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NISO Plus 2021 has ended
NISO Plus 2021 is going to be a global virtual event, happening literally around the world February 22-25, 2021. Building on the wonderful response to NISO Plus 2020, we’re bringing the same quality of content and conversation to this born-digital event, with dozens of amazing speakers and keynotes from across the globe. Scheduled to maximize attendance from as many timezones as possible, there will be things for you to see and do around the clock if you wish...or, pick and choose to make the experience perfect for your interests.

NISO Now [clear filter]
Monday, February 22
 

12:00pm EST

Standards that support diversity, equity, and inclusion
NISO Discourse Discussion for this session
https://discourse.niso.org/t/standards-that-support-diversity-equity-and-inclusion/73

We're all familiar with the problems that occur when standards fail to take into account diversity — from seatbelts that don't protect women as well as they protect men, to buildings that are only accessible to those with full mobility. Information standards, likewise, fail if they aren't created by, for, and with the community that uses them. This session will look at some existing standards that support DEI, and the speakers will also discuss what more we need to do to ensure that future standards are as diverse, inclusive, and equitable as they must be to succeed.

Moderators
avatar for Hannah Heckner

Hannah Heckner

VP of Product, Silverchair
Hannah Heckner has served as Product Strategist at Silverchair since the start of 2020. In this position she provides detailed product visioning, helps to prioritize and execute on the platform development plan, and oversees the Silverchair Universe program. She previously served... Read More →

Speakers
avatar for Katharina Ruckstuhl

Katharina Ruckstuhl

Associate Dean Māori, Otago Business School, University of Otago
I am an Associate Dean Māori and Senior Research Fellow at the Otago Business School, University of Otago, Dunedin, New Zealand. My role in the Business School focuses on strategic empowerment of Māori students and staff with a particular focus on entrepreneurship.  I am actively... Read More →
SH

Simon Holt

Publisher, Micro/Nanotechnologies and Reference Content Volume Strategy, Elsevier
Simon Holt is a Book Publisher at Elsevier, where he has worked since 2013. He is Chair of Elsevier Enabled, an employee group representing people with disabilities across the organization, and has worked to advocate for greater inclusion and diversity for all demographics across... Read More →
avatar for Trevor Dawes

Trevor Dawes

University of Delaware
Trevor A. Dawes has worked in the academic library sector for over 20 years developing and providing a range of service-enhancing training and professional development opportunities that positively impact library-wide projects and programs. Dawes also facilitates workshops on leadership... Read More →


Monday February 22, 2021 12:00pm - 1:15pm EST
Room 2
  NISO Now
  • Host Organization NISO

1:30pm EST

An introduction to NISO
NISO Discourse Discussion for this session
https://discourse.niso.org/t/an-introduction-to-niso/76

Join us for an introduction to all things NISO! Curious about our work? Want to learn more about current standards and other NISO projects? Join us for an introduction and to ask us questions.

Moderators
avatar for Rhonda Ross

Rhonda Ross

Director, Marketing Programs, CAS, a division of the American Chemical Society
I enjoy investing in people and their success above all. I value the work of NISO, and I look forward to joining you for the conference! I've been with CAS for 35 years in a variety of roles, including Content, ACS Publications, Finance,  HR, and Marketing, and I'm proud of our work... Read More →

Speakers
avatar for Nettie Lagace

Nettie Lagace

Associate Executive Director, NISO
Nettie Lagace is the Associate Executive Director at NISO, where she is responsible for facilitating the work of NISO's topic committees and development groups for standards and best practices, and working with the community to encourage broad adoption of this consensus work. Prior... Read More →
avatar for Todd Carpenter

Todd Carpenter

Executive Director, NISO
Wine, food, wine, Standards, running, wine, food, wine.http://orcid.org/0000-0002-8320-0491


Monday February 22, 2021 1:30pm - 2:30pm EST
Room 2

8:00pm EST

Seamless Access and Federated Authentication: next steps
NISO Discourse Discussion for this session
https://discourse.niso.org/t/seamless-access-and-federated-authentication-next-steps/77

Join us for an update on the Seamless Access project (http://seamlessaccess.org) and a discussion of the issues surrounding the world of Federated Authentication.

