Home SXSW: Web 2.0, Semantic Web & Scientific Publishing

SXSW: Web 2.0, Semantic Web & Scientific Publishing

Sean Ammirati of mSpoke is at
SXSW in Austin, TX (USA). He is reporting for Read/WriteWeb throughout the event.

The last panel I attended on the first
day of SXSW was entitled “Web
2.0 and Semantic Web: The Impact on Scientific Publishing
“. The panel was moderated
by John Wilbanks from Science
Commons. John did an excellent job showing how a number of general internet trends are
effecting scientific publishing. Specifically, I was impressed by three major projects
the panel touched on:

  • Open Access
  • Connotea
  • SemanticWiki on People at Ontoworld

Open Access

Melissa Hagemann, the Program Manager for Open Access at the Soros Foundation,
was one of the panelist. If you aren’t familiar with Open Access, it is an initiative
trying to get all scholarly research available for free on the Internet. Melissa
explained that many supporters are now requiring the research they support via grants, to
be provided under Open Access. In fact, the US Congress is considering legislation to
require all research supported by the United States Government to be distributed under
Open Access. The reason is that the government and other funders are realizing they are
paying for the research twice. Firstly, they are paying to have the information
created and synthesized for publication. Then they are paying again to allow other
researchers to get access to that knowledge.

Connotea

Timo Hanay, Director of Web
Publishing at Nature Publishing Group, discussed the beginning of an evolution in how the
impact of scientific research is measured. Historically, the impact of a piece of
academic research is measured by the journal that the research is published in. However,
that is evolving – the impact increasingly based on how the information is distributed.
One of the examples Timo showed was Connotea,
which Timo described as a “del.icio.us for scientific publishing”. I spent some time
exploring the site tonight and it does seem to have all the typical social bookmarking
site features, but focused around tags for scientific publications.

SemanticWiki on People at Ontoworld

As journals and other material are shared via Open Access, another key challenge is
making it easy for individuals to discover the content they are most interested in.
Interestingly, one of the most difficult challenges is understanding which individual
wrote certain pieces of research. For example, a common name (John Smith) may be multiple
people; or multiple spellings of a name (John Smith, John A. Smith) may be the same
person. Proper attribution and understanding of the progress of a research project is
very important, when trying to deliver meaningful search results across scientific
publications. Many are hoping the ‘semantic web‘ will
make that easier. Interestingly, these projects are leveraging the SemanticWiki on People at Ontoworld to help
with this.

Conclusion

While I was very familiar with all of the online media trends behind these projects,
it was very interesting to hear how this is effecting the publication of scientific
research and journals. It honestly was very encouraging! When I think about the
productivity improvements that social media has brought to my life, I’m happy to hear
that the individuals focused on finding a cure for cancer – and other significant
projects – are using the same types of tools to improve their productivity.

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