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VIVO is an open source Semantic Web application that enables the discovery of research & scholarship. VIVO is populated with detailed profiles of faculty and researchers. VIVO provides a faceted search functionality for easily identifying people, activities, organizations, and other research-related information. VIVO is funded by a $12.2 million consortium grant with UF and 6 partner institutions from the National Institutes of Health, U24 RR029822, “VIVO: Enabling National Networking of Scientists.” Since the original award was made, a number of additional institutions and organizations have implemented and adopted VIVO locally. What is VIVO? consumers both within and outside the institution. How can you use VIVO? Create cross-disciplinary research teams: Anthony is writing a multi-disciplinary research proposal on molecular treatments for breast cancer. He would like to identify and contact potential collaborators and begin to exchange information regarding the research. Identify potential funding opportunities: Mary is the director of a large research center. She would like to visualize clusters of interests, techniques, and areas of specialty amongst the researchers that are part of her center. She would like to use this Recruit graduate students: T om is completing his BS in Biology. He wants to identify institutions with robust programs in his research area of interest the genetic bases of neurodegenerative disorders. Locate focused publication content: Samantha is a faculty member at an university. She is looking for papers published by other scholars at her institution on using advanced statistical methods to analyze research impact in the bioinformatics domain. Assemble specialized review panels: David is a federal agenc co-authors with the researchers whose proposals are under review. Plan budgets, services and resources: Library administration or directors of core facilities want to align their strategic plan with the evolving research needs of their clientele. Identifying growth areas of research through increasing publications, focused areas of research, and grant dollars enables this task to become more evidence-based. VIVO’s Connections Facilitate Information Discovery & Collaboration VIVO visualizations illustrate who a researcher is already working with on publications and grants. This enables searchers to discover relevant research information with just a few clicks of a mouse! Search Click Discover VIVO’s linked data supports browsing and research discovery. Thus, a VIVO search of “gulf oil spill” (a research topic) will display diverse results such as organizations, individuals, grants, and more. One result, a consortium, links to a list of individual researchers, and their profiles contain visualizations of co-author and co-investigator networks, linking them to publication and funding collaborators. Through data linking, VIVO’s diverse information is cross-searchable and ensures that users find accurate information quickly. Collaborate VIVO is designed to connect and integrate information about grants, publications, and people in one location. VIVO displays data about researchers, their collaborators, their funding sources, and more. Linked Open Data By storing data in VIVO in RDF and using standard ontologies, the information in VIVO can either be displayed in a human-readable web page or delivered to other systems as RDF. This allows the open researcher data in VIVO to be harvested, aggregated, and integrated into the Linked Open Data cloud. SPARQL is an RDF query language which allows users to construct globally unambiguous queries, from across diverse data sources. VIVO Open Source Community http://www.facebook.com/VIVOcollaboration http://twitter.com/VIVOcollab http://vivo.sourceforge.net *VIVO Collaboration: Cornell University: Dean Krafft (Cornell PI), Manolo Bevia, Jim Blake, Nick Cappadona, Brian Caruso, Jon Corson-Rikert, Elly Cramer, Medha Devare, Elizabeth Hines, Huda Khan, Deepak Konidena, Brian Lowe, Joseph McEnerney, Holly Mistlebauer, Stella Mitchell, Anup Sawant, Christopher Westling, Tim Worrall, Rebecca Younes. University of Florida: Mike Conlon (VIVO and UF PI), Beth Auten, Michael Barbieri, Chris Barnes, Kaitlin Blackburn, Cecilia Botero, Kerry Britt, Erin Brooks, Amy Buhler, Ellie Bushhousen, Linda Butson, Chris Case, Christine Cogar, Valrie Davis, Mary Edwards, Nita Ferree, Rolando Garcia-Milian, George Hack, Chris Haines, Sara Henning, Rae Jesano, Margeaux Johnson, Meghan Latorre, Yang Li, Jennifer Lyon, James Pence, Hannah Norton, Narayan Raum, Nicholas Rejack, Alexander Rockwell, Sara Russell Gonzalez, Nancy Schaefer, Dale Scheppler, Nicholas Skaggs, Matthew Tedder, Michele R. Tennant, Alicia Turner, Stephen Williams. Indiana University: Katy Borner (IU PI), Kavitha Chandrasekar, Bin Chen, Shanshan Chen, Ryan Cobine, Jeni Coffey, Suresh Deivasigamani, Ying Ding, Russell Duhon, Jon Dunn, Poornima Gopinath, Julie Hardesty, Brian Keese, Namrata Lele, Micah Linnemeier, Nianli Ma, Robert H. McDonald, Asik Pradhan Gongaju, Mark Price, Michael Stamper, Yuyin Sun, Chintan Tank, Alan Walsh, Brian Wheeler, Feng Wu, Angela Zoss. Ponce School of Medicine: Richard J. Noel, Jr. (Ponce PI), Ricardo Espada Colon, Damaris Torres Cruz, Michael Vega Negrón. The Scripps Research Institute: Gerald Joyce (Scripps PI), Catherine Dunn, Sam Katkov, Brant Kelley, Paula King, Angela Murrell, Barbara Noble, Cary Thomas, Michaeleen Trimarchi. Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis: Rakesh Nagarajan (WUSTL PI), Kristi L. Holmes, Caerie Houchins, George Joseph, Sunita B. Koul, Leslie D. McIntosh. Weill Cornell Medical College: Curtis Cole (Weill PI), Paul Albert, Victor Brodsky, Mark Bronnimann, Adam Cheriff, Oscar Cruz, Dan Dickinson, Richard Hu, Chris Huang, Itay Klaz, Kenneth Lee, Peter Michelini, Grace Migliorisi, John Ruffing, Jason Specland, Tru Tran, Vinay Varughese, Virgil Wong. This project is funded by the National Institutes of Health, U24 RR029822, "VIVO: Enabling National Networking of Scientists". Join us for the VIVO Conference! Core project development is augmented with contributions and feedback by other developers across multiple institutions on SourceForge. More content will be added to SourceForge in the coming months to support implementation, adoption, VIVO: Open Data for Open Innovation Mike Conlon, PhD1, Michele R. Tennant, PhD, MLIS1, Kristi L. Holmes, PhD3, Kaitlin Blackburn, MLIS1‚ 1University of Florida, Gainesville, FL 2Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, MO VIVO Collaboration*
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VIVO: Open Data for Open Innovation