Moderators
avatar for Jason Griffey

Jason Griffey

Director of Strategic Initiatives, NISO
Jason Griffey is the Director of Strategic Initiatives at NISO, where he works to identify new areas of the information ecosystem where standards expertise is useful and needed, and leads ongoing projects such as NISO’s participation in the Coalition for Seamless Access. Prior to joining NISO... Read More →

Speakers
avatar for Heather Flanagan

Heather Flanagan

Program Director, SeamlessAccess


Monday February 22, 2021 8:00pm - 9:15pm EST
Room 2
  NISO Now
  • Host Organization NISO

9:30pm EST

The values and challenges of the CRediT taxonomy
NISO Discourse Discussion for this session
https://discourse.niso.org/t/the-values-and-challenges-of-the-credit-taxonomy/79

The CRediT (Contributor Roles) taxonomy — already in use by a number of publishers and other organizations — is currently being formalized as an ANSI/NISO standard. It is valued by the community as a way of recognizing more of the many types of research contribution. But there are also still many challenges to be addressed, including the current focus on roles in the STEM publication process, which will be tackled in future phases. The speakers in this session will share their views on the current and future value of CRediT, how that can be maximized in future, and what challenges will need to be overcome for us to be successful.

Moderators
avatar for Todd Digby

Todd Digby

Chair of Library Technology Services, University of Florida
Todd Digby is the Chair of Library Technology Services at the University of Florida. In this position, Todd leads a service oriented department that researches, develops, optimizes and supports advanced library information systems and technology for the University of Florida Libraries... Read More →

Speakers
avatar for Liz Allen

Liz Allen

Director of Strategic Initiatives, F1000, Taylor & Francis Group
Liz Allen is Director of Strategic Initiatives at F1000 Research and leads on shaping new initiatives and partnerships to foster open research publishing. Prior to joining F1000Research in 2015, she spent over a decade leading the Evaluation Team at the Wellcome Trust.Liz is a Visiting Senior Research Fellow in the Policy Institute at... Read More →
avatar for Richard Wynne

Richard Wynne

Founder, Rescognito
@RichardCDW
avatar for Alex Holcombe

Alex Holcombe

Professor, University of Sydney
A professor of psychology at the University of Sydney, in his laboratory Alex investigates visual perception and cognition. Outside the lab, for fifteen years Alex has worked on open access, research transparency, and improving reproducibility in academic roles with organizations... Read More →


Monday February 22, 2021 9:30pm - 10:45pm EST
Room 2
  NISO Now
  • Host Organization NISO
 
Tuesday, February 23
 

11:00am EST

Solving problems with standards
NISO Discourse Discussion for this session
https://discourse.niso.org/t/solving-problems-with-standards/85

NISO Recommended Practices for Video and Audio Metadata
Although many metadata standards address video and audio assets to some extent, a clear, commonly understood, and widely used set of properties is lacking. This is particularly problematic when assets are interchanged between their producers, such as educators, researchers, and documentarians, and their recipients, such as aggregators, libraries, and archives.

The NISO Video and Audio Metadata Working Group (VAMD) was formed to address this problem. Composed of technologists, librarians, aggregators, and publishers, the working group collaborated to develop a set of metadata properties deemed generally useful for the interchange of media assets. This includes bibliographic properties used for identification and citation, semantic properties useful for search and discovery, technical properties specific to media assets, and administrative properties to facilitate transactions.

This model is not intended to employ or replace existing metadata standards and vocabularies. Instead, the VAMD terms are a set of recommended properties to be expressed in the appropriate metadata scheme for specific parties, serving as a hub to facilitate interchange between parties that use different metadata schemes.

This session will present the current state of media asset interchange, the use cases addressed, and the results of a comparison with nine existing related standards, such as MARC and PBCore.

Introducing the Software Citation: Giving Credit Where Credit is Due
Research is commonly intense and complicated. The work to analyze a hypothesis involves building on the discovery of others and contributing new ideas and approaches. Sometimes researchers use tools designed for their community that are licensed or open source, and sometimes they must develop their own software or workflow in order to achieve their objectives. This software (aka code, model) is an important research object that supports transparency and reproducibility of our research. Without the software, it can be much harder or impossible to fully understand how the resulting data were generated and to have faith in the conclusions presented in the paper.

