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In this episode of ATP, Saurabh Todi and Shambhavi Naik discuss the state of research and development funding in India, what ails it and what can be done to improve the situation. Do check out Takshashila's public policy courses: https://school.takshashila.org.in/courses We are @IVMPodcasts on Facebook, Twitter, & Instagram. https://twitter.com/IVMPodcasts https://www.instagram.com/ivmpodcasts/?hl=en https://www.facebook.com/ivmpodcasts/ You can check out our website at https://shows.ivmpodcasts.com/featured Follow the show across platforms: Spotify, Google Podcasts, Apple Podcasts, JioSaavn, Gaana, Amazon Music Do share the word with your fSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Dr. Lisa Mandle is a Lead Scientist and the Director of Science-Software Integration at Stanford University's Natural Capital (NatCap) Project. She is the lead author/editor of Green Growth That Works: Natural Capital Policy and Finance Mechanisms From Around The World. Dr. Mandle works with governments, multilateral development banks, and NGOs, especially in Latin America and Asia, to incorporate the environmental impact of land management and infrastructure projects on ecosystem services, social equity, and human health within development decisions. Prior to joining NatCap, She earned her Ph.D. in Botany from the University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa and a combined A.B./Sc.B. in Anthropology and Biology from Brown University. Topics discussed: Dr. Mandle's intellectual evolution from a Ph.D. in Botany to researching Natural Capital Policy and Financial Mechanisms. Overview of the Natural Capital Project at Stanford University. InVEST Software: Integrated Valuation of Ecosystem Services and Tradeoffs. 500+ National and Global Partnerships with Research Institutions, Governments, NGOs, and Private Sector. Natural Capital Symposium in Early June 2024. The International and Multidisciplinary Collaboration Process for Green Growth That Works: Natural Capital Policy and Finance Mechanisms From Around The World. Key Concepts: Natural Capital and Ecosystem Services. Natural Capital and Policy Mechanisms and Case Studies: Government Subsidy Mechanisms: Watershed Conservation for New York City. Regulatory Driven Mitigation: Stormwater Retention Credit Program in Washington D.C. Voluntary Conservation: Amazon Region Protected Areas Program. Market-Driven Transactions Ecosystem Certifications: Coffee Products and Eco-Tourism Impact Investing:
Syracuse University has developed into an outstanding and accomplished research institution. As Syracuse's Vice President for Research, Duncan Brown supports and empowers Syracuse's internationally recognized creative and scholarly excellence, advancing centers and institutes that are global leaders in their fields. In this role, Brown oversees $157 million in internal and external research funding across the natural sciences, engineering, education, social sciences and law fields. Brown also leads the Office of Research and its component units, which serve as the backbone of the University's research, scholarship and creative support enterprise. Collectively, these efforts help students and faculty expand their knowledge through innovation, creativity and discovery. On this 'Cuse Conversation, Brown shares his vision for the research enterprise at Syracuse University, explains what makes Syracuse a premier research institution, examines the impact the research being done by our faculty and students is having on campus and beyond, and reveals where his passion for research came from.
