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From: Paige Pope <paige@cni.org>
Sender: <cgplmgr@cni.org>
Subject: Now Live: CNI Winter 2025 Pre-Recorded Project Briefing Series
Date: Fri, 24 Jan 2025 14:43:35 -0500
To: <CNI-ANNOUNCE>
Edition Guide
Coalition for Networked Information

Pre-Recorded Project Briefing Series

Winter 2025

We invite you to view the nine videos in the Winter 2025 edition of our Pre-Recorded Project Briefing Series.

Several briefings focus on generative artificial intelligence (AI) in research and scholarship, including concerns about its ethical use, its effective integration into tools, and support skill development:

A pair of briefings emphasize collaboration and infrastructure, with a focus on communities of practice and standards:
 
The International Association of Scientific, Technical & Medical Publishers (STM) is developing the “Content-update Signaling and Alerting Protocol” to ensure repositories and the research community are notified of critical updates—such as retractions or corrections—to published literature.  
 
Enhancing University Rankings: The Strategic Role of Academic Librarians” highlights how academic librarians can leverage their expertise in scholarly publishing, bibliometrics, and research infrastructure to improve university rankings. Using Florida State University Libraries as a case study, it details their bibliometric data remediation project with the provost’s office and an ORCID integration initiative.
 
Re-Envisioning the Digital Repository: Showcasing Our Exciting Islandora Solution” explores Lehigh University’s implementation of Islandora as a unified digital repository platform for managing and accessing diverse digital assets, such as special collections and research data. Built on a Drupal 10 framework and a microservices architecture, their solution utilizes a rich ecosystem for digital content management and features innovative tools such as OpenAI Whisper for automatic transcription of AV files. 

Over the past decade, significant progress has been made in recognizing research software as a first-class scholarly product within the scholarly ecosystem—spanning repositories and registries, publishers and citation indexers, persistent identifiers, and research-performing organizations and career paths. Yet, software still remains widely under-recognized. “The Role of Research Software and Addressing Its Challenges” summarizes the progress and offers insights for organizations seeking to better recognize and support research software outputs.

We thank the presenters for sharing their work with our community. Please contact them directly with questions or for further discussion. 
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