In this session we will share (via slides) 1) the guidance developed by the FORCE11 Software Citation Implementation Working Group for authors, developers, and journals; 2) how it supports and aligns to efforts happening around JATS/JATS4R; and 3) ways for the community to evaluate how well software citations, and necessary availability statements are being provided by authors.


Subsetting the JATS DTD – So What?
As scholarly publishers transition from manual, PDF-based workflows to automated, XML-based workflows, they will find important advantages in subsetting the JATS (Journal Article Tag Suite) DTD.

JATS was designed as a descriptive, not a prescriptive, DTD, so it allows for different ways to capture the same content and information. While this was necessary to accommodate widely divergent journal styles and legacy content, the looseness of the DTD poses problems for people building tools to bring XML forward in more automated publishing workflows. For example, building an online XML editor that allows all 11 ways of associating authors and affiliations would be unnecessarily complex and expensive to develop and maintain.

Fortunately, the JATS DTD was also designed to be easily subsetted. Content analysts can narrow the variations that developers are required to build to, making automated systems cheaper to develop and more robust. A well-designed subset that considers industry initiatives such as JATS4R also aids in making XML content more machine-readable and thus more discoverable.

Moderators
avatar for Greg Grazevich

Greg Grazevich

Editor, MLA International Bibliography, Modern Language Association
Gregory Grazevich is associate director of Bibliographic Information Services at the Modern Language Association of America and editor of the MLA International Bibliography. He joined the MLA in 1994 as a thesaurus editor after receiving an MA in Slavic and Baltic linguistics at the... Read More →

Speakers
avatar for Daniel S. Katz

Daniel S. Katz

Chief Scientist, NCSA, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign
Dan is Chief Scientist at the National Center for Supercomputing Applications (NCSA) and Research Associate Professor in Computer Science, Electrical and Computer Engineering, and the School of Information Sciences (iSchool), at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign. In past... Read More →
avatar for Melissa Harrison

Melissa Harrison

Team Leader, Literature Services, EMBL European Bioinformatics Institute
Team Leader, Literature Services, EMBL European Bioinformatics Institute
avatar for Charles O'Connor

Charles O'Connor

Business Systems Analyst, Aries Systems
XML-through journal production workflows
avatar for Bill Kasdorf

Bill Kasdorf

Principal, Kasdorf & Associates, LLC
Bill Kasdorf, kasdorf.bill@gmail.com, is Principal of Kasdorf & Associates, LLC, focusing on editorial and production workflows, XML/HTML/EPUB modeling and specification, standards and best practices, and accessibility. He is a founding partner of Publishing Technology Partners. Bill is the W3C Global Publishing Evangelist and is active in the W3C Publishing@W3C work. He co-chairs NISO’s Accessibility Remediation Metadata (ARM) Working Group, is a member and Past President of SSP, and is also a member of BISG’s Workflow Working Group, IPTC, and the D... Read More →
avatar for Erika Pastrana

Erika Pastrana

Editorial Director, Springer Nature
Erika is responsible for management and editorial direction of Nature journals in applied sciences and chemistry (including Nature Biotechnology, Nature Medicine, Nature Methods, Nature Chemistry and Nature Machine Intelligence). She is part of the senior management group at Nature... Read More →
avatar for Violaine Iglesias

Violaine Iglesias

CEO, Cofounder, Cadmore Media
I talk WAY to much about video and video metadata, but I have other interests, too!
avatar for Barbara Chen

Barbara Chen

Consultant, self
Barbara Chen has been in the information industry for her entire professional career. Soon after receiving her MLS, she joined the H.W. Wilson Company as an indexer. She subsequently developed her technological skills when computers were introduced into the company and she became... Read More →


Tuesday February 23, 2021 11:00am - 12:15pm EST
Room 2
  NISO Now
  • Host Organization NISO

12:30pm EST

The business models of infrastructure support
NISO Discourse Discussion for this session
https://discourse.niso.org/t/the-business-models-of-infrastructure-support/86

How does the infrastructure that supports our community get funded, and by whom? How can we ensure its long-term sustainability — and, by extension, that of the research tools and services that depend on it? What does sustainability even mean? Our speakers share their perspectives on these and other important questions.