Feb 06, 2022

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Page 1: VIVO: Open Data for Open Innovation

• VIVO is an open source Semantic Web application that enables the discovery of research & scholarship.• VIVO is populated with detailed profiles of faculty and researchers.• VIVO provides a faceted search functionality for easily identifying people, activities, organizations, and other research-related information.• VIVO is funded by a $12.2 million consortium grant with UF and 6 partner institutions from the National Institutes of Health, U24 RR029822, “VIVO: Enabling National Networking of Scientists.”

Since the original award was made, a number of additional institutions and organizations have implemented and adopted VIVO locally.

What is VIVO?

consumers both within and outside the institution.

How can you use VIVO?

Create cross-disciplinary research teams:Anthony is writing a multi-disciplinary research proposal on molecular treatments for breast cancer. He would like to identify and contact potential collaborators and begin to exchange information regarding the research.Identify potential funding opportunities:Mary is the director of a large research center. She would like to visualize clusters of interests, techniques, and areas of specialty amongst the researchers that are part of her center. She would like to use this

Recruit graduate students:Tom is completing his BS in Biology. He wants to identify institutions with robust programs in his research area of interest — the genetic bases of neurodegenerative disorders.

Locate focused publication content:Samantha is a faculty member at an university. She is looking for papers published by other scholars at her institution on using advanced statistical methods to analyze research impact in the bioinformatics domain.Assemble specialized review panels:David is a federal agenc

co-authors with the researchers whose proposals are under review.

Plan budgets, services and resources:Library administration or directors of core facilities want to align their strategic plan with the evolvingresearch needs of their clientele. Identifying growth areas of research through increasing publications, focused areas of research, and grant dollars enables this task to become more evidence-based.

VIVO’s Connections Facilitate Information Discovery & Collaboration

VIVO visualizations illustrate who a researcher is already working

with on publications and grants. This enables searchers to discover relevant research information with

just a few clicks of a mouse!

Search

Click

Discover

VIVO’s linked data supports browsing and research discovery. Thus, a VIVO search of “gulf oil spill” (a research topic) will display diverse results such as organizations, individuals, grants, and more. One result, a consortium, links to a list of individual researchers, and their profiles contain visualizations of co-author and co-investigator networks, linking them to publication and funding collaborators. Through data linking, VIVO’s diverse information is cross-searchable and ensures that users find accurate information quickly.

