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VIVO: Enabling National Networking of Scientists

VIVO: Enabling National Networking of Scientists. Michael Conlon, PhD Principal Investigator University of Florida. National Networking of Scientists. What is it? Information regarding scientists’ interests, activities, and accomplishments

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VIVO: Enabling National Networking of Scientists

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  1. VIVO: Enabling National Networking of Scientists Michael Conlon, PhD Principal Investigator University of Florida

  2. National Networking of Scientists • What is it? • Information regarding scientists’ interests, activities, and accomplishments • Scientists using software tools based on this information in new and existing collaborations and teams • Why? • Support the acceleration of team science • Improve visibility (accuracy, currency, breadth) of information about science • Improve competitiveness • How? • Institutionally hosted information provided and maintained by institutions and scientists • Facilitation and support through the libraries

  3. National Networking Team • University of Florida, Gainesville, FL • Cornell University, Ithaca, NY • Indiana University, Bloomington, IN • Washington University, St Louis, MO • Weill-Cornell Medical College, NY, NY • The Scripps Research Institute, La Jolla, CA • Ponce Medical School, Ponce, PR

  4. What will the National Network Do? • Provide scientists’ interests, activities and accomplishments • Identify current work • Find scientists with precision and veracity • Group colleagues, maps, networks, lineages, publications, … • Support collaboration with existing and emerging tools • Simplify reporting tasks • Route information based on interests

  5. Technology for the National Network • Semantic Web • RDF, RDFS, OWL, SPARQL, … • Ontologies • FOAF, SKOS, MESH, … • Federated Identity Management • SAML 2.0, Shibboleth, … • Interoperability • Identity, Semantics, Applications

  6. Institutional Architecture • Three sources of VIVO information • Institutional data • Provider data • User data • Two formats for output • Web Pages for users • RDF for applications

  7. National Architecture • National Network Users access applications • Applications access RDF triples • VIVOs are independent • Apps are independent • Other systems can provide triples

  8. Institutional Role • Authoritative data source • Identity Management • Employment • Scoping • Hosting responsibility • Local or outsourced • Institutional benefits • Precise information regarding activity • Reporting, response to requests, faculty benefits

  9. Collaboration and Coordination Open engagement to foster national networking • Resource Discovery – Eagle-i • Federal agencies – NIH, NSF, … • Search Providers – Google, Bing, Yahoo, … • Professional Societies – AAAS, … • Publishers – Elsevier, Springer, … • Semantic Web community – DERI, … • Consortia of schools– SURA, CTSA, CIC, … • Existing services – over 30

  10. VIVO Roadmap for National Networking • Developed at Cornell in 2004 • Find faculty by interests, activities, accomplishments • Release 1 to 7 schools now • Standard ontology • Local search • Application support • Release 2, open adoption • Federated identity • Network search • Grouping, interfaces • Release 3, national network • Most requested features VIVO at Cornell: http://vivo.cornell.edu

  11. Sustainability • Information is institutionally hosted and maintained • VIVO software is open source, community maintained • National network applications can be commercial or open source • Institutions may use commercial versions of VIVO or other platforms that provide data to the national network

  12. Project Status • Development Interfaces, packaging at UF, ontology and social networking at Indiana, semantic web, user experience at Cornell • Implementation Cornell (existing), UF (underway), Indiana (11/2009), Washington U (11/2009), Weill (12/2009), Scripps (1/2010), Ponce (1/2010) • Outreach Presentations, inquiries, collaboration • Governance TAB, SAB, EAB • Evaluation Plan complete, 1st report 1/2010 • Contact Mike Conlon, mconlon@ufl.edu

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