Moderators
avatar for Andrew Joseph

Andrew Joseph

Digital Publisher, Wits University Press
Andrew Joseph is the Digital Publisher at Wits University Press. His publishing experience has largely been in academic and reference publications, for most major European and US academic publishers – books, journals and digital products, archives, production workflows and business... Read More →

Speakers
avatar for Patrick Sweeney

Patrick Sweeney

Political Director, EveryLibrary
(he/him/his)
avatar for Ginny Hendricks

Ginny Hendricks

Director of Member & Community Outreach, Crossref
Since 2015, Ginny has been developing the member and community outreach team at Crossref encompassing outreach and education, user experience and support, and metadata strategy. She is the Instigator of the Metadata 2020 collaboration to advocate for richer, connected, reusable and... Read More →
avatar for Rebecca Ross

Rebecca Ross

Canadian Research Knowledge Network
Rebecca Ross is the Senior Director of Strategy and Engagement at the Canadian Research Knowledge Network. Prior to joining CRKN, Rebecca led the marketing department at Canadian Science Publishing, Canada’s largest not-for-profit science publisher. Rebecca’s works at the intersection... Read More →


Tuesday February 23, 2021 12:30pm - 1:45pm EST
Room 2
  NISO Now
  • Host Organization NISO

2:00pm EST

NISO update
NISO Discourse Discussion for this session
https://discourse.niso.org/t/niso-an-update/90

NISO projects are numerous, diverse in output, coverage, and participation, and ACTIVE! This session will support presentations from a small selection of current efforts, all at different stages of their lifecycles. Following project presentations, we will move into breakout rooms for more direct project Q&A and discussions.

Manuscript Exchange Common Approach
Speakers: Tony Alves, Stephen Laverick

Content Platform Migrations
Speaker: Athena Hoeppner

KBART (Knowledge Bases and Related Tools)
Speakers: Stephanie Doellinger, Robert Heaton, Noah Levin, Andrée Rathemacher

Moderators
avatar for Peter Simon

Peter Simon

Vice President, Product Management, NewsBank inc
Peter Simon is Vice President, Product Management at NewsBank, inc. He directs the development of key products while working on numerous strategic initiatives important to the growth of the company.Simon began his career as an Editor at RR Bowker; progressed to Executive Vice President... Read More →

Speakers
avatar for Stephen Laverick

Stephen Laverick

Green Fifteen Consultancy / Typefi
Stephen has over 20 years’ experience in scholarly publishing with time spent working in both the UK and China.Primarily focused on digital publishing solutions, during his time as Technical Director at The Charlesworth Group, Stephen was instrumental in overseeing the development... Read More →
avatar for Noah Levin

Noah Levin

Co-Chair NISO KBART Standing Committee, NISO KBART Standing Committee
Noah Levin is the Co-Chair of the NISO KBART Standing Committee and a member of the KBART Automation Working Group. Noah has spent the last 20 years designing and creating metadata workflows for large Academic and Trade Publishers; managing their Link Resolver/Discovery data, MARC... Read More →
AJ

Andree J. Rathemacher

Head, Acquisitions, University of Rhode Island
Andrée Rathemacher is Head of Acquisitions at the University of Rhode Island, where she administers the materials budget and is responsible for the purchase and licensing of library materials in all formats and the management of electronic resources. She is currently the co-Chair... Read More →
avatar for Stephanie Doellinger

Stephanie Doellinger

Senior Metadata Operations Manager CI & KB, OCLC
Stephanie Doellinger is a Senior Metadata Operations Manager at OCLC. Over her 10-year tenure, she and her team have worked with both publishers and libraries to manage the processing and validation of e-resource metadata which make up the WorldCat knowledge base and Central Index... Read More →
avatar for Athena Hoeppner

Athena Hoeppner

Discovery Services Librarian, University of Central Florida
Athena Hoeppner is the Discovery Services Librarian at the University of Central Florida, in Orlando, Florida. Her career in academic libraries spans 25 years with roles in public services, systems, and technical services. In her current role, she jointly oversees the eResources lifecycle... Read More →
avatar for Robert Heaton

Robert Heaton

Collection Management Librarian, Utah State University
Looking for answers: How will we keep paying for all this stuff? How are we going to archive all this digital stuff? How can we align author incentives, the publishing marketplace, and the future of the scholarly record? When will libraries benefit from well-designed free software... Read More →
avatar for Tony Alves