Access 2 Perspectives – Conversations. All about Open Science Communication
Amanda French ORCID: 0000-0002-4325-1809 Dr. Amanda French is the Technical Community Manager for the Research Organization Registry (ROR) at Crossref, where she works to promote the adoption of ROR to make information about research organizations cleaner and easier to exchange between systems. Dr. French is a well-known project director and community manager in digital humanities and scholarly communication. During the first year of the pandemic, she served as Community Lead at The COVID Tracking Project at The Atlantic, working with more than 800 volunteers to collect and publish key COVID-19 data. Earlier, she managed the "Resilient Networks for Inclusive Digital Humanities" project at GWU Libraries, directed the Digital Research Services unit at Virginia Tech Libraries, and led the THATCamp unconference initiative at GMU's Roy Rosenzweig Center for History and New Media. She was also part of the initial cohort of CLIR postdoctoral fellows. About the webinar series This webinar was co-organized by UbuntuNet Alliance and Access 2 Perspectives as part of the ORCID Global Participation Program. ORCID is the persistent identifier for researchers to share their accomplishments (research articles, data, etc with funding agencies, publishers, data repositories, and other research workflows. AfricArXiv is a community-led digital archive for African research communication. By enhancing the visibility of African research, we enable discoverability and collaboration opportunities for African scientists on the continent as well as globally. Find more podcast episodes here: https://access2perspectives.pubpub.org/podcast Host: Dr Jo Havemann, ORCID iD 0000-0002-6157-1494 Editing: Ebuka Ezeike Music: Alex Lustig, produced by Kitty Kat License: Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0) At Access 2 Perspectives, we guide you in your complete research workflow toward state-of-the-art research practices and in full compliance with funding and publishing requirements. Leverage your research projects to higher efficiency and increased collaboration opportunities while fostering your explorative spirit and joy. Website: https://access2perspectives.pubpub.org --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/access2perspectives/message
In this episode, Michael Hinckle and Rebecca Schaefer provide an overview of FDA's recently issued draft guidance on decentralized clinical trials. They review the goals of the guidance to promote diversity in clinical trials, as well as notable planning considerations and regulatory requirements for both the industry sponsors and the academic medical centers, research institutions and other providers participating in clinical studies.
Welcome to Risky Business, a limited series in partnership with Trenchcoat Advisors, a risk advisory firm. In an unpredictable, complex, and chaotic world, the business risks are ever-present. To help navigate the challenges ahead, this series delves into the intersection of business and national security — from influence operations and sabotage to hostage diplomacy and investment security, we're bringing exclusive conversations with leading experts to better understand and anticipate risk!In episode 5 of Risky Business, The Burn Bag's A'ndre Gonawela and Trenchcoat's Bill Priest chat with the co-founders of private intelligence firm Strider Technologies, Greg and Eric Levesque, on open source intelligence and the private sector intelligence community. Greg and Eric talk about what information their company gathers on behalf of clients, how they define 'open source intelligence', and how they analyze their data. We get their view on what the private sector intelligence community is and what it can be, as companies and other organizations continue to desire information that has traditionally been collected and assessed by governments. Greg and Eric discuss how Strider fills some of these needs, how their work is both similar and dissimilar from what the government's intelligence community does, and what national security issues their clients are most concerned about. They also discuss their partnerships with some government entities, and how they view future trends.
Audio from the 2022 Charleston Library Conference from the Plenary Session titled: “Values and Issues that Unite Us: The imperative for publishers, libraries and research institutions to join forces” presented by Dr. Caroline Sutton, CEO, The International Association for Scientific, Medical and Technical Publishers (STM). Video of the presentation available at: https://youtu.be/yV7Cb3Ln9V8 Social Media: https://www.linkedin.com/in/caroline-sutton-90a0941/ Twitter: @CarolineSutton Keywords: #libraries, #librarians, #publishing, #publisher, #scholarlypublishing, #scholarly, #openaccess, #OpenResearch, #OpenScience, #research #academiclibraries, #healthscience, #2022ChsConf, #LibrariesAndPublishers #libraryissues, #libraryneeds,#librarychallenges, #libraryconference #podcast
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(Part 2 of 2) Kate LaBore is the Technology and Media Professional in the Center for Innovation in Teaching and Learning at University of Illinois Urbana Champaign. In this Digication Scholars Conversation, Kate and Digication CEO Jeff Yan discuss the challenges of implementing ePortfolio at scale in a large research institution, and the importance of integrating ePortfolio with the campus Learning Management System. While acknowledging the difficulty of promoting awareness of ePortfolio and other high impact practices among instructors, Kate, emphasizes the excitement of finding instructors that “get” ePortfolio, and stresses the potential for these instructors to lead their colleagues to a deeper level of understanding of the pedagogy. The conversation concludes with an in-depth discussion on the importance of creating accessible content and resources for students. “It's empathy. It's being able to see the world through the eyes of someone who has a different way of being in the world than you do.”
