Upload
others
View
0
Download
0
Embed Size (px)
Citation preview
Conference Program
Building Plan
CAMPSITE
Monday, June 10 8:00-9:00 Morning Coffee Campsite 8:00-18:00 Registration Foyer of Main Building 9:00-19:00 Workshops East and West Wing Buildings 10:30-11:00 Coffee Break Campsite 12:30-13:30 Break (Lunch provided) Campsite 15:00-15:30 Coffee Break Campsite 17:00-17:30 Coffee Break Campsite Full Day Workshops (9:00-17:00)
Invenio User Group Workshop 2019 (W01) EAST 121 Lars Holm Nielsen1, Jose Benito Gonzalez Lopez1, Kai Wörner2 1: CERN, Geneva, Switzerland; 2: Universität Hamburg
Research Data Packaging - Research Objects, Frictionless Data Packages, Datacrates and beyond (W02) EAST 222 Peter Sefton1, Carole Goble2, Stian Soiland-Reyes2 1: University of Technology Sydney, Australia; 2: The University of Manchester, UK
Morning Workshops (9:00-17:00)
Getting Started with DSpace 7 (W03) EAST 120 Tim Donohue1, Art Lowel2, Andrea Bollini3 1: DuraSpace, United States of America; 2: Atmire, Belgium; 3: 4Science, Italy
Repository and CRIS Interoperability Workshop (W04) EAST 221 Michele Mennielli1, Anna Clements2,4, Pablo de Castro3,4 1: DuraSpace; 2: University of St Andrews, United Kingdom; 3: University of Strathclyde, United Kingdom; 4: euroCRIS
A user journey in OpenAIRE services through the lens of repository managers (W05) WEST 120 Pedro Príncipe1, Paolo Manghi2, Leonard Mack3, André Vieira1, Jochen Schirrwagen4 1: University of Minho, Portugal; 2: CNR-ISTI, Italy; 3: JISC, UK; 4: Bielefeld University, Germany
Islandora for All: ISLE Workshop (W06) EAST 123 David Keiser-Clark1, Bethany Seeger2 1: Williams College, United States of America; 2: Amherst College, United States of America
Closing the gap – connection points between DMPs and repositories (W07) EAST 122 Sarah Jones1, Sam Rust2, Magdalena Dafiova2 1: University of Glasgow, United Kingdom; 2: University of Edinburgh, United Kingdom
Lean UX Startup – from idea to lo-fi product in 3 hours (W08) WEST 122 Kristin Olofsson Chalmers University of Technology, Sweden
9:00-10:30 Samvera – an introduction to the community and sustaining its hosted and WEST 121 custom digital repository solutions (W09) Chris Awre1, Robin Ruggaber2, Julie Allinson3 1: University of Hull, United Kingdom; 2: University of Virginia, USA; 3: CoSector, United Kingdom
11:00-12:30 Building a shared repository service using Samvera Hyku (W10) WEST 121 Sara Gould1, Jenny Basford1, Brian Hole2, Tom Mowlam2 1: British Library, United Kingdom; 2: Ubiquity Press
Afternoon Workshops (13:30-17:00)
Getting Started with DSpace 7 (advanced, W03) EAST 120 Tim Donohue1, Art Lowel2, Andrea Bollini3 1: DuraSpace, United States of America; 2: Atmire, Belgium; 3: 4Science, Italy
Repository and CRIS Interoperability Workshop (II, W04) EAST 221 Michele Mennielli1, Anna Clements2,4, Pablo de Castro3,4 1: DuraSpace; 2: University of St Andrews, United Kingdom; 3: University of Strathclyde, United Kingdom; 4: euroCRIS
A user journey in OpenAIRE services through the lens of repository managers (II) (W05) WEST 120 Pedro Príncipe1, Paolo Manghi2, Leonard Mack3, André Vieira1, Jochen Schirrwagen4 1: University of Minho, Portugal; 2: CNR-ISTI, Italy; 3: JISC, UK; 4: Bielefeld University, Germany
Docker for DSpace – Lowering the Barrier of Entry for New Contributors (W11) EAST 123 Terrence W Brady1, Pascal-Nicolas Becker2 1: Georgetown University Library, United States of America; 2: The Library Code GmbH
Introduction to Fedora 5.0 and the API Specification (W12) EAST 122 David Wilcox, Andrew Woods, Daniel Bernstein DuraSpace
The human infrastructure: building community to support repository collaborations (W13) WEST 221 Leila Sterman1, Nick Shockey2, Joseph McArthur3 1: Montana State University; 2: SPARC; 3: Open Access Button
Unpacking the Algorithms That Shape Our UX: Algorithmic Awareness as a Form of Information Literacy (W14) WEST 121 Jason Anthony Clark, Julian Kaptanian Montana State University, United States of America
Using YARD to Curate for Reproducibility (W15) WEST 122 Limor Peer1, Thu-Mai Christian2, Florio Arguillas3 1: Yale University, United States of America; 2: University of North Carolina, Chappel Hill, United States of America; 3: Cornell University, United States of America
Evening Workshops (17:30-19:00)
DataCite DOI Services for Repositories - making all research outputs persistent (W16) WEST 120 Robin Dasler DataCite, Germany
Getting started with Haplo (W17) EAST 221 Ben Summers, Tom Renner Haplo, United Kingdom
DSpace 6 content manipulation with GLAMpipe (W18) EAST 222 Ari Häyrinen University of Jyväskylä, Finland
Open your structured data with Wikibase — install your own instance of the technology behind Wikidata (W19) EAST 121 Jens Ohlig Wikimedia Deutschland e.V., Germany
Measuring data reuse with the COUNTER Code of Practice for Research Data (W20) EAST 120 Helena Cousijn1, Daniella Lowenberg2, Lars Holm Nielsen3, Kristian Garza1, Martin Fenner1 1: DataCite; 2: California Digital Library; 3: Zenodo
Tuesday, June 11 8:00-9:00 Morning Coffee Campsite 8:00-17:00 Registration Foyer of Main Building 9:00-10:30 Opening Plenary and Keynote (Chair: Jessica Lindholm) Lecture Hall A
Jeff Gothelf: Outcomes over output: a user-centric approach to building successful systems
11:00-12:30 Presentations Main Building Track 1 (P1A): UX In Practice Presentations Lecture Hall A
Jisc Open Research Repository: Delivering a compelling User Experience Tom Davey, Dom Fripp, John Kaye Jisc, United Kingdom
Uncomplicating the business of repositories Emily G. Morton-Owens, Katherine Lynch University of Pennsylvania Libraries, United States of America
Building Interfaces for All the Users William Hicks, Mark E. Phillips, Pamela Andrews University of North Texas Libraries, United States of America
Track 2 (P1B): It’s Repository Rodeo Time Rodeo Lecture Hall B