Tony Alves

SVP, Product Management, HighWire Press
Thirty years of scholarly publishing experience including product development, software design, content acquisition, international client management, organization building and business development. In depth understanding of all aspects of the publishing process, particularly related... Read More →


Tuesday February 23, 2021 2:00pm - 3:00pm EST
Room 1

9:30pm EST

Preservation of new media - roles and responsibilities
NISO Discourse Discussion for this session
https://discourse.niso.org/t/preservation-of-new-media-roles-and-responsibilities/93

The digitalization of research has resulted in the development of many new types of media. How can we ensure that they're adequately preserved for future generations? What new tools and services will be needed? Who should be responsible? Two digital preservation experts will share their views on this important topic.

Moderators
WQ

Wendy Queen

Director, Johns Hopkins University Press

Speakers
avatar for Mark Graham

Mark Graham

Attendee, Internet Archive
I would like to connect with people about how to make the web more useful and reliable. With a focus on archiving born digital content.
avatar for Heather Staines

Heather Staines

Dir. of Community Engagement and Senior Consultant, DeltaThink
Open Access, Strategy projects, Data, karaoke--and dogs!


Tuesday February 23, 2021 9:30pm - 10:45pm EST
Room 2
  NISO Now
  • Host Organization NISO
 
Wednesday, February 24
 

10:00am EST

Metrics and measures: the Public Library Data Alliance
NISO Discourse Discussion for this session
https://discourse.niso.org/t/metrics-and-measures-the-public-library-data-alliance/95

The Public Library Data Alliance (PLDA) is the implementing organization of the Measures that Matter project (https://measuresthatmatter.net/) and seeks to operationalize the goals of that project, primarily to "collaboratively develop and implement a National Action Plan that will allow libraries to more effectively turn data into useable information to demonstrate the value of library collections and services nation-wide."

Come join some of the founding members of the PLDA in a discussion of the project and to help determine the areas of needed focus in this area. 

Speakers
avatar for Todd Carpenter

Todd Carpenter

Executive Director, NISO
Wine, food, wine, Standards, running, wine, food, wine.http://orcid.org/0000-0002-8320-0491


Wednesday February 24, 2021 10:00am - 11:15am EST
Room 2
  NISO Now
  • Host Organization NISO

11:30am EST

Relationship between infrastructure, protocols, standards
NISO Discourse Discussion for this session
https://discourse.niso.org/t/relationship-between-infrastructure-protocols-standards/99

Research protocols and information standards have much in common, and both are essential components of research infrastructure. Protocols outline the process for a specific experiment or research project, while standards provide technical best practices for processes across the whole information ecosystem.  In this session, representatives from a publisher, a protocols platform, and an infrastructure organization will discuss their perspectives on the relationships between each — what's working, what isn't, and what more is needed?

Moderators
KR

Ken Rawson

Director Platform Dev. & New Initiatives, IEEE

Speakers
avatar for Adrian Burton

Adrian Burton

Director of Services, Policy, Collections, ARDC - Australian Research Data Commons
Adrian Burton is Director of Services, Policy, Collections with the Australian Research Data Commons, and has many years experience building and supporting national data policy, infrastructure, and services.
DC

David Crotty

Editorial Director, Journals Policy, Oxford University Press
David Crotty is the Editorial Director, Journals Policy for Oxford University Press. He oversees journal policy and contributes to strategy across OUP’s journals program, drives technological innovation, and serves as an information officer. David previously managed a suite of research... Read More →
avatar for Emma Ganley

Emma Ganley

Director of Strategic Initiatives, protocols.io
Emma obtained a PhD from the MRC-LMB in Cambridge in the UK, followed by a postdoc at UC Berkeley. Prior to joining protocols.io, Emma was the Chief Editor of PLOS Biology and worked in scientific publishing for 15 years. During this time she gained an enthusiasm for open data, preprints... Read More →


Wednesday February 24, 2021 11:30am - 12:45pm EST
Room 2
  NISO Now
  • Host Organization NISO

8:00pm EST

An introduction to NISO
NISO Discourse Discussion for this session
https://discourse.niso.org/t/an-introduction-to-niso/76

Join us for an introduction to all things NISO! Curious about our work? Want to learn more about current Standards and other NISO projects? Join us for an introduction and to ask us questions.