Kate LaBore is the Technology and Media Professional in the Center for Innovation in Teaching and Learning at University of Illinois Urbana Champaign. In this Digication Scholars Conversation, Kate and Digication CEO Jeff Yan discuss the challenges of implementing ePortfolio at scale in a large research institution, and the importance of integrating ePortfolio with the campus Learning Management System. While acknowledging the difficulty of promoting awareness of ePortfolio and other high impact practices among instructors, Kate, emphasizes the excitement of finding instructors that “get” ePortfolio, and stresses the potential for these instructors to lead their colleagues to a deeper level of understanding of the pedagogy. The conversation concludes with an in-depth discussion on the importance of creating accessible content and resources for students. “It's empathy. It's being able to see the world through the eyes of someone who has a different way of being in the world than you do.”
In this episode, we talk about Timnit Gebru's new research institute, researcher's contentious relationship with Facebook, and a company that has been secretly helping governments track people's mobile phones. Then we chat with Dennis Ushakov, Fleet Developer at JetBrains, about Fleet, the company's new IDE. Finally, we speak with Julian McAuley, computer science professor at the University of California San Diego, about an internal TikTok document the New York Times obtained titled, TikTok Algo 101. Show Notes Starport (DevNews) (sponsor) DevDiscuss (sponsor) CodeNewbie (sponsor) Microsoft 30 Days to Learn It (DevNews) (sponsor) Cyberpunk 2077, Timnit Gebru's Firing, GitHub's ‘State of the Octoverse,' and Google's New Chip Distributed AI Research Institute (DAIR) Investigating Facebook: a fractious relationship with academia Swiss Firm Executive Operates Secret Surveillance Operation, Sources Say Fleet How TikTok Reads Your Mind
Today we are joined by Brian Darmody, CEO at AURP, a non-profit international organization that represents the leadership of more than 700 research, science and tech parks and innovation districts. In this episode we learn about the history of research parks and the founding of AURP, the expansion of research institutions beyond the university space, and other industry and regional trends in research parks. Leading the conversation is Scott Marty, Ph.D., a partner in the firm's Atlanta office.
By taking a deep dive into our planet's history, we might be able to find solutions to its current problems, such as the destruction of natural habitats and ecosystems. The Paleontological Research Institution looks at old fossils to try to find new answers. Find out how your donation can fund crucial research that can give us insight into the long-term effects of conservation. Want to support the Paleontological Research Institution? https://www.priweb.org/ Find the episode on Great.com: https://great.com/great-talks-with/why-paleontology-might-hold-the-key-toimproving-conservation-and-restoration
Christine Savage continues the conversation with Dr. Brenda Jarrell on international collaborations and discuss concerns related to recent federal initiatives that could further limit the ability of companies and research institutions in the U.S. working internationally.
Christine Savage and Dr. Brenda Jarrell discuss the benefits and risks of international collaborations in COVID-19 science, including observations about the level of collaboration, data sharing, and considerations U.S. companies or research institutions should immediately address.
Universities, hospitals, and research institutions face unique challenges when managing immigration issues for international students and exchange visitors. The current immigration environment has produced unprecedented delays, denials, and restrictive policies, which have adversely affected student enrollment. When it seems as if there are no options available, there is still one to consider: litigation. Mandamus to expedite Employment Authorization Document (EAD) adjudications H-1B litigation Ramifications of unlawful presence litigation Litigation challenging OPT/CPT denials Types of cases with high success rates Timelines Issues of publicity and retaliation Fixed feed and alternative legal fee arrangements Recent success stories To view this webinar recording, please click here. Speakers on this bonus episode are: H. Ronald Klasko- rklasko@klaskolaw.com Daniel B. Lundy- dlundy@klaskolaw.com For the latest business and employment based immigration updates, follow Klasko Immigration on Facebook, LinkedIn, and Twitter. Sign up for our newsletter here.
This week on the podcast, we invite Michael Preston, Executive Director of the Florida Consortium of Metropolitan Research Institutions into the studio to discuss workforce and education initiatives, and what's happening around the state of Florida. The Aligned for Talent Podcast is presented by CareerSource Suncoast and focuses on initiatives related to the workforce in our community and state.
What does a flagship research institution mean? Joining the episode this week is Beth Potier, manager of research communications and outreach at UNH, who explains the impact UNH research has on the country as well as ways students get involved.