Collaborate

VIVO is designed to connect and integrate information about grants, publications, and people in one location. VIVO displays data about researchers, their collaborators, their funding sources, and more.

Linked Open Data

By storing data in VIVO in RDF and using standard ontologies, the information in VIVO can either be displayed in a human-readable web page or delivered to other systems as RDF. This allows the open researcher data in VIVO to be harvested, aggregated, and integrated into the Linked Open Data cloud. SPARQL is an RDF query language which allows users to construct globally unambiguous queries, from across diverse data sources.

VIVO Open Source Community

http://www.facebook.com/VIVOcollaborationhttp://twitter.com/VIVOcollabhttp://vivo.sourceforge.net

*VIVO Collaboration: Cornell University: Dean Kra�t (Cornell PI), Manolo Bevia, Jim Blake, Nick Cappadona, Brian Caruso, Jon Corson-Rikert, Elly Cramer, Medha Devare, Elizabeth Hines, Huda Khan, Deepak Konidena, Brian Lowe, Joseph McEnerney, Holly Mistlebauer, Stella Mitchell, Anup Sawant, Christopher Westling, Tim Worrall, Rebecca Younes. University of Florida: Mike Conlon (VIVO and UF PI), Beth Auten, Michael Barbieri, Chris Barnes, Kaitlin Blackburn, Cecilia Botero, Kerry Britt, Erin Brooks, Amy Buhler, Ellie Bushhousen, Linda Butson, Chris Case, Christine Cogar, Valrie Davis, Mary Edwards, Nita Ferree, Rolando Garcia-Milian, George Hack, Chris Haines, Sara Henning, Rae Jesano, Margeaux Johnson, Meghan Latorre, Yang Li, Jennifer Lyon, James Pence, Hannah Norton, Narayan Raum, Nicholas Rejack, Alexander Rockwell, Sara Russell Gonzalez, Nancy Schaefer, Dale Scheppler, Nicholas Skaggs, Matthew Tedder, Michele R. Tennant, Alicia Turner, Stephen Williams. Indiana University: Katy Borner (IU PI), Kavitha Chandrasekar, Bin Chen, Shanshan Chen, Ryan Cobine, Jeni Co�ey, Suresh Deivasigamani, Ying Ding, Russell Duhon, Jon Dunn, Poornima Gopinath, Julie Hardesty, Brian Keese, Namrata Lele, Micah Linnemeier, Nianli Ma, Robert H. McDonald, Asik Pradhan Gongaju, Mark Price, Michael Stamper, Yuyin Sun, Chintan Tank, Alan Walsh, Brian Wheeler, Feng Wu, Angela Zoss. Ponce School of Medicine: Richard J. Noel, Jr. (Ponce PI), Ricardo Espada Colon, Damaris Torres Cruz, Michael Vega Negrón. The Scripps Research Institute: Gerald Joyce (Scripps PI), Catherine Dunn, Sam Katkov, Brant Kelley, Paula King, Angela Murrell, Barbara Noble, Cary Thomas, Michaeleen Trimarchi. Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis: Rakesh Nagarajan (WUSTL PI), Kristi L. Holmes, Caerie Houchins, George Joseph, Sunita B. Koul, Leslie D. McIntosh. Weill Cornell Medical College: Curtis Cole (Weill PI), Paul Albert, Victor Brodsky, Mark Bronnimann, Adam Cheri�, Oscar Cruz, Dan Dickinson, Richard Hu, Chris Huang, Itay Klaz, Kenneth Lee, Peter Michelini, Grace Migliorisi, John Ru�ng, Jason Specland, Tru Tran, Vinay Varughese, Virgil Wong.This project is funded by the National Institutes of Health, U24 RR029822, "VIVO: Enabling National Networking of Scientists".

Join us for the VIVO Conference!

Core project development is augmented with contributions and feedback by other developers across multiple institutions on SourceForge.

More content will be added to SourceForge in the coming months to support implementation, adoption,

VIVO: Open Data for Open Innovation

Mike Conlon, PhD1, Michele R. Tennant, PhD, MLIS1, Kristi L. Holmes, PhD3, Kaitlin Blackburn, MLIS1‚

1University of Florida, Gainesville, FL2Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, MO

VIVO Collaboration*