Speakers
avatar for Nettie Lagace

Nettie Lagace

Associate Executive Director, NISO
Nettie Lagace is the Associate Executive Director at NISO, where she is responsible for facilitating the work of NISO's topic committees and development groups for standards and best practices, and working with the community to encourage broad adoption of this consensus work. Prior... Read More →
avatar for Todd Carpenter

Todd Carpenter

Executive Director, NISO
Wine, food, wine, Standards, running, wine, food, wine.http://orcid.org/0000-0002-8320-0491


Wednesday February 24, 2021 8:00pm - 9:15pm EST
Room 3

8:00pm EST

Standards in open research infrastructure: challenges and perspectives for global adoption
NISO Discourse Discussion for this session
https://discourse.niso.org/t/standards-in-open-research-infrastructure-challenges-and-perspectives-for-global-adoption/103

Standards are an essential component of open research infrastructure, enabling interoperability, increasing efficiencies, reducing errors, and improving user experience. In order to be truly effective, standards must be developed and implemented globally, but how? This panel of experts from Australia, Ireland, and Mexico will discuss the challenges for their communities, and identify opportunities for the information community to work together globally to address them.

Moderators
avatar for Natasha Simons

Natasha Simons

Associate Director, Data & Services, Australian Research Data Commons (ARDC)
Natasha Simons is Associate Director, Data & Services, with the Australian Research Data Commons (ARDC). Based in Brisbane, Australia, Natasha drives national-scale initiatives and projects that build world class data infrastructure for researchers and that contribute to the ARDC’s... Read More →

Speakers
avatar for Ian Duncan

Ian Duncan

Director, Outreach, The Australian Research Data Commons
avatar for Arianna Becerril-García

Arianna Becerril-García

Professor, UAEM, Executive Director, Redalyc
A researcher working for the democratization of knowledge in the Latin American region through Open Access and Technology. Artificial Intelligence, Semantic Web Technologies, Scientific Journals.
avatar for Daniel Bangert

Daniel Bangert

National Open Research Coordinator, Digital Repository of Ireland, Royal Irish Academy
Dr Daniel Bangert is Ireland’s National Open Research Coordinator, based at the Digital Repository of Ireland, Royal Irish Academy. In this role he works with Ireland's National Open Research Forum (NORF) on the development and delivery of a National Action Plan for the implementation of open research across Ireland... Read More →


Wednesday February 24, 2021 8:00pm - 9:15pm EST
Room 2
  NISO Now
  • Host Organization NISO
 
Thursday, February 25
 

10:00am EST

Quality and reliability of preprints
NISO Discourse Discussion for this session
https://discourse.niso.org/t/quality-and-reliability-of-preprints/107

Preprints have been growing in popularity and visibility across many disciplines and communities — all the more so during the COVID19 pandemic, with rapid publication of early research on everything from vaccine development to economic impacts. While preprints have been widely adopted in some disciplines, there are still concerns about their quality and reliability, especially when they can be readily accessed by policy-makers and the public who may not yet fully understand their limitiations. This session brings together three experts — from Africa, Latin America, and the US — to discuss the challenges and opportunities of preprints for researchers and non-researchers alike.

Moderators
avatar for Jabin White

Jabin White

VP of Content Management, ITHAKA
Jabin White is Vice President of Content Management for ITHAKA, an organization committed to helping the academic community use digital technologies to preserve the scholarly record and to advance research and teaching in sustainable ways. ITHAKA provides several services to the academic... Read More →

Speakers
avatar for Kathryn Funk

Kathryn Funk

Program Manager, PubMed Central, National Library of Medicine, National Institutes of Health
Kathryn Funk is the program manager for PubMed Central at the US National Library of Medicine. She works on PMC policy and other special projects, including coordinating PMC support for the public access policies of numerous funding agencies. Prior to coming to NLM, Katie worked in... Read More →
avatar for Joy Owango

Joy Owango

Executive Director, Training Centre in Communication
Joy Owango is an experienced award-winning Founding Director with a demonstrated history of working in capacity support for early career researchers. She is skilled in Management, Business Strategy and Research Metrics. She is experienced in matters relating to Research Capacity... Read More →


Thursday February 25, 2021 10:00am - 11:15am EST
Room 2
  NISO Now
  • Host Organization NISO

11:30am EST

Knowledge bases and next steps: new and upcoming
NISO Discourse Discussion for this session
https://discourse.niso.org/t/knowledge-bases-and-next-steps-new-and-upcoming/110

NISO KBART Validator App 
How can we enhance trust in the quality of KBART files? Endorsement process is one way. Automated validation could be another way.