Revenge of the Repository Rodeo David Wilcox1, Melissa Anez2, Pascal Becker3, Mark Bussey4, Will Fyson5, Lars Holm Nielsen6, Robin Ruggaber7 1: DuraSpace; 2: Islandora Foundation; 3: The Library Code; 4: Data Curation Experts; 5: University of Southampton; 6: CERN; 7: University of Virginia
Track 3 (P1C): Systems and Policy 24x7 Lecture Hall C
Revising an institutional open access policy to reserve the right to apply a Creative Commons License to dissertations and author accepted manuscript versions of peer-reviewed articles. Paula Callan, Katya Henry Queensland University of Technology, Australia
Make it easy - Integration of Data Description in the Research Process Sibylle Hermann, Dorothea Iglezakis, Anett Seeland Universität Stuttgart, Germany
Automating repository workflows with Orpheus, an Open Source database of journals and publishers André Fernando Sartori University of Cambridge, United Kingdom
Permissible Closed-Use General licences: filling the gap between Open and Restrictive Data Licences Graham Alexander Parton, Sam Pepler Centre for Environmental Data Analysis, Science and Technology Facilities Council, United Kingdom
Building node-iiif: A perfomant, standards-compliant IIIF service in < 500 lines of code David E Schober, Michael Klein Northwestern University, United States of America
ARCLib – development of open source solution for long-term preservation Martin Lhotak Library of the Czech Academy of Sciences, Czech Republic
Answering the call: researcher-driven training in data management Anne Stevenson, Carmi Cronje CSIRO, Australia
OA Theses: Demonstrating value and addressing concerns of students and their supervisors Jenny McKnight University of Melbourne, Australia
Discovery with Linked Open Data: Leveraging Wikidata for Context and Exploration Devin Higgins, Lucas Mak Michigan State University, United States of America
Track 4 (P1D): Convergence of repository and CRIS functions Presentations Lecture Hall J
Practices and Patterns: the Convergence of Repository and CRIS Functions Rebecca Bryant1, Pablo de Castro2, Annette Dortmund1, Michele Mennielli3 1: OCLC; 2: University of Strathclyde; 3: Duraspace
Building an All-in-one Service: Extending an existing Open Access Repository to a complete Research Information System Oliver Goldschmidt, Beate Rajski, Gunnar Weidt TU Hamburg, Germany
RCAAP Repositories Network - Promoting Interoperability José Carvalho1, Paulo Lopes2, João Moreira2 1: University of Minho, Portugal; 2: FCT/FCCN
Track 5 (P1E) Measuring use and reuse Presentations Lecture Hall M Reuse and use: new definitions for digital library assessment Ayla Stein Kenfield1, Santi Thompson2, Elizabeth Kelly3, Genya O'Gara4, Caroline Muglia5, Liz Woolcott6 1: University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, United States of America; 2: University of Houston Libraries; 3: Loyola University New Orleans; 4: Virtual Library of Virginia; 5: University of Southern California; 6: Utah State University
The BitViews project: a new method for aggregating online usage data, a new route to universal Open Access. Manfredi La Manna1, Camillo Lamanna2 1: University of St Andrews, United Kingdom; 2: University of New South Wales and University of Sydney, Australia
Analyzing Aggregate IR Use Data from RAMP Kenning Arlitsch1, Dale Askey2, Jonathan Wheeler3 1: Montana State University, United States of America; 2: University of Alberta, Canada; 3: University of New Mexico, United States of America
12:30-13:30 Break (lunch provided) Campsite 13:30-15:30 Presentations Main Building Track 1 (P2A): Audible and visual - non-textual objects in repositories Presentations Lecture Hall A
All the viewer needs: How user-centered design helps to develop and operate an open repository for audiovisual media Margret Plank, Bastian Drees, Abiodun Ogunyemi Leibniz Information Centre for Science and Technology, Germany
What do users expect from image repositories? – Focus group impressions Lucia Sohmen, Ina Blümel, Lambert Heller Leibniz Information Center for Science and Technology, Germany
Developing technical infrastructure and services for diverse usage scenarios based on multimedial linguistic data Hanna Hedeland1, Daniel Jettka2 1: Hamburger Zentrum für Sprachkorpora, Universität Hamburg, Germany; 2: Institut für Finno-Ugristik/Uralistik, Universität Hamburg, Germany
Searching for Sustainability – Avalon in the Samvera Community David E Schober1, Jon Dunn2, Ryan Stean1 1: Northwestern University, United States of America; 2: Indiana Univerisity, United States of America
Track 2 (P2B): Designing Interfaces with UX Presentations Lecture Hall B
A new user-centric open repository design: A case study of INED’s institutional repository with Polaris OS Yann Mahé1, Karin Sohler2, Manuel Guzman1, Sarah Amrani1 1: MyScienceWork, France; 2: French Institute for Demographic Studies (Ined), France
Experts and Novices: redesigning user interfaces for the White Rose Repositories Beccy Shipman1, Kate O'Neill2, Kate Petherbridge3 1: University of Leeds, United Kingdom; 2: University of Sheffield, United Kingdom; 3: White Rose Libraries, United Kingdom
R-Shiny as an interface for Data Visualization and Data Analysis on the Brazilian Digital Library of Thesis and Dissertations (BDTD) Lucca F. Ramalho, Leonard R. Campelo, Washington Luís Ribeiro de Carvalho Segundo Brazilian Institute of Information in Science and Technology (IBICT), Brazil
Track 3 (P2C): Collections and connections for research data Presentations Lecture Hall C
In a third space: Building a horizontally connected digital collections ecosystem Kevin Clair, Jack Maness, Kim Pham, Fernando Reyes, Jeff Rynhart University of Denver, United States of America
The Protean IR: Developing a versatile and decentralized repository through an API Brian Luna Lucero, Kathryn Pope Columbia University Libraries, United States of America
Two worlds meet: customising a general purpose repository for the specific needs of Life Sciences to achieve FAIRness for research data Asztrik Bakos1, Daniela Digles1, Gerhard F. Ecker1, Raman Ganguly1, Isabelle Herbauts1, Tomasz Miksa2, Andreas Rauber2, Michael Viereck1 1: University of Vienna, Austria; 2: TU Wien
