A Recommendation System for an Open Archive

This poster is part of the Open Repositories 2021 Poster Session which takes place in the week of June 7-10. We encourage you to ask questions and engage in discussion on this poster by using the comments feature. Authors will respond to comments during this week.

Authors:

Gulce Bal Bozkurt and Gozde Boztepe Karatas

Poster description:

In this study, we developed a recommender system for OpenMETU which is the open archive of Middle East Technical University. Our system recommends items by using a content-based approach. In the content-based approach, the properties of items are vital due to the recommendations are based on them. Our recommendation system is based on the author, abstract, title, and subject similarity. To calculate these similarities, first of all, we extract features of each item by using natural language processing algorithms such as TF-IDF and Universal sentence encoder. We use cosine distance to measure the similarity between two items. Later, we give different weights to each of the similarities to calculate the overall score. Our system recommends the most similar 5 items to the visitor who visits an item in our archive.

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About the authors:

DataCORE – Grappling With Big Files and Big Problems

This poster is part of the Open Repositories 2021 Poster Session which takes place in the week of June 7-10. We encourage you to ask questions and engage in discussion on this poster by using the comments feature. Authors will respond to comments during this week.

Authors:

James Halliday and Brian Keese

Poster description:

DataCORE is a brand new Samvera-based repository at Indiana University focusing exclusively on research data. This poster will show how the system works, including detailing how data flows in and out and some of the challenges they overcame in implementing it. The changing landscape of handling large data and how to move it around has necessitated some updates to their workflows.

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About the authors:

James Halliday (Presenting author) is the Head of Repository Technology for Indiana University Libraries in Bloomington. Prior to this role, he has worked as a developer for Indiana University Libraries since 2001.

Brian Keese is a senior software engineer for Indiana University Libraries. He works on various projects in the Scholarly Communications department. Prior to this role, Brian worked for several years as a developer for the Avalon project.

RCIN – Digital Repository of Scientific Institutes in Poland

This poster is part of the Open Repositories 2021 Poster Session which takes place in the week of June 7-10. We encourage you to ask questions and engage in discussion on this poster by using the comments feature. Authors will respond to comments during this week.

Authors:

Błażej Betański; Tomasz Parkoła; Natalia Jeszke

Poster description:

This poster presents RCIN -a digital repository developed in OZwRCIN project, being an example of cooperation between thematically diverse scientific institutes across Poland. RCIN is developed to give access to and promote digital resources coming from various Polish scientific institutes. The poster covers information on technical solutions applied to increase the accessibility of data, .e.g various metadata schemes like Dublin Core and Darwin Core, accessibility in terms of user interface as well as large-scale digitisation and underlying infrastructure (software and hardware). RCIN is built as a largescale repository that holds digital assets from all participating institutions and provides multiple ways to access the data, including a web portal for the general public, multiple smaller institutional repositories that give access to resources provided by specific institutions and various APIs.

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RCIN poster

About the Authors:

Tomasz Parkoła is the Head of Digital Libraries and Knowledge Platforms Department at Poznań Supercomputing and Networking Center (Poznań, Poland) where he manages research & development teams responsible for digital humanities infrastructure (http://ehum.psnc.pl/en/main-page/), products and services for digital libraries and cultural heritage (https://dingo.psnc.pl/) as well as Europeana-accredited Polish metadata aggregator FBC (https://fbc.pionier.net.pl/). He has been involved in national and international research and development projects with main themes on data access & processing, long-term preservation, digitization workflows as well as data aggregation & interoperability. He is a board member in the IMPACT Centre of Competence (since 2011), a co-head of DARIAH-EU’s Virtual Competence Centre on Scholarly Content Management (since 2019) and a Product Board member of the Open Preservation Foundation (since 2019). He was programme committee member for iPRES 2014, iPRES 2016, DATeCH 2017 and DARIAH AE 2019. He is an author or co-author of several dozens of scientific and popular science publications.

Błażej Betański (pr- M.Sc. Eng. in computer science, Team lead in Digital Libraries and Knowledge Platforms Department at Poznań Supercomputing and Networking Center. Since 2014 works at Poznań Supercomputing and Networking Center. Leader of the team developing the DInGO software package in the Department of Digital Libraries and Knowledge Platforms. Involved in research and development in the field of software for building digital libraries, museums and digital repositories as well as systems for managing the digitization process and long-term preservation. He participated in the development and implementation of dozens of systems for presenting online cultural resources carried out in the country and abroad.

Natalia Jeszke – M.A. in social science, Digital Content Specialist in Digital Libraries and Knowledge Platforms Department at Poznań Supercomputing and Networking Center. Librarian and Senior Librarian from 2010 till 2018, since 2018 works at Poznań Supercomputing and Networking Center. Involved in projects such as the promotion of cultural heritage in Federacja Bibliotek Cyfrowych and Europeana. At Digital Repository of Scientific Institutes (DRSI) responsible for creating valuable metadata for digital objects and maintain metadata standards for digital libraries in the context of processing them for search engines.

