Research Environment

14,000,000 Leading Edge Experts on the ideXlab platform

Scan Science and Technology

Contact Leading Edge Experts & Companies

Scan Science and Technology

Contact Leading Edge Experts & Companies

The Experts below are selected from a list of 2032383 Experts worldwide ranked by ideXlab platform

Jennifer R. Kimbell - One of the best experts on this subject based on the ideXlab platform.

  • Nursing Research fellowship: building nursing Research infrastructure in a hospital.
    The Journal of nursing administration, 2010
    Co-Authors: Rene’e W. Latimer, Jennifer R. Kimbell
    Abstract:

    The largest private hospital in Hawaii was recently awarded Magnet Recognition, partly due to its exemplary nursing Research culture. The hospital fostered and sustained a strong Research Environment through the establishment of a nursing institute, nursing Research council, and, most recently, a nursing Research fellowship. The authors describe the fellowship that was designed to educate nurses on the Research process and enable nurses to lead Research projects.

Roeland Ordelman - One of the best experts on this subject based on the ideXlab platform.

  • Media Suite: Unlocking Audiovisual Archives for Mixed Media Scholarly Research
    2019
    Co-Authors: Roeland Ordelman, Liliana Melgar, Jasmijn Van Gorp, Julia Noordegraaf
    Abstract:

    This paper discusses the rationale behind and approach towards the development of a Research Environment –the Media Suite– in a sustainable, dynamic, multi-institutional infrastructure that supports mixed media scholarly Research with large audiovisual data collections and available multimedia context collections, serving media scholars and digital humanists in general.

  • talking with scholars developing a Research Environment for oral history collections
    arXiv: Digital Libraries, 2013
    Co-Authors: Max Kemman, Roeland Ordelman, Stef Scagliola, Franciska De Jong
    Abstract:

    Scholars are yet to make optimal use of Oral History collections. For the uptake of digital Research tools in the daily working practice of Researchers, practices and conventions commonly adhered to in the subfields in the humanities should be taken into account during development. To this end, in the Oral History Today project a Research tool for exploring Oral History collections is developed in close collaboration with scholarly Researchers. This paper describes four stages of scholarly Research and the first steps undertaken to incorporate requirements of these stages in a digital Research Environment.

  • talking with scholars developing a Research Environment for oral history collections
    International Conference Theory and Practice Digital Libraries, 2013
    Co-Authors: Max Kemman, Roeland Ordelman, Stef Scagliola, Franciska De Jong
    Abstract:

    Scholars are yet to make optimal use of Oral History collections. For the uptake of digital Research tools in the daily working practice of Researchers, practices and conventions commonly adhered to in the subfields of the humanities should be taken into account during development, in order to facilitate the uptake of digital Research tools in the daily working practice of Researchers. To this end, in the Oral History Today project a Research tool for exploring Oral History collections is developed in close collaboration with scholarly Researchers. This paper describes four stages of scholarly Research and the first steps undertaken to incorporate requirements of these stages in a digital Research Environment.

David De Roure - One of the best experts on this subject based on the ideXlab platform.

  • the design and realisation of the experimentmy virtual Research Environment for social sharing of workflows
    Future Generation Computer Systems, 2009
    Co-Authors: David De Roure, Carole Goble, Robert Stevens
    Abstract:

    In this paper we suggest that the full scientific potential of workflows will be achieved through mechanisms for sharing and collaboration, empowering scientists to spread their experimental protocols and to benefit from those of others. To facilitate this process we have designed and built the Experimentmy Virtual Research Environment for collaboration and sharing of workflows and experiments. In contrast to systems which simply make workflows available, Experimentmy provides mechanisms to support the sharing of workflows within and across multiple communities. It achieves this by adopting a social web approach which is tailored to the particular needs of the scientist. We present the motivation, design and realisation of Experimentmy.

  • myexperiment defining the social virtual Research Environment
    IEEE International Conference on eScience, 2008
    Co-Authors: David De Roure, Carole Goble, Jiten Bhagat, Don Cruickshank, Antoon Goderis, Danius T Michaelides, David Newman
    Abstract:

    The myExperiment virtual Research Environment supports the sharing of Research objects used by scientists, such as scientific workflows. For Researchers it is both a social infrastructure that encourages sharing and a platform for conducting Research, through familiar user interfaces. For developers it provides an open, extensible and participative Environment. We describe the design, implementation and deployment of myExperiment and suggest that its four capabilities - Research objects, social model, open Environment and actioning Research - are necessary characteristics of an effective Virtual Research Environment for e-Research and open science.