The Fast and the FRDR Alex Garnett1, Lee Wilson2, Clara Turp3, Julienne Pascoe4 1: Simon Fraser University; 2: Portage, ACENET; 3: McGill University; 4: Library and Archives, Canada
Track 4 (P2D): Repositories all around the worlds Presentations Lecture Hall J
Efforts for Promoting Open Access Repositories in Palestine Rawia Fawzi Awadallah, Iyad Mohammed Alagha The Islamic University of Gaza, Palestinian Territories
Enhancing and connecting repositories in Africa: NREN-repository collaboration Omo Oaiya1, Iryna Kuchma2, Kathleen Shearer3 1: WACREN, Nigeria; 2: EIFL, International; 3: COAR, International
The implementation of National research data repository in South Africa Mbuyiselo Mqondisi Ndlovu Council for Scientific and Industrial Research, South Africa
Building NED: National edeposit for Australia Barbara Lemon National and State Libraries Australia, Australia
Track 5 (P2E): Developer Track Developer Track Lecture Hall M
Integrating DSpace 6: A Primer Kim Michael Shepherd Kim Shepherd, Freelance Developer, New Zealand
Automating OAIS compliant digital preservation using Archivematica and DSpace Hrafn Malmquist University of Edinburgh, United Kingdom
Using DSpace as backend service - Workflow-centric repository development in practice Ari Häyrinen University of Jyväskylä, Finland
Longleaf: a repository-independent utility for applying digital preservation processes to files Benjamin Pennell, Jason Casden University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill University Libraries, United States of America
A Multi-Tenancy Cloud-Native Digital Library Platform Yinlin Chen, Jim Tuttle, William A. Ingram Virginia Tech, United States of America
DSpace-Clustering via Puppet, HAProxy and CephFS Bernd Nicklas, Paul Münch Philipps-Universität Marburg, Germany
15:30-16:00 Coffee Break Campsite 16:00-16:30 Welcome by Katharina Fegebank, Second Mayor and Lecture Hall A
Senator for Science, Research, and Equal Rights 16:30-17:30 Minute Madness Lecture Hall A 17:30-19:30 Poster Reception (snacks and drinks provided) Campsite
Posters
Archiving and collecting Arctic datasets: Open Arctic Research Index Tamer Abu-Alam, Karl Magnus Nilsen, Obiajulu Odu, Stein Høydalsvik The UiT - The Arctic University of Norway
Central Open Access Repository in Nepal: a Landmark for Supporting Open Scholarship Jagadish Chandra Aryal Social Science Baha, Nepal
An Agricultural Research e-Seeker to find, explore and visualize open repository resources Peter Ballantyne1, Moayad Al-Najdawi3, Enrico Bonaiuti2, Valerio Graziano2, Alan Orth1, Jane Poole1, Mohammed Salem3, Abenet Yabowork4 1: International Livestock Research Institute, Kenya; 2: International Center for Agricultural Research in the Dry Areas, Egypt; 3: CodeObia, Jordan; 4: International Livestock Research Institute, Ethiopia
Finding Citations on Lume Institutional Repository André Rolim Behr, Manuela Klanovicz Ferreira, Zaida Horowitz, Janise Silva Borges da Costa, Carla Metzler Saatkamp, Cleusa Pavan, Caterina Groposo Pavão Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil
PHAIDRA: An open approach for the repository infrastructure from the University of Vienna Susanne Blumesberger, Raman Ganguly University of Vienna, Austria
DeepGreen – Open Access Transformation in Practice Julia Boltze1, Eike Wannick2 1: Zuse Institute Berlin, Germany; 2: Helmholtz Open Science Coordination Office at the GFZ German Research Centre for Geosciences, Potsdam, Germany
Bridging the gap between Repositories and Homepages - Providing data from DSpace-CRIS with OData Jonathan Boß, Cornelius Matějka University of Bamberg, Germany
Preserving Social Media posts: a case study with “In Her Shoes” Kathryn Cassidy, Aileen O'Carroll, Kevin Long Digital Repository of Ireland
Bibliometric analysis of scholarly articles in Kenyan repositories: trends, challenges and policy implications Wanyenda Leonard Chilimo Technical University of Mombasa, Kenya
DOISerbia Repository – how transition country raised visibility of scientific journals Boris Đenadić, Tatjana Timotijević, Katarina Perić, Aleksandra Kužet National Library of Serbia, Serbia
Building a single repository to meet all use cases: a collaboration between institution, researchers and supplier Jenny Evans1, Tom Renner2, Nina Watts1 1: University of Westminster, United Kingdom; 2: Haplo, United Kingdom
OASIS: A sustainable digital repository service owned by academics Yankui Feng, Sebastian Pałucha University of York, United Kingdom
ROSI – Open Metrics for Open Repositories Grischa Fraumann, Svantje Lilienthal, Christian Hauschke, Lucia Sohmen German National Library of Science and Technology (TIB), Germany
Making Local Knowledge Visible: An IR in Kosovo Michele Gibney University of the Pacific, United States of America
Virtual Reality Record Metadata Michele Gibney University of the Pacific, United States of America
An assessment of the status of Open Access Policies and Repositories Development in Kenya Milcah Wawira Gikunju, Felix Rop University of Nairobi, Kenya
A native iPad app for the DSpace 7 REST API Keith Gilbertson Virginia Tech, United States of America
Hamburg Open Science at TUHH: An All-in-one repository service based on DSpace CRIS Oliver Goldschmidt, Andreas Pohnke, Beate Rajski, Gunnar Weidt TU Hamburg, Germany
Usage Statistics Do Count Chiara Bigarella, Jose Benito Gonzalez Lopez, Alexandros Ioannidis, Lars Nielsen CERN, Switzerland
DOI Minter: A Service for Flexible Generation of DataCite DOIs in Connection with a DSpace Repository Mohyden Habbal, Daryl Grenz KAUST, Saudi Arabia
Introducing the Fedora User Guide Juliet L. Hardesty1, Anna Goslen2, Jennifer B. Young3, Ruth Kitchin Tillman4, Andrew Woods5 1: Indiana University, United States of America; 2: University of North Carolina Chapel Hill, United States of America; 3: Northwestern University, United States of America; 4: Penn State University, United States of America; 5: Duraspace, United States of America
