Sayeed Choudhury (Johns Hopkins) and Jaap Geraerts (University College London) describe the close cooperation between scholars and technical experts in the development of a transcription protocol developed to better understand the practice of reading. Watch The Archaeology of Infrastructure at:
The Open Science Framework (OSF) is a free, open source Web application, developed by the Center for Open Science (COS), that provides features like file sharing and citing, persistent urls, provenance tracking, and automated versioning. Andrew Sallans (COS) and Natalie Meyers (Notre Dame) describe the core OSF architecture and the problems that it solves, and then explore how this infrastructure can support the institutional research mission, demonstrated through specific examples from the University of Notre Dame. The Open Science Framework (OSF) at Notre Dame: Connecting the Workflow and Supporting the Research Mission is online at:
Previously-released videos from this meeting:
-Transparency, Trust, and Consumer Protection in a Complex World (Julie Brill, Federal Trade Commission)
-Achieving Meaningful Interoperability for Web-based Scholarship (Van de Compel, Nelson)
-Recalibrating Access, Security, Privacy and Innovation (Clifford Lynch, CNI)
-Is Gold Open Access Sustainable? Update from the UC Pay-It-Forward Project (Smith, Anderson)
-How Much Does $1.7 Billion Buy You? A Comparison of Published Scientific Journal Articles to Their Pre-print Version (Farb, Grappone, Broadwell, Klein)