E-Science : Open, Social and Virtual Technology for Research Collaboration.
Main Author: | |
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Other Authors: | , |
Format: | eBook |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Cham :
Springer International Publishing AG,
2021.
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Edition: | 1st ed. |
Series: | Progress in IS Series
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Subjects: | |
Online Access: | Click to View |
Table of Contents:
- cover
- Introduction
- Acknowledgements
- References
- Contents
- Understanding e-Science-What Is It About?
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Related Work
- 3 Research Approach
- 3.1 Research Field and Methodology
- 3.2 Research Framework
- 4 Results
- 5 Discussion of Initial Results
- 6 Conclusion
- References
- Organising Academia Online
- 1 Introduction
- 2 E-Learning Organisation: Media Integration as Organisational Development
- 2.1 Online Technologies in Higher Education
- 2.2 Virtualisation in Higher Education
- 3 Change of Organisational Theories and Paradigms
- 3.1 The Research Framework: Virtual (Educational) Organisations
- 3.2 Research Methods
- 4 Discussion and Conclusions
- 4.1 Theoretical Considerations About the Functioning of Virtual Organisations in the Academic Sector
- 4.2 Forms, Instruments and Mechanisms of Control in Virtual Organisations
- 4.3 Limitations
- References
- The Fish Model: When Do Researchers Collaborate Online?
- 1 Introduction
- 2 The Fish Model: A Conceptual Framework for E-Research Collaboration
- 2.1 The Reality of Managing Scientific Tasks in Terms of the Available Time
- 2.2 Online Research Activities Led by Work-Based Beliefs
- 2.3 Support for Technology Use in Context
- 2.4 Incentives Protected by Research Ethics
- 3 Method
- 4 Results
- 4.1 The Measurement Model
- 4.2 The Structured Model
- 5 Discussion: Conclusion and Limitations
- 5.1 Conclusions
- 5.2 Limitations
- Appendix
- References
- The Use of Digital Tools in Scholarly Activities. Empirical Findings on the State of Digitization of Science in Germany, Focusing on Saxony
- 1 E-Science, Cyberscience, Science 2.0: The Digitization of Science Is on the Move
- 2 The Empirical Question: Is Digitization Really on the Move?
- 3 Hypotheses, Data, and Methods
- 4 Results.
- 4.1 General Level of Adoption of Digital Tools in Scholarly Activities
- 4.2 Use of Web 2.0 Tools Among Scholars
- 4.3 Disciplinary Differences
- 4.4 Changing Scholarly Practices
- 5 Summary and Discussion
- References
- Digital Research Infrastructure
- 1 Introduction
- 2 IT Infrastructure
- 3 Information Infrastructure
- 3.1 Repositories and Publication Server
- 3.2 Data Formats
- 4 Legal Issues
- 4.1 Copyright Issues
- 4.2 Personal Data Protection
- 5 Conclusion
- References
- MOVING: A User-Centric Platform for Online Literacy Training and Learning
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Digitized Science
- 3 Overview of the MOVING Platform
- 4 The MOVING Web Application
- 4.1 Search
- 4.2 Recommender System
- 4.3 Communities
- 4.4 Learning Environment
- 4.5 Adaptive Training Support
- 5 Conclusion
- References
- CLARIN-D: An IT-Based Research Infrastructure for the Humanities and Social Sciences
- 1 Introduction
- 2 The Impact of Digitization in the Humanities-From Digital Humanities to E-Humanities
- 3 CLARIN-D-An Infrastructure for Text-Oriented Humanities
- 4 Metadata, Citation, and Search
- 5 Summary and Conclusion
- References
- Toward Process Variability Management in Online Examination Process in German Universities: A State of the Art
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Motivation
- 3 Research Method
- 3.1 Literature Search and Data Collection in Three Domains
- 3.2 Accreditation Processes in Germany
- 4 Literature and Results
- 4.1 Evaluation of IT Approaches
- 4.2 Evaluation of Study Courses
- 4.3 Evaluation of Accreditation
- 4.4 Summary of the Results
- 5 Conclusion and Further Work
- Appendix 1: Summary of IT Approaches to e-Assessment
- Appendix 2: List of German universities reviewed
- References
- Designing External Knowledge Communication in a Research Network The Case of Sustainable Land Management.
- 1 Background: Theory and Project
- 1.1 Sustainable Communication in the Sciences
- 1.2 Theoretical and Conceptual Considerations for the Design of Communication Processes
- 1.3 Knowledge Management in the Sustainable Land Management Program as a Challenge for External Communication
- 2 Approach and Methodology
- 2.1 Data Collection
- 2.2 Evaluation Method
- 3 Results
- 3.1 Practitioners and Civil Society as Target Groups of External Knowledge Communication
- 3.2 Effects and Interactions of Factors Influencing External Knowledge Communication
- 3.3 Selecting a Suitable Means of Communication
- 3.4 Selecting and Preparing the Communications Content
- 3.5 Addressing the Attitude of Stakeholders
- 4 Conclusions
- 4.1 Background and Communicative Tasks
- 4.2 Definition of Communication Objectives
- 4.3 Definition of Target Groups
- 4.4 Formulating Messages
- 4.5 Definition of Communication Strategies
- 4.6 Activity Planning and Scheduling ("Concerted Activity")
- 4.7 Limitations of the Study
- 4.8 Lessons Learned
- References
- Researching Scientific Structures via Joint Authorships-The Case of Virtual 3D Modelling in the Humanities
- 1 Introduction
- 1.1 Defining Disciplines
- 1.2 Defining Cross-Disciplinarity
- 2 The Case of Virtual 3D Modelling in the Humanities
- 2.1 Field of Research
- 2.2 Data Sample
- 2.3 Scientific Approach: Analysis of Scientific Authorship Relations
- 3 Findings
- 3.1 Indication 1: Cooperative Authorship
- 3.2 Indication 2: Lotka Coefficient
- 3.3 Indication 3: Key Players
- 4 Conclusion
- References
- Visions of a Future Research Workplace Arising from Recent Foresight Exercises
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Integration of Future Research Tools in Global Expert Systems
- 3 Results of the Delphi Survey on e-Science Tools and Factors
- 3.1 Delphi Survey Background and Scope.
- 3.2 The Future Use of Information Systems for e-Science-The Results of the Delphi Survey
- 4 Discussion and Conclusions
- References.