Long-term preservation: Integrating DSpace and Rosetta at ETH Zurich Barbara Hirschmann, Greg Scowen ETH Zurich, Switzerland
User stories and Front-ends for a Research and Cultural Heritage Data Repository Bolette Ammitzbøll Jurik Royal Danish Library, Denmark
Jisc Open Research Hub – Supporting Open Scholarship John Kaye, Dom Fripp, Tom Davey Jisc, United Kingdom
Highly Automated Import of Metadata into an Institutional Repository: A PHP Tool Laura Amalia Konstantaki, Federico Cantini, Lothar Nunnenmacher Lib4RI - Library for the Research Institutes within the ETH Domain: Eawag, Empa, PSI & WSL, Dübendorf, Switzerland
Opinions, Attitudes, and Contributions to Institutional Repositories: A Survey of Indonesian University Academics Toong Tjiek Liauw Petra Christian University, Indonesia
Adapting repositories to OpenAire 4 Guidelines: Huelva repository, a case study Jose Carlos Morillo Moreno1, Emilio Lorenzo Gil2, Eva Braña Ferreiro2 1: Universidad de Huelva; 2: Arvo Consultores y Tecnología
Newspapers in Samvera Eben English1, Brian McBride2, Harish Kumar Maringanti2, Sean Upton2, Jacob Reed2 1: Boston Public Library, United States of America; 2: University of Utah, United States of America
Automated metadata generation using machine learning Harish Maringanti University of Utah, United States of America
Developing an Open Repository into Full Service platform for Open Publishing - The Case of 25 Universities of Applied Sciences in Finland Minna Marjamaa, Tiina Tolonen AMKIT Consortium, Finland
Attention to Detail, Attention to Value: Building Additional Repository Assessment Tools for In-House Reporting Aajay Murphy, Heather Hankins Kennesaw State University, United States of America
Research Data Support at the Royal Veterinary College: A Case Study Michael Murphy Royal Veterinary College, United Kingdom
Developing the Legislative Map of the Philippines Repository for better Research Experience Laurence Anthony Narvaez House of Representatives of the Philippines, Philippines
Automatic data enrichment: merging metadata from several sources Frank Lützenkirchen1, Kathleen Neumann2 1: Universitätsbibliothek Duisburg-Essen; 2: Verbundzentrale des GBV (VZG)
Search Engine Optimization as a motivational factor for researchers to submit their material on the institutional open repository case study of Uganda Christian University. Fredrick Odongo Uganda Christian University, Uganda
MyCoRe - the repository software framework Wiebke Oeltjen Universität Hamburg, Germany
Hamburg Open Science, linking Repositories across universities and fostering digital cultural in science Konstantin Olschofsky University of Hamburg/ Hamburg Open Science, Germany
Building Campus Support and Adoption of a New Repository Jennifer Lea Pate University of North Alabama, United States of America
Repositories at Work: General Research Data Repository at Universität Hamburg Hagen Peukert, Juliane Jacob, Iris Vogel, Kai Wörner University of Hamburg, Germany
OpenAIRE Content Acquisition Policy: expanding the scope Pedro Príncipe University of Minho, Portugal
How to publish software artefacts in institutional repositories: Git integration for DSpace repositories with SARA Franziska Rapp1, Daniel Scharon2 1: Ulm University, Germany; 2: University of Konstanz, Germany
One Repo fits all – The Specialist Repository for Life Sciences as a Data Store for every type of publication Dr. Ursula Arning, Robin Rothe ZB MED Information Centre for Life Sciences, Germany
Collaborative Open Data Repository for Sustainable Health Development in Tanzania Mboni Amiri Ruzegea Muhimbili University of Health and Allied Sciences, Tanzania
Leveraging a University Institutional Repository to Host a New Open Access, Peer-Reviewed Student Biomedical Science Journal at the Cooper Medical School of Rowan University Benjamin Saracco, Amanda Adams Cooper Medical of Rowan University, United States of America
Introducing Orpheus, an Open Source database of journals and publishers André Fernando Sartori University of Cambridge, United Kingdom
Donut and Glaze: A Hyrax Dam and Decoupled Frontend in AWS David E Schober Northwestern University, United States of America
Open Access Repositories in Pakistan: a case study Attya shahid FAST-National University of computer & Emerging sciences, Pakistan
Keeping the user in the workflow: IR licensing for mediated deposits Gail Steinhart Cornell University, United States of America
Flexible metadata: the key to a single repository for all types of output Ben Summers Haplo, United Kingdom
The Bridge of Data project: Gdansk University of Technology approach to building up the infrastructure for data sharing. Magdalena Szuflita-Żurawska, Michał Nowacki, Anna Wałek, Paweł Pszczoliński Gdansk University of Technology, Poland
Designing a vocabulary service for a ‘data-driven’ materials data repository Kosuke Tanabe, Asahiko Matsuda, Mikiko Tanifuji National Institute for Materials Science, Japan
CDS Videos: The new platform for CERN videos Flavio Costa, Jose Benito Gonzalez Lopez, Ludmila Marian, Karolina Przerwa, Nicola Tarocco, Zacharias Zacharodimos CERN, Switzerland
Lost in Migration: Satisficing the Herbert Simon Collection Kate Topham, Emily Finch University of Michigan School of Information, United States of America
A short history of ORCID (DE) in Germany Paul Vierkant1, Heinz Pampel1, Britta Dreyer2, Stephanie Glagla-Dietz3, Sarah Hartmann3, Christian Pietsch4, Jochen Schirrwagen4, Friedrich Summann4 1: Helmholtz Association, Germany; 2: German National Library of Science and Technology; 3: German National Library; 4: Bielefeld University
re3data - Open infrastructure for Open Science Paul Vierkant1, Heinz Pampel1, Robert Ulrich2, Frank Scholze2, Maxi Kindling3, Michael Witt4, Kirsten Elger5 1: Helmholtz Association, Germany; 2: Karlsruhe Institute of Technology; 3: Humboldt Universität zu Berlin; 4: Purdue University; 5: GFZ German Research Centre for Geosciences
