv, Dspace, … Press – Nature, Science, Cell, Genome Tech, SEED, The Chronicle, AP, Information Today, IEEE, … Professional Societies – AAAS, AIRI, AAMC, ABRF, APA,… International– CIMMYT, Australia, China, Netherlands, UK, Central America, Brazil, … Semantic Web community – DERI, Tim Berners-Lee, MyExperiment, ConceptWeb, Open Pharma Space (EU), Linked Data, … Social Network Analysis Community – Northwestern, Davis, UCF, … Schools and Consortia – CTSAs, CIC, SURA, FLR, IICA, University of Nebraska – Lincoln, Iowa, Harvard, UCSF, Pittsburgh, Stanford, MIT, Brown, Michigan, Colorado, OHSU, Duke, Minnesota, many more Sub-awards to Duke, Pittsburgh, Leicester, Stonybrook, Weill, Indiana Application and service providers – over 100 File downloads – about 7,000 (6,941 as of 04/15) on SF since May 2010 and over 1,500 on vivoweb.org Contact list – over 1,500

  26. vivo.sourceforge.net

  27. http://www.vivoweb.org/conference

  28. Register at vivoweb.org/conference Who: Scholars, Scientists, Researchers, Developers, Publishers, Funding Agencies, Research Officers, Students, Institutional Officials What: three-day conference with workshops, tutorials, keynotes, presentations, posters and interactive sessions When: August 24-26, 2011 Where: Gaylord National, Washington DC Why: promote research networking and academic scholarship using linked open data Topics include: Semantic Web Linked Open Data VIVO Sustainability Adopting VIVO Implementing VIVO Research Networking Network Visualization Ontology … and much more! VIVO is supported by NIH Award U24 RR029822

  29. VIVO Implementation Fest June 23-24, 2011, St. Louis, Missouri Apply at vivoweb.org VIVO is supported by NIH Award U24 RR029822

  30. More Information… • How can you get involved and learn more about the project, the code, adoption at your site and more? • Contact form: http://vivoweb.org • SourceForge: http://vivo.sourceforge.net Thank you!

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