The recent government shutdown had a significant impact on our nation's research institutions. Jennifer Poulakidas of the Association of Public and Land-Grant Universities joins Megan Schneider to discuss the broader implications of the shutdown on research and higher education.
We, 192 delegates from 21 African countries attended the 2018 Regional Policy Dialogue convened through a collaborative partnership between the Food, Agriculture and Policy Analysis Network (FANRPAN), the Graca Machel Trust (GMT), the Mandela Institute for Development Studies (MINDS), and the Centre for Coordination of Agriculture Research and Development for Southern Africa (CCARDESA). The delegates represented the following stakeholder groupings attending the 2018 regional Policy Dialogue: 24 (13%) Government representatives; 6 (3%) Intergovernmental Organizations; 66 (34%) Civil Society; 29 (15%) Research Institutions; 10 (5%) Private Sector; 11 (6%); Farmer Organisations; 5 (3%) Donors; and 34 (18%) not disclosed. With regard to specialised groups 40 (21%) Youth and 77 (40%) Women attended the 2018 Regional Policy Dialogue. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/connectingminds/support
We, 192 delegates from 21 African countries attended the 2018 Regional Policy Dialogue convened through a collaborative partnership between the Food, Agriculture and Policy Analysis Network (FANRPAN), the Graca Machel Trust (GMT), the Mandela Institute for Development Studies (MINDS), and the Centre for Coordination of Agriculture Research and Development for Southern Africa (CCARDESA). The delegates represented the following stakeholder groupings attending the 2018 regional Policy Dialogue: 24 (13%) Government representatives; 6 (3%) Intergovernmental Organizations; 66 (34%) Civil Society; 29 (15%) Research Institutions; 10 (5%) Private Sector; 11 (6%); Farmer Organisations; 5 (3%) Donors; and 34 (18%) not disclosed. With regard to specialised groups 40 (21%) Youth and 77 (40%) Women attended the 2018 Regional Policy Dialogue. Become a supporter of this podcast: https://anchor.fm/connectingminds/support
Karen Trivette and Geof Huth, hosts of An Archivist's Tale, recount their time at the meeting of the International Council of Archives' Section on University Archives and Research Institutions held in Salamanca, Spain, in October 2018, including the issue of translation in multi-lingual conferences, the death of Geof's former colleague Art Sniffin just before the conference, and the value of the papers they heard and of the friends they made in Salamanca.
Karen Trivette and Geof Huth, hosts of An Archivist's Tale, recount their time at the meeting of the International Council of Archives' Section on University Archives and Research Institutions held in Salamanca, Spain, in October 2018, including the issue of translation in multi-lingual conferences, the death of Geof's former colleague Art Sniffin just before the conference, and the value of the papers they heard and of the friends they made in Salamanca.
I was thrilled to welcome to the podcast Margo Day, Microsoft's Vice President of US Education since 2012 and no stranger to the channel. Margo leads Microsoft's largest business focused on this segment and was Microsoft's US Channel Chief for 5 years from 2001 to 2006. In this episode, Margo shares with our listeners the US Education business, Microsoft’s focus on outcomes, how she thinks about partners in her business and her career journey. Margo's enthusiasm and passion for education and empowerment are contagious and come through in this interview. Her business role and her life work are both closely aligned with Microsoft's mission to empower every person and every organization on the planet to achieve more. Toward the very end of our interview, Margo shares her personal story of the incredible and selfless work she does in collaboration with World Vision to make a difference in the lives of girls in Kenya. That work has been game-changing and has created new opportunities for thousands of girls whose only other path was Female Genital Mutilation and early marriage. Here's a link to Margo's personal blog about this work*. In addition, in this interview you will learn: Skills and competencies critical to success in preparing for the jobs of tomorrow - excellent communications skills, creativity, critical thinking, collaboration and traits such as character and citizenship. What Microsoft is doing to help students use the tools of tomorrow in the learning of today. How Minecraft with Code Builder is being used in Education to develop computer coding skills and understand big data. Hacking Stem and how it is making learning experiential - data, coding, engineering students can see and visualize data examples in lessons plans to help democratize STEM and STEAM (Science, Technology, Engineering, Arts, Math). How Microsoft tools in the classroom like One Note, Microsoft Learning tools, and Translator are helping students acquire skills to compete. How