From Penn State University, the co-directors of the office of digital scholarly publishing Mike Furlough the assistant dean for scholarly communications, and Patrick Alexanderpresented "Humanities Publishing & Data Curation: Eternal Life & Eternal Damnation." The talk dealt with Penn State's Office of Digital Scholarly Publishing (ODSP), a joint collaboration between the University libraries and University Press. Furlough and Alexander discussed the ODSP's mission, which includes the publishing, archiving, and hosting of journal content and digitization of primary sources, such as newspapers.
Mike Furlough and Patrick Alexander - Click here to view the PowerPoint Presentation
In the same session Scott Brandt the associate dean for research in Purdue University Libraries, and Charles Watkinson the director of the university press presented "Conceptualizing Library Data Curation and Publishing Services at Purdue University." This presentation offered three lessons that Purdue University Press (PUP) has learned about e-publishing and the "data deluge" currently occurring in scholarship. These include the following:
- “Researchers want to disseminate outputs, but ranges in scope, format, use." - Print books and subscription-based journals, PUP’s traditional focus, are not enough. PUP / Libraries need to offer a range of different channels to fit different needs. PUP / Libraries need a venue to experiment with hybrid or new model."
- "Researchers willing to share data with others, but not without certain restrictions/benefits” - PUP provides a layer of editorial services for credentialing that can incentivize data sharing. PUP needs to make it easy to link to and cite data in publications (Datacite so important!). PUP / Libraries need to be nuanced in their Open Access messages (open access is not always right strategy).
- “What is most easily/willingly shared is not always data that has the most re-use value” - Move away from producing data supplements for publications to producing supplementary publications to drive re-use of data.
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| An example of how Purdue Libraries/ University Press PUP provides an easy to use "layer of editorial services for credentialing that can incentivize data sharing" - part of "lesson learned" #. |
Scott Brandt and Charles Watkinson - Click here to view the PowerPoint Presentation
Disciplinary Practices and Different Content
Dr. Claire Warwick, Director of the Digital Humanities Centre at University College London (who spoke in week one of the course) presented "Luddites or Critics? Designing Useful Digital Resources for Humanities Scholars." Her presentation was a critical look at what humanities scholars want and expect from digital research environments. Dr. Warwick was quick to point out that librarians often assume humanities scholars lack the technological knowledge to take full advantage of e-resources. Training, however rarely works, implying that this group will only use resources that "are designed for them - not for the convenience of publishers [and] not for the preferences of librarians (eg Librarians and publishers like advanced search, users almost never use it)." She suggested the solution is to continue to study these users, take their understanding of research environments seriously (physical and digital), and build systems tailored to their needs.
Dr. Claire Warwick - Click here to view the PowerPoint Presentation
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Thoughts on the Conference
This was my first professional conference in the Library Science field. Overall, I would say that the conference, in terms of its speakers, presentations, and organization was outstanding. I was a little surprised that there was little to no focus on "e-books," the theme of the Pratt/UCL course. The conference instead focused mainly of academic e-publishing, particularly data sets. While I wasn't exactly conversant in much of this (frankly, some of it was completely over my head), it was interesting and a necessary crash course into how data is published, utilized, and preserved in an academic library setting. I have no doubt the conference has provided a firm foundation as I move forth in my career.