Content providers can have their KBART files endorsed by NISO. But the endorsement process consists of manual checks and thus can be a long process, with multiple file revisions and much back-and-forth communication required. The KBART Standing Committee aims to formalize and speed up its endorsement process by automating a number of validation tasks, thus providing more time to analyze parts of the files that are trickier to check automatically. Automated validation could also occur upstream, by content providers checking their KBART files post-production, or downstream, by knowledge bases checking KBART files before ingestion. What if all these scenarios relied on a shared tool?

The NISO KBART Validator app has two goals:
* Short term : ease NISO’s endorsement process by automating file checks that can be automated
* Long term : provide the community with a common validator app

The NISO KBART Validator app is currently under development. This session will provide a demo of the tool and insights about its roadmap. We want this app to be community powered: we’ll take time in this session to discuss where you and your organization could help, with or without developers."

The Package ID: Seeking Sanity through Standards
Content providers often bundle offerings into pre-set collections by subject, year, or some other scope so libraries can select packages that best fit their needs. Publishers also sell individual journals and books, allowing libraries to select content title-by-title. These options provide an effective approach to selling content. However, they produce a confusing, ever-changing tangle in knowledgebases.

Currently, package names are used identifiers, which introduces challenges for knowledgebase providers and librarians. Marketing pages, access platforms, licenses, invoices, and knowledgebases may all use different names for the same packages. Additionally, package names change, differ on various systems, and different bundles often have very similar names.

Knowledgebase providers load the content bundles to serve as the basis for discovery, linking, and ERM processes. Using package names as the identifier complicates always uniquely identify collections. The problem also affects automatic updates to the knowledgebase, in general, or within a specific library’s holdings. Likewise, librarians have a difficult time determining which of the many similar-sounding packages matches their licensed content.

Ultimately, all parties want to ensure that the licensed content is represented and enabled in knowledgebases for discovery and linking. Consistent unique identifiers may offer a way to improve efficiency and reduce confusion.

Moderators
avatar for Peter Murray

Peter Murray

Open Source Community Advocate, Index Data
Peter Murray is the Open Source Community Advocate at Index Data, a software development and consulting enterprise with expertise in networked information retrieval and management based on open standards. He received an MLIS from Simmons College and a Bachelor of Science degree in... Read More →

Speakers
avatar for Christine Stohn

Christine Stohn

Dir Product Management, ProQuest (Ex Libris)
Christine Stohn is director of product management for discovery and delivery at Ex Libris. Christine has over 25 years of experience in the library and information industry, having worked on the content and data side before joining Ex Libris in 2001. In her current role Christine... Read More →
avatar for Ben Johnson

Ben Johnson

Provider Relations Engagement Manager, Ex Libris, a ProQuest Company
Ben has been working with content in the ProQuest/Serials Solutions products for over a decade, and Ex Libris products since their acquisition by ProQuest in late 2015. He has participated in all things KBART since 2012, including two years as former co-chair of the KBART Standing... Read More →
avatar for Athena Hoeppner

Athena Hoeppner

Discovery Services Librarian, University of Central Florida
Athena Hoeppner is the Discovery Services Librarian at the University of Central Florida, in Orlando, Florida. Her career in academic libraries spans 25 years with roles in public services, systems, and technical services. In her current role, she jointly oversees the eResources lifecycle... Read More →
avatar for Davin Baragiotta

Davin Baragiotta

IT Lead, Consortium Érudit
Davin is part of the KBART Standing Committee and is currently the main developer of the NISO KBART Validator app. He has worked for about 20 years in university cooperation and now leads the IT Team of Consortium Érudit, the leading digital dissemination platform of SSH research... Read More →


Thursday February 25, 2021 11:30am - 12:45pm EST
Room 2
  NISO Now
  • Host Organization NISO
 
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