institutions are thinking about cost and optimizing operations by shifting their data centers to the cloud and how cloud tools can improve operations and create new scenarios by leveraging predictive analytics. Managing the campus - how ISV applications can greatly improve business operations leveraging IP that's been developed for other customers outside of Education. Security and developing an Identity Based Security Model What's she is seeing in the transformation that she didn't expect to see a year ago. The work in research and how Research Institutions are using big data to do breathtaking work. Where should Microsoft partners invest in 2018? What characteristics make a great partner? Top challenges organizations in technology face today? How Margo got started in technology. How to reach Margo Day - margoday@microsoft.com *If you or someone you know is interested in making a donation, please visit www.kenyagirls.seeyourimpact.org. You can listen to the podcast here or on iTunes, SoundCloud, Stitcher, Google Play, Player FM, other Android podcast players. As with each of my interview and articles, I appreciate your feedback. You can reach me on Linked In or on email at vincem@cloudwavepartners.net. You can also review this podcast by going to iTunes and searching “Ultimate Guide to Partnering” and clicking on the album art and hitting the rating link. This helps others find the podcast. I hope you enjoy this episode! Vince Menzione
In this FAST CAST, we interview Michelle Duttle, Contract Administrator in the Office of Grants and Contracts at New Mexico State University. We talk with Mickey about items small businesses need to know when working with a Research Institution on their SBIR or STTR proposals, understanding the timelines that Research Institutes have for getting documentation to small businesses for their submissions, and other aspects a small business might not be aware of when they look for subcontracting partners.
Dr. Stephen Lanier, the vice president for research at Wayne State University in Detroit, Michigan, talks to Rick Skinner about the importance of making research institutions cross-disciplinary instead of siloed. Dr. Lanier talks about how universities like Wayne State can serve the urban areas they inhabit. Innovators is a podcast production of Harris Search Associates. *The views and opinions shared by guests or hosts on the podcast do not necessarily reflect the views of the organizations they represent.*
This week, the fellas cover some big updates on previous stories, while touching on some new ones. Space Corps makes a return, as does the NASA Reauthorization from earlier this year. Expedition 52 has arrived at the ISS, and SpaceX has become the most valuable privately held space company. NASA and Newton celebrate their birthdays, too! Tune in next week for an update on Ad Astra’s Great American Eclipse Livestream, the final vote tally for the Favorite Planet contest, and the return of Listener Submitted Queries. Latest from Washington What is this guy even talking about? Ban for Funding Space Corps Banned from Debate What’s the future of the ISS? Space News Highlight of the Week Happy 59th birthday, NASA! International News Veteran 3-Man Crew Launches to International Space Station Latest in Tech NASA Awards $14.3 Million to Small Businesses, Research Institutions to Develop Innovative Technologies SpaceX is now valued at $21.2 Billion Jeff Bezos briefly Overtakes Bill Gates To Become World's Richest Man and then isn’t Follow Ad Astra on Twitter at @AdAstra_Podcast, on Facebook, and subscribe to the mailing list for future updates and events!
Angelina Kouroubali talks about FORTH’s Computer Science and Health research centre outcomes, ‘From Research to Αffective Ιmpact on Ηealth’ sharing 30 years of experience on eHealth, big data and creating actual products for the Greek market. Professor Karantanas takes us on a quick journey over their advanced medical imaging research and the possible opportunities in the market. He continues, deepening on the causes of public health care dysfunctionality, analyzing the disconnection between applied science and policy makers; wrong investments decisions; availability of funds and steps that need to be taken to turn the tide, in Greece. Interviewed by TTC’s George Voulgaris.
Expectations of a Large Research Institution Ralf Schimmer is Director of Information Provision at the Max Planck Digital Library in Munich.where he is responsible for the system-wide electronic resources licensing program, for the development of the library access and information systems (e.g. OPACs, federated searching, reference linking).
Expectations of a Large Research Institution Ralf Schimmer is Director of Information Provision at the Max Planck Digital Library in Munich.where he is responsible for the system-wide electronic resources licensing program, for the development of the library access and information systems (e.g. OPACs, federated searching, reference linking).