Agenda
| Day
One -- Thursday, March 27, 2008 |
8:00 - 9:00 a.m.
Atrium Center |
Continental Breakfast |
9:00 - 9:15 a.m.
Redbud A/B |
Welcome & Introductions
Todd Carpenter, Managing Director, NISO
biography |
| 9:15 - 10:15 a.m. |
Opening Keynote
Building SkyNet for Science: Discovering New Frontiers Using Embedded
Knowledge
Richard Akerman, Technology Architect, NRC CISTI
biography
Discovery in the digital environment is primarily mediated by machines.
Unfortunately, the machines don't speak our language. Therefore, we must
find standard ways of representing and communicating our requests, and
standards for embedding and exchanging knowledge about digital objects.
With the rise of the machines, we need to consider what information encodings
will allow them to most efficiently process and analyze the vast range
of information that is available. We need to find ways to communicate
human recommendations and preferences, and to enable people to successfully
explore the new digital frontier.
|
| 10:15 - 11:00 a.m. |
Deep Indexing and Discovery of Tables and Figures
Robert J. Sandusky, Assistant University Librarian for Information Technology,
Clinical Associate Professor, Richard J. Daley Library, University of
Illinois at Chicago
biography
Deep indexing refers to the capability of discovering information objects
at new, finer levels of granularity. Traditional abstracting and indexing
systems provide access to article-level surrogates and let users evaluate
results sets based upon descriptors, text abstracts, journal and article
titles, and author names and affiliations. Systems are now available
that extract, index, and support search of article subcomponents such
as figures, tables, maps, graphs, and photographs. Three contemporary
systems that provide direct access to disaggregated components of scholarly
articles are compared and their potential and limitations are discussed.
Research into user needs and uses for direct access to journal article
components is reviewed, along with presentation of several remaining
issues and opportunities for research and development.
|
| 11:00 - 11:15 a.m. |
Break
Sponsored by

|
| 11:15 a.m. - 12 noon |
Identities, xISBN, and xISSN
Mike Teets, Vice President,
Global Engineering, OCLC
biography |
12 noon - 1:00 p.m.
Trillium Room |
Lunch
|
| 1:00 - 2:00 p.m. |
Search Web Service
Ralph LeVan,
Senior Research Scientist, OCLC
biography
The Search Web Service group was formed to propose new search standards
based on the experience gained with Z39.50, SRU and OpenSearch. That
group has developed the concept of an abstract retrieval protocol, is
developing bindings from concrete protocols to the abstract protocol
and is developing a non-prescriptive standard based on a description
language that allows content providers a way to describe how to interact
with their systems with a high level of interoperability.
|
| 2:00 - 2:45 p.m. |
2collab: A
Collaboration Tool for Researchers and Scientists
Camelia Csora, Product Manager,
ScienceDirect and 2collab, Elsevier
biography
In a context where scholarly research is increasingly e-centric, with online
tools that make access to scientific information faster and more dynamic
than ever, researchers need new tools to process and filter the information,
to organize and share resources, to connect and collaborate online.
2collab is an online collaboration tool for researchers and scientists,
enabling them to store and organize their favorite Internet resources
such as blogs, websites, reference materials, citation lists, research
articles, and more. It provides researchers with an open and accessible
space to connect with peers, to exchange information, enhancing the way
they work together.
|
| 2:45 - 3:15 p.m. |
Break
Sponsored by

|
| 3:15 - 4:00 p.m. |
Improving Discovery Systems
Through Post Processing of Harvested Data
Vinod Chachra, President & CEO,
VTLS Inc.
biography
This
presentation will discuss the harvesting process for a discovery system
that covers several geographically distributed repositories. It
is assumed that the repositories contain not just OPAC based metadata,
but metadata related to a variety of digital objects. Issues
related to consistency, aggregation, cross-walking, faceting, knowledge
bases and drill down capabilities will be discussed. |
| 4:00 - 4:45 p.m. |
Scitopia.org: A Discovery Tool Using
Federated Search
Karen Hawkins, Director of Product
Management, IEEE
biography
Scitopia.org began as a partnership among 15 (now grown to 20) scientific
and technical societies. It enables end-users to focus a search on content
that is society generated, and mainly peer-reviewed, including journal
articles, conference proceedings, and standards, as well as related content
such as patents and government documents. The search eliminates the noise
found in search results from the open web, but also creates some technical
challenges for the participating societies, especially given the disparate
content types searched. |
| Day
Two: Friday, March 28, 2008 |
8:00 -9:00 a.m.
Atrium Center |
Continental Breakfast
|
9:00 - 10:00 a.m. Dogwood
A/B |
Discovery Tools and the OPAC
Peter Murray, Assistant Director, New Service Development, OhioLINK
biography
A great deal of the discussion surrounding new discovery tools in libraries
involve the evolution of the end-user interface to library catalogs. Comparative
information seeking services on the general web offer tools such as permalinking,
tagging, and content enhancement through comments and reviews. Beginning
with a taxonomy of techniques to enhance/supplement/replace the OPAC along
with examples of commercial and open source solutions that demonstrate
the various tools for user-contributed content. |
| 10:00 - 10:45 a.m. |
A Model of the User's Psychological State as
a Framework for Understanding the Nexus of What's Desirable and What's
Possible in the Future of Online Reference
John G. Dove, Chief Executive
Officer, Credo Reference
biography
John will give an overview of one model of a user's approach to reference
information that Credo finds useful in examining the potential benefits
of future developments in online reference. He will then apply this model
to a list of things Credo would love to build but doesn't yet know how
to. In doing so he will draw out of some of the ways in which standards
around discovery of people, places, events, works, and institutions could
assist in the building of some of these future tools, as well as some
characteristics that, in his opinion, any such standards should
have. |
| 10:45 - 11:15 a.m. |
Break
Sponsored by