Status of students’ graduate (masters) theses in repositories of six European universities

This poster is part of the Open Repositories 2021 Poster Session which takes place in the week of June 7-10. We encourage you to ask questions and engage in discussion on this poster by using the comments feature. Authors will respond to comments during this week.

Authors:

Danijel Gudelj; Ljiljana Poljak; Vicko Tomić; Mirta Matošić; Matko Marušić; Ana Marušić

Poster description:

Institutions are often apprehensive when moving their repository to a new repository system, as this will affect hundreds of thousands of records collected over decades and the discoverability of their institution’s
research. This poster will present statistics on item usage and discovery after repository migration, using data from an external independent repository monitoring service to show an increase in usage of up to 250% and explain how this can be achieved.

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About the authors:

Danijel Gudelj
Danijel Gudelj is M.A. of sociology and croatology, graduated at Centre for Croatian Studies, University of Zagreb. Currently, he is a member of the editorial team of ST-OPEN, new overlay+ journal which was founded by the University of Split. For the last decade, he was working at the University of Split as an events manager. His interests are scientific research in the field of scientometry, scientific ethics, editing the scientific journal, cultural and social events etc. He has published several papers.

Ljiljana Poljak

Ljiljana Poljak holds a master’s degree in library and information science from the University of Zadar and is currently a PhD student at the same university. She works as a librarian at the University of Split Library Department of Research Services and Development, where her responsibilities include analysis of scientific productivity, web development, institutional repository management, and open science advocacy.

Vicko Tomić (Presenting author)

Vicko Tomić is an Editor-in-Chief of the overlay+ journal ST-OPEN, founded by the University of Split. He graduated sociology from the Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences in Split and currently is a PhD candidate at the University of Split School of Medicine. His main fields of scientific interest are qualitative methodology, research ethics and research integrity. He has published several scientific papers and had presentations at several national and international scientific conferences. He is a member of the Croatian Sociological Society.

Mirta Matošić

Mirta Matošić is a Librarian Advisor at the University of Split Library. She received her Bachelor’s degree from the University Oklahoma, in Management Information Systems and in International Business, and her Master’s degree in Library and Information Sciences from the University of Zadar. She is pursuing her postgraduate degree at the University of Zadar in the Knowledge Society and Information Transfer programme. Her main research interests are academic librarianship, library management and evaluation.

Matko Marušić, MD, PhD

Dr Marušić is the founder and Editor emeritus of ST-OPEN journal. He is a graduate of Zagreb University School of Medicine (1970), where he also obtained PhD (1975), and professorship at the Department of Physiology (1980). His research interest has mostly been concentrated on immunology of bone marrow transplantation, but he also published in fields of oncology, philosophy of science, and medical education. Dr Marušić writes short stories, and two collections of his works became obligatory readings in the primary schools in Croatia.

Ana Marušić

Ana Marušić is Professor of Anatomy and Chair of the Department of Research in Biomedicine and Health at the University of Split School of Medicine, Split, Croatia. Since 2012, she is Honorary Professor of the Edinburgh University, Edinburgh, Scotland, UK. Prof. Marušić has been the Editor in Chief of the Croatian Medical Journal for 20 years, and is now the Founder and Co-editor in Chief of the Journal of Global Health. Prof. Marušić is Past President of the World Association of Medical Editors and Council of Science Editors. She is currently the Vice President of the European Association of Science Editors. Professor Marušić received her MD and PhD degrees from the University of Zagreb, Croatia. Her biomedical research is focused on the interactions between the immune and bone systems. Her research interests also include peer review and research integrity. She has been the principal investigator of several national and international research grants. She has given a number of invited lectures at international meetings. Prof. Marušić is the founder of the Croatian branch of the Cochrane Collaboration and creator of the Croatian public registry of clinical trials. She is on the Steering Group of the EQUATOR Network, an international initiative for promoting transparent and accurate reporting of health research.

A Framework for an Arabic Terminology Management System (TMS) using Artificial Intelligence

This poster is part of the Open Repositories 2021 Poster Session which takes place in the week of June 7-10. We encourage you to ask questions and engage in discussion on this poster by using the comments feature. Authors will respond to comments during this week.

Author:

Sherine Mahmoud Eid

Poster description:

Many translation projects in the Arab world were not implemented, or were delayed, due to manual translation processes and/or budgetary reasons. The poster proposes the use of Artificial intelligence (AI) in the form of Arabic machine translation (MT) to develop an Arabic Terminology Management System (TMS), followed by human Post-editing of machine-translation output. The system shall ease the translation process and generate output products, such as glossaries and taxonomies.

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About the author:

Sherine Eid is Head of the International Library Projects Unit at Bibliotheca Alexandrina, Egypt and has twenty-one years’ experience in the Library and Information Science field. Sherine is a member of the LD4 Steering Group. She is a reviewer for international journals and conferences and has contributed to many publications, published by IFLA, Bibliotheca Alexandrina, and Taylor and Francis. She holds a MBA degree in Global Marketing from Paris ESLSCA Business School.

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