: The proposed work will establish national networking of scientists by providing a new software system (VIVO) and support for scientists using VIVO. Scientists using VIVO will be able to find other scientists and their work. Conversely, scientists using VIVO will be found by other scientists doing similar or complimentary work. VIVO leverages work done over the past five years by Cornell University, supporting researchers and finding of researchers by representing data about them and their activities including publications, awards, presentations and partners. VIVO is fully extensible and based on Sematic Web concepts insuring sound data representation, vastly improved search over existing text based methods and integration of data with other applications. Support for researchers using VIVO will be done by librarians of the research institutions. Librarians provide an existing and fully integrated resource for enabling researchers and the national network. The project will provide six deliverables: 1) A first release of the software to be used at the seven participating institutions focused on institutional resources. This release will be used to help establish internal support for the system and build understanding of system value;2) A second release incorporating all national networking features which will be used by the seven participating institutions to demonstrate the viability and utility of national deployment;3) A third release incorporating features requested by the NIH and the project's Executive Advisory Board, fully integrated with the corresponding resource discovery solution, enabling full national networking capability;4) a community support process to insure sustainability;5) a sustainable, open product development process;and 6) a national, on-going governance process. The national networking of scientists enabled by VIVO will provide a fundamental new capability to improve biomedical research and human health.

Public Health Relevance

(provided by the applicant) Establishing national networking of scientists will significantly improve all of biomedical research in the United States by providing opportunities across all disciplines to identify existing and on-going work, identify potential new collaborations and improve and extend existing collaborations. National networking gives scientists critical new information regarding current scientific activity to improve science, knowledge and human health.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Center for Research Resources (NCRR)
Type
Resource-Related Research Projects--Cooperative Agreements (U24)
Project #
5U24RR029822-02
Application #
7940935
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZRR1-CR-3 (01))
Program Officer
Collier, Elaine S
Project Start
2009-09-25
Project End
2012-08-31
Budget Start
2010-09-01
Budget End
2012-08-31
Support Year
2
Fiscal Year
2010
Total Cost
$6,170,131
Indirect Cost
Name
University of Florida
Department
Other Health Professions
Type
Schools of Medicine
DUNS #
969663814
City
Gainesville
State
FL
Country
United States
Zip Code
32611
Garcia-Milian, Rolando; Norton, Hannah F; Auten, Beth et al. (2013) Librarians as Part of Cross-Disciplinary, Multi-Institutional Team Projects: Experiences from the VIVO Collaboration. Sci Technol Libr (New York, NY) 32:160-175
Börner, Katy; Klavans, Richard; Patek, Michael et al. (2012) Design and update of a classification system: the UCSD map of science. PLoS One 7:e39464
Falk-Krzesinski, Holly J; Contractor, Noshir; Fiore, Stephen M et al. (2011) Mapping a research agenda for the science of team science. Res Eval 20:145-158
Ding, Ying (2011) Scientific collaboration and endorsement: Network analysis of coauthorship and citation networks. J Informetr 5:187-203
Börner, Katy; Contractor, Noshir; Falk-Krzesinski, Holly J et al. (2010) A multi-level systems perspective for the science of team science. Sci Transl Med 2:49cm24
Falk-Krzesinski, Holly J; Börner, Katy; Contractor, Noshir et al. (2010) Advancing the science of team science. Clin Transl Sci 3:263-6