|
| 11:15 a.m. - 12 noon |
Changing Patron Expectations
and the Discovery Landscape
Dinah Sanders, Senior Product Manager,
Encore,
Innovative Interfaces, Inc.
biography
The world and the Web have changed and library patrons, naturally, have
as well. What is the current discovery landscape and how does it impact
what patrons expect from the tools they use to interact with libraries
and other information providers? What skills do these users bring with
them which can be leveraged to make anyone more successful searchers? What
user interface patterns and metadata can interact to provide the basis
for this improvement in usability? How can we extend beyond our current
descriptors to create new pathways to connect information needs with the
resources that meet them? How can libraries reconnect to the life of the
web (and the daily lives of patrons)? Where are we now, what's new, and
where are we headed next? What are the four clusters of technology trends
which will be impacting libraries next? This session will answer these
questions and provide a sneak preview of new library discovery tools currently
in development along with a report from SXSW Interactive, one of the most
popular and influential web technology conferences. |
12 noon - 1 p.m.
Atrium,
Second Floor |
Lunch
|
| 1:00 - 2:00 p.m. |
PennTags: Social Discovery & Organization
Michael Winkler, Director of Information Technologies & Digital
Development (iTadd), University of Pennsylvania
biography
PennTags
is a social tagging application developed at the University of Pennsylvania
to support research, teaching, and learning in an academic environment.
It is currently being used by students, faculty, and staff to generate
bibliographies, resource lists, and guides to subject disciplines. Like
other social tagging applications, PennTags provides a simple and fast
method for capturing a webpage through the use of a "bookmarklet" that
captures the title and network location of a webpage. It further allows
users to provide organizing tags or keywords and discursive annotations
describing the context, significance, or use of a site. PennTags can
be used to tag items from library catalogs, openurl link resolvers, image
catalogs, and the open Web.
PennTags and other social software systems could provide an alternative
to traditional search-based discovery tool by leveraging social networks
to foster communities of practice that organize useful resources. Michael
Winkler discusses the development of PennTags and other social software
at Penn and partner institutions to assist in resource discovery... and
re-discovery. |
| 2:00 - 3:00 p.m. |
ILS and Discovery Systems: A DLF Update
John Mark Ockerbloom, Digital Library Architect and Planner,
University of Pennsylvania
biography
In 2007, the Digital Library Federation
convened a task force to create a technical recommendation for integrating
a wide range of of discovery applications with integrated library systems.
This task force has surveyed library professionals, met
with developers, and negotiated with representatives of ILS and application
vendors, and will soon release an official recommendation that identifies
particular functions and technologies for interoperability at various levels
of sophistication. In this talk, the chair of the task force will discuss
the essentials of the recommendation, the process of developing it, and
the ways in which the recommendation can be realized in working implementations,
standards, and collaborations. |
| 3:00 - 3:15 p.m. |
Break
Sponsored by

|
| 3:15 - 4:15 p.m. |
ResearchBlogging.org A Peer Review Research
Discovery System
- Dave Munger,
Freelance Writer and Co-Founder, ResearchBlogging.org
biography
- Eric Schnell, Associate Professor and
Assistant Director for Technolgy and Digital Initiatives, Prior Health
Sciences Library, The Ohio State University
biography
ResearchBlogging.org began simply as a way for academic bloggers to
identify serious and public posts in what can also be a frivolous and
private environment. Then, once these items are identified -- many of
them written by experts in a field -- effective indexing, archiving,
and discovery becomes a realistic possibility. To date, hundreds of bloggers
have signed up for the service, and hundreds of thousands of readers
have viewed their posts.
But bloggers remain a notoriously difficult group to rein in. They use
a variety of different platforms and most are unaware of metadata, standards
and other means for cataloging their work. In this talk, Dave Munger
and Eric Schnell discuss how they are attempting to identify and apply
standards to the best blogging about peer-reviewed research without handcuffing
the cavalier spirit that attracts so many to the medium of blogging.
They then show how this project exemplifies many of the current challenges
in information system design. |
| 4:15 - 4:30
p.m. |
Closing Remarks
Todd Carpenter, Managing Director, NISO
|