  • designing the myexperiment virtual Research Environment for the social sharing of workflows
    International Conference on e-Science, 2007
    Co-Authors: David De Roure, Carole Goble, Robert Stevens
    Abstract:

    Many scientific workflow systems have been developed and are serving to benefit science. In this paper we look beyond individual systems to consider the use of workflows within scientific practice, and we argue that the tremendous scientific potential of workflows will be achieved through mechanisms for sharing and collaboration - empowering the scientist to spread their experimental protocols and to benefit from the protocols of others. We discuss issues in workflow sharing, propose a set of design principles for collaborative e-Science software, and illustrate these principles in action through the design of the myExperiment Virtual Research Environment for collaboration and sharing of experiments.

  • myexperiment a web 2 0 virtual Research Environment
    In: International Workshop on Virtual Research Environments and Collaborative Work Environments; 2007., 2007
    Co-Authors: David De Roure, Carole Goble
    Abstract:

    e-Science has given rise to new forms of digital object in the Virtual Research Environment which can usefully be shared amongst collaborating scientists to assist in generating new scientific results. In particular, descriptions of Scientific Workflows capture pieces of scientific knowledge which may transcend their immediate application and can be shared and reused in other experiments. We are building the myExperiment Virtual Research Environment to support scientists in sharing and collaboration with workflows and other objects. Rather than adopting traditional methods prevalent in the e-Science developer community, our approach draws upon the social software techniques characterised as Web 2.0. In this paper we report on the preliminary design work of myExperiment.

Carole Goble - One of the best experts on this subject based on the ideXlab platform.

  • the design and realisation of the experimentmy virtual Research Environment for social sharing of workflows
    Future Generation Computer Systems, 2009
    Co-Authors: David De Roure, Carole Goble, Robert Stevens
    Abstract:

    In this paper we suggest that the full scientific potential of workflows will be achieved through mechanisms for sharing and collaboration, empowering scientists to spread their experimental protocols and to benefit from those of others. To facilitate this process we have designed and built the Experimentmy Virtual Research Environment for collaboration and sharing of workflows and experiments. In contrast to systems which simply make workflows available, Experimentmy provides mechanisms to support the sharing of workflows within and across multiple communities. It achieves this by adopting a social web approach which is tailored to the particular needs of the scientist. We present the motivation, design and realisation of Experimentmy.

  • myexperiment defining the social virtual Research Environment
    IEEE International Conference on eScience, 2008
    Co-Authors: David De Roure, Carole Goble, Jiten Bhagat, Don Cruickshank, Antoon Goderis, Danius T Michaelides, David Newman
    Abstract:

    The myExperiment virtual Research Environment supports the sharing of Research objects used by scientists, such as scientific workflows. For Researchers it is both a social infrastructure that encourages sharing and a platform for conducting Research, through familiar user interfaces. For developers it provides an open, extensible and participative Environment. We describe the design, implementation and deployment of myExperiment and suggest that its four capabilities - Research objects, social model, open Environment and actioning Research - are necessary characteristics of an effective Virtual Research Environment for e-Research and open science.

  • designing the myexperiment virtual Research Environment for the social sharing of workflows
    International Conference on e-Science, 2007
    Co-Authors: David De Roure, Carole Goble, Robert Stevens
    Abstract:

    Many scientific workflow systems have been developed and are serving to benefit science. In this paper we look beyond individual systems to consider the use of workflows within scientific practice, and we argue that the tremendous scientific potential of workflows will be achieved through mechanisms for sharing and collaboration - empowering the scientist to spread their experimental protocols and to benefit from the protocols of others. We discuss issues in workflow sharing, propose a set of design principles for collaborative e-Science software, and illustrate these principles in action through the design of the myExperiment Virtual Research Environment for collaboration and sharing of experiments.

  • myexperiment a web 2 0 virtual Research Environment
    In: International Workshop on Virtual Research Environments and Collaborative Work Environments; 2007., 2007
    Co-Authors: David De Roure, Carole Goble
    Abstract:

    e-Science has given rise to new forms of digital object in the Virtual Research Environment which can usefully be shared amongst collaborating scientists to assist in generating new scientific results. In particular, descriptions of Scientific Workflows capture pieces of scientific knowledge which may transcend their immediate application and can be shared and reused in other experiments. We are building the myExperiment Virtual Research Environment to support scientists in sharing and collaboration with workflows and other objects. Rather than adopting traditional methods prevalent in the e-Science developer community, our approach draws upon the social software techniques characterised as Web 2.0. In this paper we report on the preliminary design work of myExperiment.

Rene’e W. Latimer - One of the best experts on this subject based on the ideXlab platform.

  • Nursing Research fellowship: building nursing Research infrastructure in a hospital.
    The Journal of nursing administration, 2010
    Co-Authors: Rene’e W. Latimer, Jennifer R. Kimbell
    Abstract:

    The largest private hospital in Hawaii was recently awarded Magnet Recognition, partly due to its exemplary nursing Research culture. The hospital fostered and sustained a strong Research Environment through the establishment of a nursing institute, nursing Research council, and, most recently, a nursing Research fellowship. The authors describe the fellowship that was designed to educate nurses on the Research process and enable nurses to lead Research projects.