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Presentation: Moving from an IR to a CRIS, the why & how

TitleMoving from an IR to a CRIS, the why & how
Authors
KeywordsCurrent Research Information System
Impact Management System
Research Networking System
Research Profiling System
Expert Finder
Issue Date2013
Citation
Coalition for Networked Information Spring 2013 Membership Meeting, San Antonio, 4-5 April 2013 How to Cite?
AbstractIRs collect, manage and display publications, and their metadata. However, an institution’s research, expertise and capacity is described by more than publications. The HKU Scholars Hub, hosted in DSpace, began as the IR of The University of Hong Kong (HKU) in 2005. Asking for voluntary deposit of publications from HKU academics, it received little notice, and more importantly, little support from University senior management. In 2009 a new HKU initiative, Knowledge Exchange, adopted the Hub as a key vehicle to share knowledge and skill with the community outside HKU. With funding support from the Office of KE, we extended the data model of DSpace to include relational tables on non-publication objects, including people, grants, and patents, holding attributes of these objects, such as co-investigators, co-inventors, co-prize winners, research interests, languages spoken, supervision of postgraduate theses, etc. The DSpace user interface now delivers an integrated search and display on these objects and attributes, as well as on ones newly derived, such as authority work on name disambiguation and synonymy in Roman and Hanzi (漢字), visualizations on networks of co-authors, co-investigators, etc, metrics extracted from external sources such as Scopus, WoS, PubMed, Google Scholar Citations, internal alt-metrics of view and download counts, and more. Beyond the functions of an IR, the Hub now performs as a system for reputation management, impact management, and research networking and profiling -- all of which are concepts included in the broad term, “Current Research Information System” (CRIS). These new objects and attributes curated from several trusted sources, and integrated into the present mashup, contextualize and highlight HKU research, and attract more hits, than an IR with only publications. The HKU Office of Knowledge Exchange has now funded the modularization of these new HKU features of DSpace. Together with our partner, CINECA of Italy, we are making this work available in open source for the DSpace community.
Persistent Identifierhttp://hdl.handle.net/10722/181895

 

DC FieldValueLanguage
dc.contributor.authorPalmer, DT-
dc.date.accessioned2013-03-22T05:28:06Z-
dc.date.available2013-03-22T05:28:06Z-
dc.date.issued2013-
dc.identifier.citationCoalition for Networked Information Spring 2013 Membership Meeting, San Antonio, 4-5 April 2013en_US
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/10722/181895-
dc.description.abstractIRs collect, manage and display publications, and their metadata. However, an institution’s research, expertise and capacity is described by more than publications. The HKU Scholars Hub, hosted in DSpace, began as the IR of The University of Hong Kong (HKU) in 2005. Asking for voluntary deposit of publications from HKU academics, it received little notice, and more importantly, little support from University senior management. In 2009 a new HKU initiative, Knowledge Exchange, adopted the Hub as a key vehicle to share knowledge and skill with the community outside HKU. With funding support from the Office of KE, we extended the data model of DSpace to include relational tables on non-publication objects, including people, grants, and patents, holding attributes of these objects, such as co-investigators, co-inventors, co-prize winners, research interests, languages spoken, supervision of postgraduate theses, etc. The DSpace user interface now delivers an integrated search and display on these objects and attributes, as well as on ones newly derived, such as authority work on name disambiguation and synonymy in Roman and Hanzi (漢字), visualizations on networks of co-authors, co-investigators, etc, metrics extracted from external sources such as Scopus, WoS, PubMed, Google Scholar Citations, internal alt-metrics of view and download counts, and more. Beyond the functions of an IR, the Hub now performs as a system for reputation management, impact management, and research networking and profiling -- all of which are concepts included in the broad term, “Current Research Information System” (CRIS). These new objects and attributes curated from several trusted sources, and integrated into the present mashup, contextualize and highlight HKU research, and attract more hits, than an IR with only publications. The HKU Office of Knowledge Exchange has now funded the modularization of these new HKU features of DSpace. Together with our partner, CINECA of Italy, we are making this work available in open source for the DSpace community.en_US
dc.language.isoengen_US
dc.relation.ispartofCoalition for Networked Information Spring 2013 Membership Meeting-
dc.subjectCurrent Research Information Systemen_US
dc.subjectImpact Management Systemen_US
dc.subjectResearch Networking Systemen_US
dc.subjectResearch Profiling Systemen_US
dc.subjectExpert Finderen_US
dc.titleMoving from an IR to a CRIS, the why & howen_US
dc.typePresentationen_US
dc.description.naturepublished_or_final_version-
dc.identifier.hkuros230513-

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