A model for a sustainable repository network in Serbia Obrad Vučkovac Institute of nuclear sciences "Vinca", University of Belgrade, Serbia
Archiving large or restricted datasets with Edinburgh DataVault Pauline Ward University of Edinburgh, United Kingdom
EUDAT-B2FIND : A FAIR friendly and interdisciplinary discovery service for open research data Heinrich Widmann, Claudia Martens, Hannes Thiemann Deutsches Klimarechenzentrum GmbH, Germany
Using DSpace@Fraunhofer – Building up the Fraunhofer Open Science Cloud Andrea Wuchner, Dirk Eisengräber-Pabst, Michael Erndt Fraunhofer-Informationszentrum Raum und Bau IRB, Germany
JOIN² Software Platform for the JINR Open Access Institutional Repository Irina Filozova, Roman Semenov, Galina Shestakova, Tatiana Zaikina Joint Institute for Nuclear Research, Russian Federation
Context-adaptive research data repository publishing in Chinese Academy of Sciences Lili Zhang, Chengzan Li, Lulu Jiang, Yuanchun Zhou Computer Network Information Center, Chinese Academy of Scinece, China, People's Republic of
Wednesday, June 12 8:00-9:00 Morning Coffee Campsite 8:00-17:00 Registration Foyer of main building 9:00-10:30 Presentations Main Building Track 1 (P3A): Audible and visual - non-textual objects in repositories Presentations Lecture Hall A
A conceptual model for building publishing services on top of a distributed network of repositories Kathleen Shearer1, Eloy Rodrigues1,2, Tony Ross-Hellauer3, Benedikt Fecher4, John Willinsky5, Paolo Manghi6, Natalia Manola7, Susanna Mornati8, Pedro Principe2 1: COAR, International; 2: University of Minho, Portugal; 3: Know-Center, Austria; 4: Alexander von Humboldt Institute for Internet and Society, Germany; 5: Public Knowledge Project, Canada; 6: National Research Centre, Italy; 7: Athena Research Centre, Greece; 8: 4Science srl, Italy Discovering the rules of the game of preprints Andrea Chiarelli1, Rob Johnson1, Emma Louise Richens1, - Knowledge Exchange Task and Finish Group on Preprints2 1: Research Consulting Limited, United Kingdom; 2: Knowledge Exchange
Adding value to repositories through overlay journals Courtney Matthews1, Oya Rieger2,3, Kathleen Shearer4, Martha Whitehead1 1: Queen's University, Canada; 2: arXiv, United States; 3: Cornell University, United States; 4: COAR, International
Track 2 (P3B): Research data and the Oxford Common File Layout standard Presentations Lecture Hall B
OCFL: An application-independent file layout for repositories Andrew Hankinson1, Neil Jefferies1, Rosalyn Metz2, Julian Morley3, Simeon Warner4, Andrew Woods5 1: Bodleian Libraries, University of Oxford; 2: Emory University; 3: Stanford University; 4: Cornell University; 5: DuraSpace
Implementation of a Research Data Repository using the Oxford Common File Layout standard at the University of Technology Sydney Michael Lynch, Peter Sefton University of Technology Sydney, Australia
More than preservation: Creating motivational designs and tailored incentives in research data repositories Sebastian Stefan Feger1,2, Sünje Dallmeier-Tiessen1, Pamfilos Fokianos1, Dinos Kousidis1, Artemis Lavasa1, Rokas Maciulaitis1, Jan Okraska1, Diego Rodriguez Rodriguez1, Tibor Šimko1, Anna Trzcinska1, Ioannis Tsanaktsidis1, Stephanie van de Sandt1,3 1: CERN, Switzerland; 2: LMU Munich, Germany; 3: Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, Germany
Track 3 (P3C): 24x7s: Users 24x7 Lecture Hall C
Replicating DSpace Content to the Internet Archive Irene C. Berry Naval Postgraduate School, United States of America
User-specific adjustments to our repository – a first-hand report Margo Bargheer, Daniel Beucke, Mustafa Dogan Göttingen State and University Library, Germany
Interactive Engagement Experiences: Next Level Open Access for Collections Lee Boulie Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum, United States of America
Engagement and Sustainability Through User-Centered Design Patrick Galligan Rockefeller Archive Center, United States of America
Bringing your user community with you...a story of successful engagement! Jenny Evans, Nina Watts University of Westminster, United Kingdom
New ways to improve the common understanding of users in an agile development team Karin Maria Ljungklint Chalmers University of Technology, the Library, Sweden
Staff competencies in the planning and establishing of an open repository at the Botswana University of Agriculture and Natural Resources Tlhalefo Metlhaleng Botswana University of Agriculture and Natural Resources, Botswana
The future of scholarly communications professionals Nancy Pontika CORE - The Open University, United Kingdom
Track 4 (P3D): Electronic theses and dissertations Presentations Lecture Hall J
Issues in Transformation of Indian Traditional Print and Born Digital Theses into Open Access Electronic Theses Perumal Ganesan Alagappa University, India
Improving LA Referencia metadata by linking research profiles to repositories: the case of the Brazilian Digital Library of Thesis and Dissertations (BDTD) and the Lattes CV Platform Lautaro J. Matas3, Washington Luís Ribeiro de Carvalho Segundo1, Thiago M. R. Dias2 1: Brazilian Institute of Information in Science and Technology (IBICT), Brazil; 2: Centro Federal de Educação Tecnológica de Minas Gerais (CEFET/MG); 3: Red de Repositorios de Acceso Abierto a La Ciencia (LA Referencia), Chile
Integration of a national e-theses online service with institutional repositories Vasily Bunakov1, Frances Madden2 1: STFC UKRI (UK Research and Innovation), United Kingdom; 2: British Library, United Kingdom
Track 5 (P3E): Developer Track DEV Lecture Hall M
DSpace 7 - Creating High-Quality Software: Update to Development Practices Andrea Bollini1, Terry Brady2, Giuseppe Digilio1, Tim Donohue3 1: 4Science, Italy; 2: Georgetown University Library; 3: DuraSpace
Web Data Engineering: A Technical Perspective on Web Archives Helge Holzmann Internet Archive, United States of America
Tools and Techniques for a Repository-Centric Architecture with Fedora Joshua A. Westgard University of Maryland Libraries, United States of America
