RDA Deutschland Tagung 2022

Europe/Berlin
Online Event

Online Event

Christoph Bruch (Helmholtz Open Science Office), Henriette Senst (Deutsches Archäologisches Institut), Jan Brase (SUB Göttingen), Lea Maria Ferguson (Helmholtz-Gemeinschaft, Helmholtz Open Science Office), Nina Weisweiler (Helmholtz-Gemeinschaft, Helmholtz Open Science Office), Raphael Ritz (MPG / MPCDF)
Description

Die RDA Deutschland Tagung 2022 wird vom RDA Deutschland e.V. in Kooperation mit dem Helmholtz Open Science Office veranstaltet. Sie findet vom 21. bis 25. Februar 2022 als virtuelles Event Event statt. Die Teilnahme ist kostenlos. Präsentationen und Materialien zur Tagung werden sukzessive online im Tagungsprogramm hinterlegt und verfügbar gemacht. Bitte registrieren Sie sich, um die Zugangsdaten für die Veranstaltung zu erhalten.

Am 22.01.2022 um 17.15 Uhr findet die Mitgliederversammlung des RDA DE e.V. online statt. Entsprechende Einladungen an die Vereinsmitglieder erfolgen separat.

Twitter-Hashtag zur Konferenz: #RDAde2022

Die RDA Community in Deutschland will dazu beitragen, dass der Austausch von Daten verstärkt und die Wiederverwendung von Daten effizienter wird. Sie umfasst Datenexpertinnen und -experten in Deutschland, die sich in der Research Data Alliance (RDA) engagieren bzw. ein Interesse an den Ergebnissen der RDA haben. Seit 2014 organisiert RDA Deutschland Jahreskonferenzen und verschiedene Aktivitäten wie z.B. Trainingskurse mit Fokus auf Data Science und Forschungsdatenmanagement.

Hinweis: Die Teilnehmenden, Vortragenden und Mitarbeitenden der Tagung werden aufgefordert, sich an den Code of Conduct zu halten. Wir bitten um die Rücksichtnahme und Mitarbeit aller Beteiligten, um die Veranstaltung zu einem sicheren und angenehmen Ort für alle zu machen.

Registration
RDA Deutschland Tagung 2022
Speakers: Dr Alexander Hirschfeld (Leiter Research, Bundesverband Deutsche Startups e.V.), Dr Christoph Bruch (Helmholtz Open Science Office), Prof. Heike Neuroth (Professur für Bibliothekswissenschaft, Fachhochschule Potsdam), Henriette Senst (Deutsches Archäologisches Institut), Jan-Martin Wiarda (Journalist für Bildung und Wissenschaft), Dr Jörn Krupa (Leitung, Transfer & Innovation, Helmholtz-Zentrum Potsdam - Deutsches GeoForschungsZentrum GFZ ), Marie Jansen (Senior Business Analyst | Public Sector | Business Technology Solutions | Capgemini Deutschland), Prof. Ulrike Lucke (Professur für Komplexe Multimediale Anwendungsarchitekturen, Universität Potsdam)
  • 15:30 17:00
    Provenance Monitoring and Management – Metadata is the Key 1h 30m

    Talk #1: Beyond identification: Provenance management with ORCID and CRedIT

    (Paloma Marín-Arraiza, ORCID)

    Abstract:
    ORCID iDs have been established in the research community as an identification standard. However, in an ecosystem of links and data, the importance of using identifiers goes beyond identification. Identifiers are central to the FAIRification of metadata, to improving its quality and to determining provenance.
    ORCID has as strategic objectives the improvement of metadata quality and completeness. Among others, this has involved the adoption of new work types, the integration of the CRedIT taxonomy or the adoption of ROR.
    In this talk, we will delve more deeply into these developments with a special focus on traceability and provenance.

    Biography:
    (https://orcid.org/0000-0001-7460-7794 )
    Paloma Marín-Arraiza studied Physics at the University of Granada (Spain) and got her Master's degree in Scientific Information and Communication at the same university. She also got her PhD in Information Science at Sao Paulo State University (Brazil) focusing her research in enhanced publications. Paloma has worked with non-textual materials at the German National Library of Science of Technology and as an Information Manager for persistent identifiers at the library of the Technical University of Vienna. Since March 2020, she is part of the ORCID team as an Engagement Lead, working directly with consortia in Europe and America.

    Talk #2: Introduction to Contributor Roles Taxonomy

    (Alison McGonagle-O’Connell, HighWire Press; CRediT Program Committee)

    Abstract:
    This talk will provide an introductory-level overview of the Contributor Roles Taxonomy, also known as CRediT offers the ability for recognition of the specific contributions each contributor makes to a collaborative effort such as a manuscript, a grant proposal or a project. Using 14 standard terms, each contributor's work is recognized not just at the level of 'who' but also 'what'. The CRediT initiative is a grassroots community and volunteer-run effort that is now part of National Information Standards Organization that is passionate about supporting better recognition and metadata via shifting from the framework of 'authorship' toward 'contributorship' for collaborative research efforts, publishing, and reporting. We will look at examples of CRediT adoption use cases, and practical application examples, and next steps for joining the hundreds of publishers and thousands of journals who are more accurately recognizing research contributions with CRediT.

    Biography:
    (https://orcid.org/0000-0002-9032-3983)
    Alison has nearly 20 years of experience in publishing, including 10 years marketing scholarly communications workflow tools. Alison leads Marketing at HighWire and MPS, and is responsible for continually growing and supporting the community. She is also the co-Chair of the CRediT Program Committee.

    Talk #3: An overview of Provenance and its use cases

    (Carina Haupt, German Aerospace Center (DLR), Helmholtz Metadata Collaboration Platform (HMC))

    Abstract:
    The concept of provenance is well known by some, and completely unknown to others. In this talk I give a short introduction into the basics. From the definition, the W3C standard, to the storing and accessing of it. To put these basics into context, I will show some examples of how we work with provenance data within the German Aerospace Center (DLR). I will thereby focus on the work of the department of intelligent and distributed systems where we use provenance data to monitor and analyse software development processes.

    Biography:
    (https://orcid.org/0000-0001-6447-1379)
    Carina Haupt is head of the Sustainable Software Engineering group as well as deputy head of the Intelligent and Distributed Systems department of the Institute for Software Technology of DLR. Her aim is to support domain scientists by creating software and process based solutions for their day to day problems. Her research topics are software engineering in the scientific context, open source, and knowledge and data management.

    Speakers: Carina Haupt, Alison McGonagle-O’Connell, Paloma Marín-Arraiza
  • 17:00 17:15
    Pause 15m
  • 17:15 18:45
    RDA-DE Mitgliederversammlung 1h 30m
  • Wednesday, 23 February
  • Thursday, 24 February
  • Friday, 25 February