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Center for Digital Scholarship

Education and outreach Category Posts

Providing Library Services Across the Research Lifecycle: Flow Cytometry and Sorting Facility Data Documentation and Public Access Project

By Andrew Creamer, Scientific Data Management Specialist Brown’s Health Sciences Librarian, Erika Sevetson (R), poses with Brown’s Metadata Librarian, Ann Caldwell (C), and Brown’s Flow Cytometry and Sorting Facility Manager, Kevin Carlson (L). The Brown University Library and Center for Digital Scholarship (CDS) have begun an exciting pilot with Browns Flow Cytometry and Sorting Facility Providing Library Services Across the Research Lifecycle: Flow Cytometry and Sorting Facility Data Documentation and Public Access Project

Researcher Support Services for Data Management and Sharing

Andrew Creamer, Scientific Data Management Specialist This semester consider utilizing Brown University Library’s researcher support services related to managing, publishing, and sharing your research data. Writing Data Management and Sharing Plans: The Library offers a service to assist you with the writing of a data management and/or data sharing plan required by public and private Researcher Support Services for Data Management and Sharing

“History is speeding up”

Ted Widmer reflects on Lincoln research, utilizing digitized materials, and blogging: http://news.brown.edu/features/2011/02/disunion . See also the Library’s “Lincolniana at Brown.”

CDS @ DH2010

Digital Humanities 2010 in London. CDS presentations: Julia Flanders and Syd Bauman on “Using ODD for Multi-purpose TEI Documentation;” Andy Ashton on “Semantic Cartography: Using RDF/OWL to Build Adaptable Tools for Text Exploration” and Elli Mylonas with a poster on “Discursive Metadata and Controlled Vocabularies.” Conference URL: http://dh2010.cch.kcl.ac.uk/ Twitter Hashtag: dh2010 (very active tweeting!) Edit: CDS @ DH2010

AMCV220: Digital Scholarship, Spring 2010

Staff from the Center for Digital Scholarship worked with Professor Susan Smulyans Digital Scholarship class this spring. The website exhibits the 12 resulting student projects (the course syllabus is also available on the website).

Collaboration and Dissent

Podcasts are now available of the Interview and Lecture by Julia Flanders from the Digital Humanities Speaker’s Series, Future Knowledge: Prospects for a Digital Era. University of South Carolina. March 25, 2010. Julia is the Director of the Women Writers Project and Associate Director for Textbase Development here at the Center for Digital Scholarship.