10:30-11:00 Coffee Break Campsite 11:00-12:30 Presentations Main Building Track 1 (P4A): Introducing DSpace 7 Presentations Lecture Hall A
Introducing DSpace 7 Tim Donohue DuraSpace, United States of America
DSpace 7 - The Angular UI from a user’s perspective Ignace Deroost, Art Lowel Atmire, Belgium
DSpace 7 - Enhanced Submission & Workflow Andrea Bollini, Giuseppe Digilio, Claudio Cortese 4Science, Italy
Track 2 (P4B): Joining forces to address user needs around research data management Panel Lecture Hall B
Radical collaborations: Joining forces to address user needs around research data management Elizabeth Arnold Hull1, Lisa Johnston2, Nancy McGovern3, Cynthia Hudson-Vitale4, Amy Nurnberger3, Limor Peer5 1: Dryad, United States of America; 2: University of Minnesota, United States of America; 3: Massachusetts Institute of Technology, United States of America; 4: Penn State University, United States of America; 5: Yale University, United States of America
Track 3 (P4C): Large-scale repositories Presentations Lecture Hall C
Sustaining a Large-Scale Repository Architecture: Behind the Scenes of the Stanford Digital Repository Michael Giarlo, Justin Coyne Stanford University, United States of America
The Dos and Don’ts about setting up a very large full-text repository Gerrit Gragert, Oliver Schöner State Library Berlin, Germany
Migrating The Language Archive to a new repository solution. Paul Trilsbeek Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics
Track 4 (P4D): Islandora for everybody Presentations Lecture Hall J
Islandora Community Update: A Platform for the User, by the User Melissa Anez, Daniel Lamb Islandora Foundation, Canada
Islandora 8 and Beyond Melissa Anez, Daniel Lamb Islandora Foundation, Canada
Islandora for All: Community Sustainability and Lessons Learned David Keiser-Clark Williams College, United States of America
Track 5 (P4D): Open access, neoliberalism, compliance and the law Presentations Lecture Hall M
Open or ajar?: 'openness' within the neoliberal academy Simon Bowie1, Kevin Sanders2 1: SOAS, University of London, United Kingdom; 2: University of West London, United Kingdom
Assessing Compliance with the UK REF 2021 Open Access Policy Drahomira Herrmannova, Nancy Pontika, Petr Knoth Knowledge Media institute, The Open University, United Kingdom
Rights registration conditional to Open Access Marjolein Steeman Netherlands Institute for Sound and Vision, The Netherlands
12:30-13:30 Break (Lunch provided) Campsite 13:30-15:00 Presentations Main Buildung Track 1 (P5A): Extending DSpace 7 Presentations Lecture Hall A
DSpace 7: open for integrations Andrea Bollini, Luigi Andrea Pascarelli 4Science, Italy
DSpace 7 - The Power of Configurable Entities Lieven Droogmans Atmire
Extending DSpace 7: DSpace-CRIS and DSpace-GLAM for empowered repositories and digital libraries Andrea Bollini, Claudio Cortese, Giuseppe Digilio, Riccardo Fazio, Luigi Andrea Pascarelli, Susanna Mornati 4Science srl, Italy
Track 2 (P5B): Practice Research in Repositories Presentations Panel Lecture Hall B
Engaging practice researchers in open repositories: beyond A.B.C. Helen Cooper, Josie Caplehorne University of Kent, United Kingdom
Practice-based arts research in repositories: how do we better engage with researchers to capture, manage and enable discoverability of this research? Jenny Evans1, Andrew Gray2, John Kaye3, Dawn Pike4, Tom Renner5, Nicola Siminson4, Nina Watts1 1: University of Westminster, United Kingdom; 2: Goldsmiths, University of London, United Kingdom; 3: Jisc, United Kingdom; 4: Glasgow School of Art, United Kingdom; 5: Haplo, United Kingdom
Track 3 (P5C): Green roads to Open Access Presentations Lecture Hall C
DeepGreen – Pushing on the Green Road of Open Access Eike Wannick1, Julia Boltze2, Thomas Dierkes2, Heinz Pampel1, Markus Putnings3 1: Helmholtz Association, Helmholtz Open Science Coordination Office at the GFZ German Research Centre for Geosciences, Potsdam, Germany; 2: Zuse Institute Berlin – KOBV, Berlin, Germany; 3: Friedrich-Alexander University Erlangen-Nürnberg (FAU), University Library, Erlangen, Germany
Towards Easy Deposit: Lowering the Barriers of Green Open Access with Data Integration and Workflow Automation for an Institutional Repository Hui Zhang, Josh Gum, Sarah Imholt, Steve VanTuyl Oregon State University, United States of America
Building delightfully fast, simple, legal ways to deposit articles for individuals and libraries Joseph McArthur Open Access Button
Track 4 (P5D): Moving forward with Fedora Presentations Lecture Hall J
Fedora Project and Community Update David Wilcox, Andrew Woods, Daniel Bernstein DuraSpace
Barriers to Major Upgrades: Assessing Migration Paths Erin Tripp, Andrew Woods, David Wilcox DuraSpace
Bridge2Hyku: Tools and Strategies for Content Migration to Open Source Repository - Hyku Annie Wu, Santi Thompson, Andy Weidner, Todd Crocken, Sean Watkins, Anne Washington University of Houston, United States of America
Track 5 (P5E): Standards and protocols for ingesting and harvesting Presentations Lecture Hall M
DataCrate: a progress report on packaging research data for distribution via your repository Peter Sefton University of Technology Sydney, Australia
SWORDv3: Standardising Interoperability for Data Repositories Richard Jones1, Neil Jefferies2, Lars Holm Nielsen3, Dom Fripp4 1: Cottage Labs LLP, United Kingdom; 2: University of Oxford, United Kingdom; 3: CERN; 4: Jisc
Comparing the Performance of OAI-PMH with ResourceSync Petr Knoth1, Matteo Cancellieri1, Martin Klein2 1: Knowledge Media institute, The Open University, United Kingdom; 2: Los Alamos National Laboratory, USA
15:00-15:30 Coffee Break Campsite 15:30-17:00 Presentations Main Building Track 1 (P6A): ORCID in repositories Presentations Lecture Hall A
Working together to make ORCID work for repositories: ORCID in repositories task force Elizabeth Krznarich ORCID, United States of America
