IN23B-1735
Enlisting User Community Perspectives to Inform Development of a Semantic Web Application for Discovery of Cross-Institutional Research Information and Data

Tuesday, 15 December 2015
Poster Hall (Moscone South)
Erica Mehan Johns1, Matthew S. Mayernik2, Frances M Boler3, Jon Corson-Rikert1, Michael D Daniels4, M. Benjamin Gross3, Huda Khan1, Keith e Maull2, Linda R Rowan3, Don Stott2, Steve Williams4 and Dean B. Krafft1, (1)Cornell University, Ithaca, NY, United States, (2)National Center for Atmospheric Research, Boulder, CO, United States, (3)UNAVCO, Inc. Boulder, Boulder, CO, United States, (4)National Center for Atmospheric Research, Earth Observing Laboratory, Boulder, CO, United States
Abstract:
Researchers seek information and data through a variety of avenues: published literature, search engines, repositories, colleagues, etc. In order to build a web application that leverages linked open data to enable multiple paths for information discovery, the EarthCollab project has surveyed two geoscience user communities to consider how researchers find and share scholarly output. EarthCollab, a cross-institutional, EarthCube funded project partnering UCAR, Cornell University, and UNAVCO, is employing the open-source semantic web software, VIVO, as the underlying technology to connect the people and resources of virtual research communities. This study will present an analysis of survey responses from members of the two case study communities: (1) the Bering Sea Project, an interdisciplinary field program whose data archive is hosted by NCAR’s Earth Observing Laboratory (EOL), and (2) UNAVCO, a geodetic facility and consortium that supports diverse research projects informed by geodesy.

The survey results illustrate the types of research products that respondents indicate should be discoverable within a digital platform and the current methods used to find publications, data, personnel, tools, and instrumentation. The responses showed that scientists rely heavily on general purpose search engines, such as Google, to find information, but that data center websites and the published literature were also critical sources for finding collaborators, data, and research tools.The survey participants also identify additional features of interest for an information platform such as search engine indexing, connection to institutional web pages, generation of bibliographies and CVs, and outward linking to social media. Through the survey, the user communities prioritized the type of information that is most important to display and describe their work within a research profile. The analysis of this survey will inform our further development of a platform that will facilitate different types of information discovery strategies, and help researchers to find and use the associated resources of a research project.