Download - VIVO Update and Many Flavors of Search
VIVO Update and Many Flavors of Search
Mike ConlonUniversity of Florida
Since February• VIVO version 1.3 completed – search, user accounts, science map,
QR codes, patents, interface • Spreadsheet upload, Google Refine, Harvester • Cross site search, VIVO searchlight, Direct2Experts• Cooperative projects – Harvard, Northwestern, Rochester, OHSU• Mini grants to Pittsburgh, Stonybrook, Duke, Indiana, Weill, ORCID• Adoptions at APA, USDA, 50 US Schools. Tests at NIH• Mexico, Costa Rica, Puerto Rico, India, Australia, China, UK,
Netherlands, Brazil• Thomson-Reuters, Elsevier, Microsoft Research• OpenPhacts, Federal Demonstration Partnership, Community of
Science• Workshop, Hackathon, Implementation Fest, Conference
What is VIVO?
• VIVO is open source, community maintained software tools for research discovery and networking
• VIVO is open standards and open linked data regarding science – people, papers/products, funding, events, resources, projects, data, concepts – and the relationships between them
• VIVO is a world community of collaborators – scientists, implementers, developers
Tools, Data and Community
Providing Data
Tools, Data and Community
VIVO Systems
Tools, Data and Community
VIVO Systems Harvard Profiles
Tools, Data and Community
VIVO Systems Harvard Profiles Other Compatible Systems
Tools, Data and Community
Linked Open Data in a common format, regardless of the system providing data
Research Discovery and Networking Tools
• VIVO search – research discovery and networking• Duke, Florida, DERI – web site plug-ins for reuse of VIVO data• UCSF – find investigators “like me” across the network• Harvard – visualize publication patterns• Northwestern – C-IKnow Recommender• Pittsburgh – Digital Vita – produce vita and biosketches• VIVO Search Light – find experts related to any page on the world wide web • Direct2Experts – get counts of researchers matching criteria and link to them• Community of Science – use linked open data for faculty interests, match to
opportunities• Federal Researcher Profile System – avoid duplication of entry, simplify
administration• OpenPhacts (EU) – link profiles to concepts, provide provenance for assertions,
identity management• NRN visualization – show data sources and their inventory of data
CTSA Consortium Adoption of Linked Open Data for Research Discovery and Networking
Research Networking Number of CTSAs
Linked Open data systems (VIVO+Profiles+Loki) (see note 1)
14
Elsevier SciVal Experts (see note 2) 9
Non Linked Open Data System (see note 3) 20
No system (see note 4) 17Notes1.Nine other CTSAs are evaluating either VIVO or Profiles2.Elsevier has said they can provide linked open data – either directly, or through a VIVO add-on. Northwestern will implement a VIVO add-on for their SciVal system as a model for others3.Many CTSAs has researcher directories and/or researcher networking systems. Some – Pittsburgh Digital Vita, Iowa Loki, Stanford CAP – may be retrofitted to provide open linked data. Others may provide a VIVO or Profiles add-on4.Forty CTSAs continue to use WebCamp. A WebCamp to VIVO connector could be written to provide linked open data for these CTSA investigators
Barriers to Adoption
• Cost/Commitment– Time and Effort– Available data– Institution-wide implementation beyond CTSA
mission?
• Benefits– Emerging tools will be compelling?– Are tools for faculty or administration?– Cross site search?
Addressing the Barriers• VIVO, Profiles and Elsevier, all provide rapid start-
up. Commercial support available for each• Sites can add-on to their existing systems to
provide linked open data (eg Loki)• Sites can “pipe” data from their existing systems
to a linked open data system• Focus on CTSA level implementation• Additional communication consortium wide• More tools needed for investigators• Faceted cross site search is coming