Cultivating ORCIDs - growing a sustainable national consortium Balviar Notay, Adam Vials Moore, Monica Duke Jisc, United Kingdom
Using ORCID in the Digital Repository of Ireland Kathryn Cassidy, Kevin Long Digital Repository of Ireland
Track 2 (P6B): Plan S panel Panel Lecture Hall B Chair: Torsten Reimer, British Library
Track 3 (P6C): Interoperability 24x7 Lecture Hall C
Impact of the subject metadata element on the discoverability of repository items on the Web Lenka Shipton City, University of London, United Kingdom
Central Platforms for Open Access Repositories – A case study of Publicly Funded Research Organizations in India Alok Khode CSIR-Unit for Research and Development of Information Products, Pune, India
Prioritizing use over perfection: a risk management approach to digital preservation Rachel Trent, Matthew Mihalik The George Washington University, United States of America
Square pegs, round holes: how can we make repositories work for arts research? Dawn Pike, Nicola Jane Siminson The Glasgow School of Art, United Kingdom
OpenAIRE Dashboard for Content Providers: Open Science as-a-Service for literature and data repositories André Vieira1, Pedro Principe1, Paula Moura1, Stefania Martziou2, Claudio Atzori3 1: University of Minho, Portugal; 2: Athena Research Center, Greece; 3: CNR-ISTI, [email protected], Italy
Reinventing the Wheel? – The Case for the Development of an alternative DSpace Submission Assistant for Psychological Science Peter Weiland, Christiane Baier, Roland Ramthun, Johannes Höhmann Leibniz Institute for Psychology Information (ZPID), Germany
Linking ArchivesSpace Hierarchy to DSpace Digital Objects Terrence W Brady Georgetown University Library, United States of America
Discovery of Open Access resources in the heterogeneous environment Viatcheslav Britchkovski National Library of Belarus, Belarus
Track 4 (P6D): Research management workflows Presentations Lecture Hall J
Automation and human curation to enable the preservation, linking, and discovery of research and scholarship Cynthia Vitale1, Daniel Coughlin1, Michael Tribone1, Scott Woods2 1: Pennsylvania State University, United States of America; 2: West Arete
Scratching that itch: Process improvement and problem solving in the University of Bath Research Data Archive Alexander James Ball University of Bath, United Kingdom
Integrating workflows to streamline the research lifecyle with OSF Sara Bowman Center for Open Science, United States of America
Track 5 (P6E): Standards and protocols for ingesting and harvesting Developer Track Lecture Hall M
Connecting my repository to the Research Graph using Event Data Kristian Garza DataCite, Germany
Show and Tell: SHERPA Romeo's New API Adam Field Jisc, United Kingdom
Pocket infrastructures: Open and reproducible scholarship and publishing from/for the Global South Offray Vladimir Luna Cárdenas mutabiT / HackBo, Colombia
MouseBytes: an open-access and web-based repository for cognitive data integration and sharing Sara Memar, Flavio H. Beraldo, Vania F. Prado, Lisa M. Saksida, Timothy J. Bussey, Marco A. M. Prado University of Western Ontario, Canada
Tainacan, a WordPress based repository platform Leonardo Germani Tainacan, MediaLab - Federal University of Goiás, IBICT
“Why can’t I get this Digital Library App to .WARC?” - Progressive Web Apps (PWA) as Digital Repository Software Architectures for Emulation and Preservation Jason Anthony Clark Montana State University, United States of America
19:00-22:00 Conference Dinner (registered participants only) Harbour Please make your way to the Überseebrücke: https://tinyurl.com/y3c8ytz2 Boarding starts at 18:30, the ship leaves at 19:00!
Thursday, June 13 8:00-9:00 Morning Coffee Campsite 8:30-15:30 Registration Foyer of main building 9:00-10:30 Presentations Main Building Track 1 (P7A): Tools for measuring and monitoring Presentations Lecture Hall A
Relevance and Challenges of Altmetrics for Repositories - answers from the *metrics project Astrid Orth1, Jan Weiland2, Maryam Mehrazar2, Wolfgang Riese2, Julius Stropel3 1: SUB Göttingen, Germany; 2: Leibniz-Informationszentrum Wirtschaft ZBW; 3: Verbundzentrale des GBV - VZG
Data Science Tools for Monitoring the Global Repository Eco-System and its Lines of Evolution Friedrich Summann, Dirk Pieper Bielefeld University Library, Germany
CORE Analytics Dashboard Petr Knoth, Jozef Harag, Drahomira Herrmannova Knowledge Media institute, The Open University, United Kingdom
Track 2 (P7B): Towards next generation technologies (panel) Panel Lecture Hall B Adoption of NGR technologies - status update Kathleen Shearer1, Eloy Rodrigues1, Lars Holm Nielsen2, Erin Tripp3, Paul Walk4, Andrea Bollini5 1: COAR, International; 2: Invenio; 3: DuraSpace; 4: Antleaf; 5: 4Science
Track 3 (P7C): New repositories and tools 24x7 Lecture Hall C Lirias 2.0 - Implementation of a new Institutional Repository Hannelore Vanhaverbeke1, Nicky Vanwinkel1, Marc Van Herck2, Veerle Kerstens2, Valérie Adriaens2 1: KU Leuven, Research Coordination Office, Belgium; 2: KU Leuven, LIBIS, Belgium
Introducing the New Sherpa Romeo Jane HS Anders Jisc, United Kingdom
Stripping down Zenodo to build an Invenio repository – lessons learned Kai Wörner, Hagen Peukert, Juliane Jacob, Iris Vogel Universität Hamburg, Germany
Usability testing to inform IR upgrade Laura Henze, Kate Pechekhonova New York University Libraries, United States of America
Inter-unit collaboration in developing repository services – the case of E-thesis at the University of Helsinki Jussi Piipponen1, Miia Valento2, Samu Kytöjoki1, Martina Mether3 1: Helsinki University Library; 2: Student Services, University of Helsinki; 3: Educational technology services, University of Helsinki
LillOA : try before you buy! Marie-Madeleine Géroudet Université de Lille, France
Jisc Open Research Hub – Supporting Open Scholarship John Kaye, Dom Fripp, Tom Davey Jisc, United Kingdom
Track 4 (P7D): Design principles for Cloud-based repositories Presentations Lecture Hall J
When the use case tells you to start over Nate Hill Metropolitan New York Library Council, United States of America
The Challenges and Charms of a Cloud-Based Repository Infrastructure Transition: A Case Study from the University of Illinois Seth Robbins, Joseph Troy, Kyle Rimkus, W. Jason Strutz, Jason Colwell University of Illinois, United States of America
Forming a CI/CD Pipeline and Cloud-first Culture Jeremy N Friesen University of Notre Dame, United States of America
Track 5 (P7E): Digital preservation Presentations Lecture Hall M
Development of New Standards for OAIS Interoperability Michael W. Kearney1, David Giaretta2, John Garrett3, Steve Hughes4 1: Space Infrastructure Foundation; 2: PTAB Ltd.; 3: Garrett Software; 4: Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology
Participatory Design for Long-Term Access: User Research, Software Preservation and Emulation Jessica Meyerson1, Seth Anderson2 1: Educopia Institute, United States of America; 2: Yale University, United States of America
Capturing the UK City of Culture: bringing Hyrax and Archivematica together to deliver preservation and access workflows Chris Awre1, Julie Allinson2, Anusha Ranganathan3, Laura Giles1, Simon Wilson1, Steph Taylor2 1: University of Hull, United Kingdom; 2: CoSector, United Kingdom; 3: Cottage Labs, United Kingdom
10:30-11:00 Coffee Break Campsite 11:00-12:30 Presentations Main Building
Track 1 (P8A): How to be discovered? Presentations Lecture Hall A Analysing the performance of open access papers discovery tools Petr Knoth, Matteo Cancellieri Knowledge Media institute, The Open University, United Kingdom
Promoting content discovery of open repositories: reviewing the impact of optimisation techniques (2016-2019) George Macgregor University of Strathclyde, United Kingdom
If you’ve got it, flaunt it: repository improvements to increase discoverability, visibility and usability Leigh Stork Aston University, United Kingdom
Track 2 (P8B): Whose community is this, anyway? Presentations Panel Lecture Hall B
Stewarding National User Groups to Strengthen International OSS Communities Pascal Becker1, Michele Mennielli2, Erin Tripp2 1: The Library Code GmbH; 2: DuraSpace
All Together Now? – Do service providers have a role in the sustainability of open source repositories? Julie Allinson, Rory McNicholl CoSector - University of London, United Kingdom
Track 3 (P8C): Reuse 24x7 Lecture Hall C Beyond repositories: enabling actionable FAIR open data reuse services in particle physics Tibor Šimko, Sünje Dallmeier-Tiessen, Sebastian Feger, Pamfilos Fokianos, Dinos Kousidis, Artemis Lavasa, Rokas Mačiulaitis, Jan Okraska, Diego Rodrı́guez, Anna Trzcińska, Ioannis Tsanaktsidis, Stephanie van de Sandt CERN, Switzerland Long-term archival and global dissemination of climate data at DKRZ Karsten Peters, Stephan Kindermann, Hannes Thiemann Deutsches Klimarechenzentrum GmbH, Germany
What role can Open Science play in enabling South-North dialogues? Johanna Havemann1, Justin Sègbédji Ahinon2 1: Access 2 Perspectives, Germany; 2: University of Parakou, Benin
More users than we need? – Making Open Science accessible for audiences with diverging interests Jan Frederik Maas, Steff Bentrup SUB Hamburg, Germany
OTI Knowledge Base Nana Yaw Nhyira Butah LMI Holdings, Ghana
Sharing images with Wikimedia Commons for repository users Lucia Sohmen, Janko Happe Leibniz Information Center for Science and Technology, Germany
CISAN´s Handbook of Metadata Norma Aída Manzanera Silva1, María de los Ángeles Medina Huerta2 1: Centro de Investigaciones sobre América del Norte, UNAM, Mexico; 2: Facultad de Filosofía y Letras, UNAM, México
DSpace ORCID integration: name authority control solution at the European University Institute Lotta Svantesson, Monica Steletti European University Institute, Italy
Track P8D: Services for research data, with privacy in mind Presentations Lecture Hall J
The Development of an Integrated Next Generation Data Repository for Materials Science Paul Walk3, Mikiko Tanifuji1, Kosuke Tanabe1, Asahiko Matsuda1, Richard Jones2, Anusha Ranganathan2 1: National Institute for Materials Science, Japan; 2: Cottage Labs LLP, United Kingdom; 3: Antleaf Ltd., United Kingdom
Data Privacy Encodings at the Human-Machine Interface Nic Weber1, Sebastian Karcher2, James Myers2 1: University of Washington, United States of America; 2: Qualitative Data Repository - Syracuse University, United States of America
Impact of Privacy Law on National Research Data Repositories in South Africa Nobubele Angel Shozi Data Intensive Research Initiative of South Africa, South Africa
Track P8E: Meeting the user needs for cultural heritage Presentations Lecture Hall M
All the GLAM needs: Engaging users for a collaborative cultural heritage repository Abigail Shelton, Jeremy Friesen, Miranda Van Nevel University of Notre Dame, United States of America
Digital Libraries@UC with DSpace/GLAM Ana Luísa Silva, Mário Bernardes, Bruno Neves, Ana Miguéis Coimbra University Portugal
Building infrastructure for a developing nation Michelle Ann Watson Deakin University, Australia
12:30-13:30 Break (Lunch provided) Campsite 13:30-14:30 Ideas Challenge Presentations Main Building, Lecture Hall A 14:30-15:00 Coffee Break Campsite 15:00-16:30 Closing Plenary and Closing Keynote Main Building, Lecture Hall A Heather Piwowar: The breakout moment for open repositories is now – how can we build the best future for our users?
The 14th Conference on Open Repositories 2019, Hamburg, Germany
Program Chairs: Jyrki Ilva, National Library of Finland Jessica Lindholm, Chalmers University of Technology Torsten Reimer, British Library
Steering Committee: Elin Stangeland (University of Oslo, Chair) Sarah Shreeves (University of Arizona, Vice Chair) https://openrepositories.org
Local Hosts: Universität Hamburg, Center for Sustainable Research Data Management Juliane Jacob, Hagen Peukert, Iris Vogel, Kai Wörner http://or2019.net
Platinum Sponsors:
Silver Sponsors: