Reference management software
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In questa intervista esclusiva, Giampaolo Salice, professore di storia moderna e coordinatore della Ludica Scuola estiva di storia digitale e pubblica, ci racconta come nasce e si sviluppa questo progetto innovativo: un laboratorio immersivo dove si costruiscono insieme biografie digitali, si esplorano archivi pubblici e privati, si creano piattaforme online con strumenti open source e si vive il territorio dialogando con le comunità locali. Ludica è molto più di una scuola estiva: è un'esperienza laboratoriale, un progetto formativo e di ricerca partecipata che trasforma il modo di fare storia. Lo racconta con entusiasmo Giampaolo Salice, professore associato di storia moderna all'Università di Cagliari e coordinatore della scuola. Dalla Bottega Digitale al campo sul territorio Il progetto si articola in due momenti principali: la Bottega Digitale e il campo estivo sul territorio. La prima è un laboratorio tecnico e concettuale in cui studenti e studiosi imparano a costruire bibliografie automatizzate, schede di classificazione per oggetti storici e archivi digitali. «L'obiettivo – spiega Salice – è fornire strumenti pratici per descrivere e collegare tra loro fotografie storiche, interviste, documenti, tutto ciò che può essere meta-datato e reso accessibile sul web in modo competente». Le tecnologie usate sono Zotero per la costruzione delle bibliografie e Omeka S per realizzare portali tematici. Ogni edizione di Ludica genera così un sito web completo, con centinaia di oggetti digitali organizzati e consultabili. Una volta terminata la fase digitale, i partecipanti si spostano sul campo, esplorando il territorio e interagendo direttamente con archivi comunali, ecclesiastici e privati. A Cagliari, tema e luogo dell'edizione 2025, l'attenzione è rivolta alle confraternite laicali, realtà storiche secolari che hanno lasciato un segno profondo nella storia cittadina. La forza di Ludica sta anche nella sua dimensione collaborativa e inclusiva: si lavora in gruppo, si coinvolgono archivisti, amministratori locali, associazioni, ma anche semplici cittadini, custodi di memorie e patrimoni immateriali. Ogni giornata si conclude con un seminario pubblico, occasione per confronti e dibattiti. La storia si scrive insieme Gli studenti non solo partecipano ma diventano autori di storie digitali. Ogni esperienza viene raccolta in un portale chiamato Storie digitali Unica e successivamente pubblicata in un quaderno diari-di-bordo a cura di UnicaPress, la casa editrice dell'ateneo. Giampaolo Salice è ottimista: «Ludica è un modello che sta suscitando interesse anche altrove. Continueremo in Sardegna per ora, ma potremmo presto portare il nostro approccio in altre città italiane o addirittura all'estero».
This show has been flagged as Explicit by the host. Research Tools Harvard Referencing - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parenthetical_referencing#Author%E2%80%93date_(Harvard_referencing) Google Notebook LM - https://notebooklm.google/ Google Scholar - https://scholar.google.co.uk/ Connected Papers - https://www.connectedpapers.com/ Zotero - https://www.zotero.org/ Databases SQL Databases - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Relational_database NoSQL Databases - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NoSQL Graph Databases - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Graph_database Misc Borland Graphics Interface - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Borland_Graphics_Interface Hough Transform - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hough_transform Joplin - https://joplinapp.org/ Provide feedback on this episode.
Kamila Albin i Wojciech Figiel prezentują możliwości Zotero, darmowego menedżera bibliografii, oraz jego współpracę z czytnikami ekranu NVDA i VoiceOver. Program umożliwia sprawny import metadanych…
Broad, W. J., & Wade, N. (1983). Betrayers of the truth. New York : Simon and Schuster. http://archive.org/details/betrayersoftruth00broa Wolfgang Stroebe, Tom Postmes, & Russell Spears. (2012). Scientific Misconduct and the Myth of Self-Correction in Science. Perspectives on Psychological Science, 7(6), 670–688. https://doi.org/10.1177/1745691612460687 Zotero can track if you are citing retractions: https://retractionwatch.com/2019/06/12/want-to-check-for-retractions-in-your-personal-library-and-get-alerts-for-free-now-you-can/ 100% CI blog: The Untold Mystery of Rogue RA https://www.the100.ci/2024/12/18/rogue-ra/ Merton, R. K. (1957). Priorities in Scientific Discovery: A Chapter in the Sociology of Science. American Sociological Review, 22(6), 635–659. https://doi.org/10.2307/2089193 Senior RIKEN scientist involved in stem cell scandal commits suicide https://www.science.org/content/article/senior-riken-scientist-involved-stem-cell-scandal-commits-suicide Kis, A., Tur, E. M., Lakens, D., Vaesen, K., & Houkes, W. (2022). Leaving academia: PhD attrition and unhealthy research environments. PLOS ONE, 17(10), e0274976. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0274976
Hoy te hablo de cómo han cambiado las herramientas para seguir la literatura en investigación. Pero no solo seguirla, sino también procesarla. Y antes de entrar en detalle, te cuento una historia de viejos (porque a veces toca).En 2001, cuando quería leer un artículo científico, tenía que ir a la hemeroteca, buscar el journal en papel, localizar el volumen correcto, sacar varios tomos en un carrito y fotocopiarlos. Ahora, con un móvil, lo tenemos todo en segundos. Pero esa evolución no solo ha sido cuestión de acceso: ha cambiado la forma en que decidimos qué leer y cómo procesamos lo que leemos.De 2004 a 2023, Google Scholar, Web of Science y Scopus dominaron la búsqueda de artículos. La gran revolución llegó con la inteligencia artificial generativa, y aquí entra en escena SciSpace.¿Qué hace esta herramienta? Tres cosas clave:Búsqueda semántica, mucho más potente que los buscadores clásicos. No se limita a palabras clave exactas, sino que entiende el significado detrás de la consulta.Resúmenes automáticos de cada paper, destacando lo esencial en segundos.Interacción con los papers, permitiéndote hacer preguntas sobre ellos y recibir respuestas en lenguaje natural.El impacto de esto no es solo práctico, sino también filosófico. ¿Estamos investigando mejor o solo produciendo más ruido? Antes profundizábamos en unos pocos artículos; ahora acumulamos cientos en Zotero sin leerlos. ¿Nos ayuda este mar de información o nos ahoga?Reflexiono sobre estas preguntas en el episodio. Y si quieres discutirlo conmigo y con otros investigadores, puedes unirte a nuestra comunidad en WhatsApp:https://chat.whatsapp.com/BIfSH9QFEiK9hiS83fw2am Que tengas un buen día, y recuerda: si estas herramientas te ahorran tiempo, úsalo bien. Sal a dar un paseo.
Every other week I'm republishing one of my most popular or impactful episodes and adding an update, new insight, or context that will help you benefit from it even more. This week I'm highlighting Episode 184, where I take you through my eight favorite online tools for nursing school that help set you up for success. NEWLY ADDED! Organize your school and study schedules with My Study Life. Get Google Drive with a free Google account: Google Drive. Say goodbye to password frustrations with LastPass. Take your notes for nursing school into digital format with GoodNotes and Notability. Improve your writing with Grammarly. Start your online search for research articles with Google Scholar and PubMed. Manage your bibliography and make writing scholarly papers easier with Zotero. Demystify APA formatting and scholarly writing with Purdue Owl APA. Reclaim your focus and embark on powerful work sessions with the Focus Keeper App for iOS or Pomodoro Timer for Android. ———— Full Transcript – Read the article FREE CLASS – If all you've heard are nursing school horror stories, then you need this class! Join me in this on-demand session where I dispel all those nursing school myths and show you that YES…you can thrive in nursing school without it taking over your life! Crucial Concepts Bootcamp – Start nursing school ahead of the game, or reset after a difficult first semester with my nursing school prep course, Crucial Concepts Bootcamp. Learn key foundation concepts, organization and time management, dosage calculations, and so much more. New Nursing Student Checklist – Grab this checklist which includes clinical and school supplies, things to organize, what to review, and more to help you prepare for nursing school.
"Das Klima”, der Podcast zur Wissenschaft hinter der Krise. Wir lasen den [sechsten Bericht](https://www.ipcc.ch) des Weltklimarats und erklären den aktuellen Stand der Klimaforschung. In Folge 127 geht es für uns back to the roots. Wir beschäftigen uns wieder mit dem Sachstandsbericht des IPCC. Wir lesen das Ding aber nicht nochmal, keine Sorge. Aber wir besprechen, was man beim kommenden Sachstandsbericht besser machen könnte, damit es alle Beteiligten ein wenig leichter haben UND der Bericht am Ende auch besser wird. Dazu gibt es einen Erfahrungsbericht beteiligter Forschenden und den stellt Claudia diesmal vor. Wer den Podcast unterstützen will, kann das gerne tun: https://steadyhq.com/de/dasklima/ und https://www.paypal.me/florianfreistetter.
Diesmal sprechen wir im c't uplink über verschiedene Tool-Kategorien, die dabei helfen, Wissen und Ideen zu ordnen. Stefan Wischner beschreibt das Wissensmanagement-Tool Obsidian. Sabrina Patsch hat eine Reihe von Programmen zur Literaturverwaltung getestet und Dorothee Wiegand befasst sich mit dem Thema Mindmapping – einer Technik, mit der sich Gedanken, Assoziationen und Wissen visualisieren und strukturieren lassen. Unseren gesamten Schwerpunkt zum Thema Wissens-, Literatur- und Ideenmanagement lesen Sie in [c't 19/2024](https://www.heise.de/select/ct/2024/19).
Google introduces Gemini Live, a voice chat feature powered by generative AI, offering enhanced speech capabilities and natural conversations. Meanwhile, Flux, an open-source AI image generation model developed by Black Forest Labs, gains popularity for its superior performance in rendering people. The rapid advancements in AI technology are highlighted, showcasing the iterative progress and the potential for models like Flux to quickly surpass competitors like Midjourney.The episode also delves into a significant antitrust case against Google, where the tech giant faces potential breakup over its search monopoly. The ruling, seen as a historic win for the American people, could reshape monopolization law and have broader implications for the Internet and business practices in the U.S. The discussion emphasizes the impact of exclusive contracts on market dynamics and sets the stage for a remedy phase to address Google's anti-competitive practices.Furthermore, the episode explores how partners in the tech channel are favoring fewer vendor relationships, empowering them to seek vendors that can help achieve business outcomes rather than just product sales. Advancements in AI, such as Zotero's Copilot 2, are enhancing operational efficiency for providers. The evolving landscape of AI technology, including challenges and opportunities in enterprise workflows, cybersecurity, and identity and access management, is discussed, highlighting the need for organizations to remain vigilant as the technology evolves.Lastly, the episode touches on four megatrends that MSPs should track to stay relevant in the industry. These megatrends include climate issues, workforce changes, IT risks, and supply chain disruptions, with a focus on enhancing resiliency and addressing global disruptions. The discussion underscores the importance of focusing on business outcomes with AI technology and the need for businesses to adapt to the changing technological landscape to thrive in the industry. Three things to know today00:00 Gemini Live Debuts on Google One with Advanced Voice Chat, While Flux Challenges Midjourney02:39 Google Loses Landmark Antitrust Case, Faces Potential Breakup Over Search Monopoly04:17 Fewer Vendor Relationships Empower Partners as AI Matures Beyond the Hype Supported by: https://movebot.io/mspradio/ All our Sponsors: https://businessof.tech/sponsors/ Do you want the show on your podcast app or the written versions of the stories? Subscribe to the Business of Tech: https://www.businessof.tech/subscribe/Looking for a link from the stories? The entire script of the show, with links to articles, are posted in each story on https://www.businessof.tech/ Support the show on Patreon: https://patreon.com/mspradio/ Want our stuff? Cool Merch? Wear “Why Do We Care?” - Visit https://mspradio.myspreadshop.com Follow us on:LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/28908079/YouTube: https://youtube.com/mspradio/Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/mspradionews/Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/mspradio/TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@businessoftechBluesky: https://bsky.app/profile/businessoftech.bsky.social
En esta bitácora comparto con vosotros la nueva forma que tengo de investigar y organizar la información. Espero que os pueda ser útil como me está siendo a mí. Sendero a la Nada: https://www.ivoox.com/podcast-sendero-a-nada_sq_f1660417_1.html Links sobre el podcast: El método Zettelkasten: https://www.amazon.es/m%C3%A9todo-Zettelkasten-aprendizaje-estudiantes-acad%C3%A9micos/dp/B08KHQDKBK Zotero: https://www.zotero.org/ Tutorial sobre Zotero: https://youtu.be/pNUCJP4Nuaw Buscadores (ejemplos): https://dialnet.unirioja.es/ https://archive.org/ https://scholar.google.es/ https://senderoalanada.com/
Welcome back to the 'Research Mini-Series'. Things we've discussed in this episode to help you on your journey: Setting up 'Google Scholar Alerts' Using platforms such as: EndNote, Zotero, Mendeley etc. to keep all of your articles in one place - this can assist you with finding out a methodology to use and you may find that there are the same groups of people doing particular studies around your topic. Much more... Please check out this textbook Introducing, Designing and Conducting Research for Paramedics to help break down these topics more. Link to the Hexoskin study. DISCLAIMER: All of the opinions of each individual on 'The Student Paramedic Podcast' are their own.
Are you tired of feeling overwhelmed and frustrated when searching for relevant studies on PubMed for your medical writing projects? As a medical writer, you know that conducting a comprehensive literature review is crucial for delivering high-quality work to your clients and audiences. However, the process can be time-consuming and challenging, especially if you don't have a clear strategy. This episode of Monday Mentor will provide you with the tools and techniques you need to streamline your literature review process and find the most relevant, high-quality studies to inform your work. Listen in to gain: Best practices for efficiently searching databases like PubMed Steps to find the most relevant and high-quality sources. Tools and resources to stay organized and produce a rigorous literature review Tune in now to discover how you can elevate your literature review skills and deliver stronger, more valuable work to your clients and audiences! Takeaways 1. Defining your research question or objectives is crucial for guiding your search strategy and ensuring a focused, efficient literature review process. Before diving into your literature search, take the time to clearly articulate your research question or objectives using frameworks like PICO, SPIDER, or PEO. 2. Using a combination of keyword searches, subject heading/index term searches (like MeSH terms), and database filters can help you capture a wide range of potentially relevant sources while narrowing down your results. Familiarize yourself with the search functionalities and controlled vocabularies of databases like PubMed, and experiment with different combinations of keywords, subject headings, and filters to optimize your search results. 3. Leveraging citation management tools, note-taking techniques, and reporting guidelines can help you stay organized, maintain transparency, and produce a rigorous literature review. Explore and implement tools like EndNote, Zotero, or Mendeley for citation management, and develop a structured note-taking system (e.g., literature matrices or apps like Notion or Roam Research) to synthesize and report your findings effectively. Resources NYU Libraries Literature Search Template Literature Review Typologies Timestamps 00:00 Introduction 01:47 Defining the research question 03:43 Establishing search terms 06:17 Exploring various databases 10:30 Grey literature sources 13:32 Additional search techniques 15:07 Tools and resources that can help you 20:28 The power of literature reviews Subscribe to the Write Medicine podcast! Subscribe to the Write Medicine podcast for more valuable insights on continuing medical education content for health professionals. Click the Follow button and subscribe on your favorite platform.
In dieser Folge geht es um die Frage, wie man Software in wissenschaftlichen Artikeln zitieren kann. Die Antwort: das Citation File Format (CFF) - an dem mein Gast Stephan Druskat maßgeblich mitgewirkt hat. Stephan und ich hatten uns auf der letzten UK RSE Konferenz in Swansea in einer der Pausen zu einem Schwätzchen getroffen.Inzwischen wird das CFF von etlichen Organisationen wie z.B. GitHub, Zenodo und Zotero unterstützt und das eScience Center in den Niederlanden unterstützt das Projekt tatkräftig.Hier ein paar Linkshttps://citation-file-format.github.io Homepage vom Citation File Formathttps://docs.github.com/en/repositories/managing-your-repositorys-settings-and-features/customizing-your-repository/about-citation-files GitHub CFF Support und Hilfe Webseitehttps://www.esciencecenter.nl/news/code-citation-was-made-possible-by-research-software-engineers-in-germany-and-the-netherlands/ eScience Center in den Niederlanden und CFFhttps://codemeta.github.io Code Metahttps://json-schema.org JSON Schema https://project.software-metadata.pub Hermes Projekt (Helmholtz)Support the Show.Thank you for listening and your ongoing support. It means the world to us! Support the show on Patreon https://www.patreon.com/codeforthought Get in touch: Email mailto:code4thought@proton.me UK RSE Slack (ukrse.slack.com): @code4thought or @piddie US RSE Slack (usrse.slack.com): @Peter Schmidt Mastadon: https://fosstodon.org/@code4thought or @code4thought@fosstodon.org LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/pweschmidt/ (personal Profile)LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/codeforthought/ (Code for Thought Profile) This podcast is licensed under the Creative Commons Licence: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/
In this episode, we talk with Lizzy (she/her), a Ph.D. candidate in the University of Washington's Archaeology Program. Listen in as we talk about getting organized, thinking about audience, and confronting the blank page. Find out more about the material and support mentioned in this episode: Zotero – Zotero is a citation manager. Find links to Zotero and other similar apps in the UW Libraries' research guide on digital history tools under “Productivity” Dian Million – Associate Professor of American Indian Studies Sapiens – a digital magazine that poses anthropological perspectives for non-specialist readers Nature – a longstanding and well-respected peer reviewed journal publishing on topics related to the natural sciences and technology Science – a longstanding and well-respected peer reviewed journal publishing on topics related to leading scientific discoveries An audio transcript for this episode available here.
Welcome to the Signpost Inn Podcast! We're glad you're here for today's conversation with David Zahl about the book he co-authored, Law and Gospel: A Theology for Sinners (and Saints). We start with the question, "what does this phrase, 'law and gospel' mean? David then explains why this tool was so energizing for him and his team at Mockingbird. We find that the law and gospel filter clarifies our experience of this broken world and shapes our expectations for how God interacts with us. So grab a drink and a seat and learn with us how God uses both the law and the gospel for our good! Links: David Zahl's website: Mockingbird The book: Law and Gospel: A Theology for Sinners (and Saints) Signpost Inn Spring Retreat: Register today! Our weekly newsletter: Grace-filled encouragement for your journey Updates from the back porch - Zotero (file storage) - Shogun (TV series)
Cristina Guzmán es doctoranda con su tesis 'Its dangerous to go alone! Play this!'. Su trabajo analiza desde la musicología la banda sonora de The Legend of Zelda. Esta charla nos ayudará a comprender cómo se estudia la música de videojuegos desde la universidad. - Enlace a la web de la Society for the Study of Sound and Music in Games: https://sssmg.org/wp/ Enlace a su bibliografía en Zotero: https://zotero.org/groups/4707990/sssmg_bibliography/collections/UI6K5DX2 Ludomusicology Research Group: https://ludomusicology.org Grupo de Trabajo en Ludomusicología: https://ludomusico.hypotheses.org En Twitter/X en @Ludomusicología
This is a recap of the top 10 posts on Hacker News on December 25th, 2023.This podcast was generated by wondercraft.ai(00:45): Ruby 3.3Original post: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=38760477&utm_source=wondercraft_ai(02:21): Breakdown of faults by car brand: Tesla has replaced Dacia at the bottomOriginal post: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=38760933&utm_source=wondercraft_ai(04:06): Stirling-PDF: local web application to perform various operations on PDFsOriginal post: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=38765627&utm_source=wondercraft_ai(05:57): Zotero for Android available for beta testsOriginal post: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=38760864&utm_source=wondercraft_ai(07:40): Fed court rules for retired engineer told by state to not talk about mathOriginal post: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=38767936&utm_source=wondercraft_ai(09:15): Non-interactive SSH password authenticationOriginal post: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=38762214&utm_source=wondercraft_ai(10:46): A recent software update was not successful. Your vehicle cannot be drivenOriginal post: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=38766178&utm_source=wondercraft_ai(12:34): I told the flight attendant "the WiFi isn't working"Original post: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=38762065&utm_source=wondercraft_ai(13:53): Challenging projects every programmer should try (2019)Original post: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=38768678&utm_source=wondercraft_ai(15:52): Nintendo Network shutdown – The beginning of the endOriginal post: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=38766570&utm_source=wondercraft_aiThis is a third-party project, independent from HN and YC. Text and audio generated using AI, by wondercraft.ai. Create your own studio quality podcast with text as the only input in seconds at app.wondercraft.ai. Issues or feedback? We'd love to hear from you: team@wondercraft.ai
Welcome to this Teach Me Something Tuesday episode of the Healthcare Education Transformation Podcast! Dr. F. Scott Feil is here to wrap up our exciting series on plagiarism. Today, it's all about the magic of citations and how to dodge the plagiarism pitfall. Learn the secrets of correct formatting, choosing the right style, and using nifty tools like Zotero and EndNote. Plus, discover how Grammarly can be your trusty sidekick in this writing adventure. Don't miss out on these invaluable tips to become a top-notch writer and scholar!Key Takeaways:Use Citations Wisely: A references page is like a treasure map for your sources! Know Your Style: Different journals have different rules. Always follow them to stay on track!Cite, Cite, Cite: When in doubt, always give credit to the source of your information. Double-Check with Tools: Tools like Grammarly can help you spot plagiarism and improve your writing. Avoid Self-Plagiarism: Did you know you can plagiarize yourself? Always give credit, even to your past self! Special thanks to both our sponsors, The NPTE Final Frontier, and Varela Financial! If you are taking the NPTE or are teaching those about to take the NPTE, visit the NPTE FInal Frontier at www.NPTEFF.com and use code "HET" for 10% off all purchases at the website...and BREAKING NEWS!!!! They now have an OCS review option as well... You're welcome! You can also reach out to them on Instagram @npteff If you're a PT and you have student loan debt, you gotta talk to these guys. What makes them unique is that they view financial planning as like running hurdles on a track. And for PTs, the first hurdle many of us run into is student loan debt. Varela Financial will help you get over that hurdle. They not only take the time to explain to you which plans you individually qualify for and how those plans work, but they ALSO take the time to show you what YOUR individual case looks like mapped out within each option. So if you're looking for help on your student loan debt, or any area of your personal finances, we highly recommend working with them. You can check out Varela Financial out at varelafinancial.com. Feel free to reach out to us at: http://healthcareeducationtransformationpodcast.com/ https://www.facebook.com/HETPodcast https://twitter.com/HETpodcast Instagram: @hetpodcast @dawnbrown_pt @pteducator @dawnmagnusson31 @farleyschweighart @mail.in.stew.art @ujima_institute For more information on how we can optimize and standardize healthcare education and delivery, subscribe to the Healthcare Education Transformation Podcast on Apple Podcasts or wherever you listen to podcasts.
Pendant mon doctorat, j'ai découvert et utilisé Mendeley pour gérer mes références. Dans cet épisode du PhD Dojo, un trésor de la voûte Papa PhD, Sarah Perrier et moi parlons de Zotero, de comment elle l'utilise, et nous allons partager avec toi des conseils et un « tip » qui t'aidera à optimiser l'utilisation de ce type de logiciel (pas juste Zotero) dans la gestion des références pour ta thèse. Bonne écoute ! Et bons partages ;) Les ressources de cet épisode : David Mendes | LinkedIn David Mendes | Instagram Sarah Perrier | LinkedIn Sarah Perrier | Instagram Plog de Thèse | Podcast Envoie-nous tes commentaires ! Si cet épisode t'a plu, fais-nous en part en cliquant sur les liens ci-dessous et en nous laissant un message : Clique ici pour remercier Sarah Perrier sur Twitter ! Clique ici pour partager avec David le principal message que tu retiens de cet épisode ! Contribue à la production de Papa PhD sur Patreon ! Ou ravitaille David en café :) Tu aimeras aussi ces épisodes : Comment se légitimer au doctorat en SHS - Arthur Lin : PapaPhD.com/223 Quels chemins mènent au doctorat : PapaPhD.com/132 Spécial Halloween - : PapaPhD.com/136 La vulgarisation grand public - Martin Carli : PapaPhD.com/martin-carli
In this episode we talk about what's happening to us - as we find digital tooling becoming more important in our stationery world. We talk about the Remarkable 2, Moleskine balance and how we are still stationery freaks! And Rob is retooling his knowledge management and Helen learned nothing about herself, despite sticker journaling for a few weeks.We cover: Woolsthorpe manor, where Isaac Newton saw the apple fall - and the fact you can buy pens made from the very tree that Newton saw the apple fall from Rob's bought a Remarkable - will he send it back? Rob's doing a workshop in Romania - and has bought hundreds of stickers for an immersive workshop Helen's been using the Moleskine Balance app to track habits, mood etc. The interface is calming and clean - she is enjoying Helen is using Bullet Journaling more for work than personal - due to working from home more often and "closing down the day" Rob's been researching tooling for a Personal Knowledge Management System - and was spending more time fiddling with the system than learning. Helen is using Obsidian, Rob uninstalled it after 10 minutes. Rob talks about The Brain as a PKMS. It's an awesome tool - but pricey, and would require a big on-going financial investment. Helen has been sticker journaling about her mood and energy levels, and tracking this using stickers. What did she learn about herself? Absolutely nothing by all accounts. Zero insights. Nothing. Nada Rob talks about using Zotero and the Remarkable as his new PKMS Rob talks through why he's bought the Remarkable 2, and how it fits into his ecosystem of learning and note taking. At the moment, he's keeping it, but there is a 100 day returns promise Helen's not convinced about the Remarkable. Truth be told, Rob isn't either. Find more episodes and subscribe to the newsletter at www.stationeryfreaks.com
On this weeks NEWSPASTE Podcast we take a stunning look at the Medical Anthropology of HIV and the bioweapon birth of diseases which was originally only in chimpanzees. Nick Petosky is an extremely well versed expert on the origins of HIV, this episode will blow your mind. Find Nick's videos on Rumble and Odysee and some of his sources and research on his Zotero or contact him on Twitter @PizzaPicklePur Support NEWSPASTE at https://newspaste.com/home/support-ne... Find the NEWSPASTE Podcast on all good podcast platforms: https://newspaste.podbean.com/
In this episode, we talk to Andrew (he/him), a Ph.D. Candidate in the University of Washington's Department of History and Associate Director of the Harry Bridges Center for Labor Studies, about navigating a changing writing process, writing across a range of genres, and the richness of editorial feedback. Listen in to hear more! Find out more about the material and support mentioned in this episode: Zotero – Zotero is a citation manager. Find links to Zotero and other similar apps in the UW Libraries' research guide on digital history tools under “Productivity." National Center for Faculty Development & Diversity (NCFDD) – Access the NCFDD's vast range of resources and support for free through the University of Washington's institutional membership. Additional access to programs and support, such as the Write Now program, are available on a pay-to-register basis. “Revisiting ‘Streetwise'” – Andrew Hedden (Real Change, 2021) "Even blue-chip companies fail. Here's how to save their workers, and towns, when they do.” — Andrew Hedden (The Washington Post, 2019). “Streetwise/Tiny: The Life of Erin Blackwell: Qualities of Life” – Andrew Hedden (The Criterion Collection, 2021) Audio transcripts available here.
Theresa returns to talk about going back to school, research tools and workflows, general productivity, and Obsidian. Subscribe to the Blog… RSS | Email Newsletter Subscribe to the Podcast in… Apple Podcasts | Overcast | Castro | Spotify | RSS Support Music Ed Tech Talk Become a Patron! Buy me a coffee Thanks to my sponsors this month, Scale Exercise Play-Along Tracks. Show Notes: Theresa's website Dr. Evan Tobias Active Shoulder Rests Zotero Two resources on using Zotero with Obsidian https://talk.macpowerusers.com/t/thrilled-with-obsidian-readwise-zotero-workflow/24997 https://pypi.org/project/zotero2readwise/ Readwise Readwise Reader Raindrop.io Mentioned Obsidian Plugins Readwise Advanced Tables Excel to Markdown Table Word Count Calendar Convert URL to iframe Google Calendar Minimal Theme Guitar Tabs Text as Markdown HookMark Click Up Never Miss a Task, with OmniFocus Project Templates – Robbyburns.com OmniFocus 4 ProWritingAid Mike's Music Frank Buck ClickUp Microsoft Loop Building a Second (Music Teacher) Brain, with Dr. Cory Meals podcast episode Craft Notion Pokemon Sleep Additional Places to Find Theresa: Pass the Baton Book Empowering Ensembles with Technology Book Summer Courses Theresa is teching Active Shoulder Rest App of the Week: Robby - MarkEdit Theresa - Forest Album of the Week: Robby - Nickel Creek: Celebrants Theresa Hoover - GoGo Penguin Tech Tip of the Week: Robby - Drag the proxy icon on Mac Theresa Hoover - Data vailidation in Google Sheets Where to Find Us: Robby - Twitter | Blog | Book Theresa Hoover - Website Please don't forget to rate the show and share it with others!
There is administration time related to getting your PhD. The Sunday Basket® and the Business Friday Workbox® teaches you there are invisible tasks you do at home and work. Once these tasks are made visible, you can eliminate as many as possible. Mid-semester, I realized I need PhD administrative time. Listen in as I review what types of administrative tasks I have while working on my PhD. Planning my work Organizing my email Signing up for teacher office hours Cleaning up Zotero files Next week, I will share with you how I took a pause and reoriented myself. EPISODE RESOURCES: Follow my journey on Instagram - Check out the PhD Highlight Button The Sunday Basket® The Friday Workbox® Zotero Did you enjoy this episode? Please leave a rating and review in your favorite podcast app. Share this episode with a friend and be sure to tag Organize 365® when you share on social media!
In Episode 131, Kevin Patton discusses the use of ChatGPT and other chatbots and artificial intelligence (AI) in teaching and learning. We learn what's going on, what to be concerned about, and what to look forward to. And how to keep breathing. 0:00:00 | Introduction 0:00:53 | What's a Chatbot and Why Should I Care? 0:08:44 | Sponsored by AAA 0:09:51 | Kevin Asks ChatGPT Some Questions 0:21:25 | Sponsored by HAPI 0:22:01 | Is ChatGPT Amazing? Is It Accurate? 0:37:23 | Sponsored by HAPS 0:38:11 | Arms Race or Tool Box? 0:46:55 | Calculators, Typewriters, and Grammarly 0:58:36 | Cool Tools and Alternative Assessments 1:06:20 | Worry? 1:13:47 | Staying Connected ★ If you cannot see or activate the audio player, go to: theAPprofessor.org/podcast-episode-131html
We'll be talking about beta readers. After you've finished writing your latest pieces, you might want to consider sharing them with others to get vital feedback from a sample audience. And our tool tip of the week is Zotero. Stay tuned to hear about how painless constructing a research bibliography can actually be. For real. We promise it's not that bad! Picks of the Week: A Monster Calls by Patrick Ness Dopamine Nation by Dr. Anna Lembke Mentioned in the Episode: Zotero Mendeley Papers
Les références : Bibliothèques de l'INSA Rennes Bibliothèques Nantes Université Appel à participation pour les Journées Des Libertés Numériques Clap de fin - Festival des Libertés Numériques Interview de Chloé Lailic, bibliothécaire et DPO - Resnumerica Zotero Libre à vous ! sur la science ouverte Ziklibrenbib - La musique libre s'invite dans les médiathèques Actux Nothing2HideVous pouvez commenter les émissions, nous faire des retours pour nous améliorer, ou encore des suggestions. Et même mettre une note sur 5 étoiles si vous le souhaitez. Il est important pour nous d'avoir vos retours car, contrairement par exemple à une conférence, nous n'avons pas un public en face de nous qui peut réagir. Pour cela, rendez-vous sur la page dédiée.Pour connaître les nouvelles concernant l'émission (annonce des podcasts, des émissions à venir, ainsi que des bonus et des annonces en avant-première) inscrivez-vous à la lettre d'actus.
In this episode, host Kate Carpenter interviews historian Dr. Abby Mullen, assistant professor of history at the United States Naval Acadmey. In her former role at the Roy Rosenzweig Center for History and New Media, Abby not only worked on software designed for historians, but she also created and hosted a narrative history podcast, Consolation Prize, which looked at U.S. diplomacy through the lens of the country's consuls. Kate and Abby talk about what it takes to write for a listening audience, the joys of using Tropy to manage primary source research, and much more.
Episode three in the Robin S. Jeffers Learning Taxonomy Series brings us Webb's Depths of Knowledge. The DOK taxonomy provides us some useful insights to complement Bloom's. We might be in too deep (ha!), but we're enjoying pulling these apart. After that, we open up Zotero as another research / resource management tool. Zotero compares to Mendeley pretty well, but offers up its unique features. For more on our conversation, check out the episode page here. For all of our episodes and resources for each app we discuss, head over to our website at hitechpod.us. --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/hitechpod/message
In this episode we talk with Jessica Calarco about advocating for oneself. Jessica is an Associate Professor of Sociology at Indiana University. Her research program focuses on systems of inequality, how policies and institutions cater to those with power and privilege while disadvantaging others. Professor Calarco has two books, "Negotiating Opportunities" and "A Field Guide to Grad School: Uncovering the Hidden Curriculum", which is very related to the topics of this podcast! Sebastian Tello-Trillo is an Assistant Professor of Public Policy and Economics at the Frank Batten School of Leadership and Public Policy in the University of Virginia. Alex Hollingsworth is an Assistant Professor of Economics at the O'Neill School of Public and Environmental Affairs in Indiana University. Show notes: You can find the book and all other books that we have recommended in our Hidden Curriculum library One of the recommendations of the week is Zotero bib. ZoteroBib is a free service that helps you build a bibliography instantly from any computer or device, without creating an account or installing any software. Find more here: https://zbib.org/faq You can also check out Alex's guide on how to manage reference for research here: https://hollina.github.io/managing-references.html Another recommendation is the Facebook group "Buy Nothing". This is a Facebook group, that aims to have people give out free items to members of their own local community. It's a great way of recycle or ask for favors! --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/hidden-curriculum/message
Dr. Benjamin Gladd shares his methods and favorite tools for facilitating research and eventual publication of his writing. Dr. Gladd is Professor of New Testament at Reformed Theological Seminary in Jackson, Mississippi. He is the author of Handbook on the Gospels (Grand Rapids: Baker, 2021) and From Adam and Israel to the Church: A Biblical Theology of the People of God (Downers Grove: IVP Academic, 2019). Along with G. K. Beale, he is the co-author of The Story Retold: A Biblical-Theological Introduction to the New Testament (Downers Grove: IVP Academic, 2020). Dr. Gladd is also series editor for IVP's Essential Studies in Biblical Theology and Baker's Handbook on the New Testament. Links Richard Hays, Reading Backwards (https://www.amazon.com/Reading-Backwards-Figural-Christology-Fourfold/dp/1481302337/ref=sr_1_1?keywords=hays+reading+backwards&qid=1658333854&sprefix=hays+reading+%2Caps%2C78&sr=8-1) Sönke Ahrens, How to Take Smart Notes (https://www.amazon.com/How-Take-Smart-Notes-Technique-ebook/dp/B09V5M8FR5/ref=sr_1_2?crid=O5OXLXWD9TY7&keywords=sonke+ahrens&qid=1658333869&sprefix=sonke+ahrens%2Caps%2C77&sr=8-2) Drafts (https://apps.apple.com/us/app/drafts/id1236254471) Notability (https://apps.apple.com/us/app/notability/id360593530) Liquid Text (https://apps.apple.com/us/app/liquidtext/id922765270) Zotero (https://www.zotero.org/) Papers SimpleMind (https://apps.apple.com/us/app/simplemind-mind-mapping/id305727658) Neil Postman, Amusing Ourselves to Death (https://www.amazon.com/Amusing-Ourselves-Death-Discourse-Business-ebook/dp/B0023ZLLH6/ref=sr_1_1?keywords=amusing+ourselves+to+death&qid=1658333997&s=books&sprefix=amusing+our%2Cstripbooks%2C80&sr=1-1) Accordance (https://accordancebible.com/) Logos (https://www.logos.com/)
Interview with the creator of C++, Bjarne Stroustrup. We discuss his work on the language and its features, as well as his experiences programming in general. We also touch briefly on his experiences with Zotero, a powerful research tool.
Dana Wanzer on saving time with Zotero on episode 420 of the Teaching in Higher Ed podcast. Quotes from the episode Most of us do not need to be doing more at this time. -Dana Wanzer It doesn't have to be something that just helps you, it can also help others. -Dana Wanzer Resources Zotero Zotero Connector Proxy server RStudio ZotFile UC Irvine Anteaters Apparently, Bonni was wrong in the episode and anteaters do indeed make the ZOT sound when attacking their prey scite Zotero plugin Mobile apps Robert Talbert Robert Talbert on Teaching in Higher Ed episodes Learn Zotero course
In this episode, we hear from Megan and Mikhail, graduate students in Clinical Informatics and Patient-Centered Technologies and Archeology, respectively. In their discussion, we hear about utilizing multiple forms of communication, negotiating audiences, and the ongoing process of refining your approach. Listen in to learn more! Find out more about the material mentioned in this episode: The Pomodoro Technique – This time management strategy is summarized by Amrita Mandal in “The Pomodoro Technique: An Effective Time Management Tool.” Zotero – Zotero is a citation manager. Find links to Zotero and other similar apps in the UW Libraries' research guide on digital history tools under “Productivity." StatQuest with Josh Starmer – Find engaging digital content about statistics and mathematics from Josh Starmer on his YouTube page. Atul Gawande – Learn more about Gawande's work in writing, medicine, and public health on his website here. “To Save The Science Poster, Researchers Want To Kill It And Start Over” -- Nell Greenfieldboyce (NPR, 2019). “Why Doctors Hate Their Computers”– Atul Gawande (The New Yorker, 2018) Bitch Doctrine: Essays for Dissenting Adults – Laurie Penny (Bloomsbury, 2017)
Travis Statham is an original World Carnivore Tribe moderator and an independent researcher turned masters student who just moved to Logan, Utah with his wife and two cats to study and conduct nutrition research. His dream would be to test the carnivore diet in a clinical trial setting, and test independent variables like grass-fed:grain-fed, organs:no organs, fat:protein ratios, as well as Carnivore:Almost carnivore as well as testing the efficacy of various subtypes on different chronic diseases that still have no etiology. He worked with Dr Shawn Baker to provide feedback to the researchers that conducted the Harvard Carnivore Survey Study, which received results from 2029 adults living the carnivorous way of eating for an average of 14 months! Travis used his experience on Reddit, Facebook, and Twitter, to help him collect links to science across a swath of disciplines related to the broad topic of human facultative carnivory into a public Zotero library called KetoscienceDatabase - over 10,000 articles relating to paleoanthropology, evolution, primatology, etc. When a NYPost reporter joined WCT as the carnivore diet was picking up steam, Travis was able to schedule an interview with her and get a free Fogo de Chao meal, and the next day he and his wife appeared on Good Morning America! He also attended the 4-day special event that was CarnivoryCon 2019 and Low Carb Denver 2019, and even went to Low Carb Denver 2020 just before flights closed in the beginning of the pandemic. After working with Michael Goldstein on justmeat.co, he decided to use a Wix website to stuff as much content as he could about the carnivore diet into one place. Nowadays, in Utah, Travis is helping Stephan van Vliet PhD with research in which they try to figure out the interplay between different agricultural systems as 500+ different metabolites can be recorded using advanced metabolomics machines by collecting and preparing samples such as soil, grass, animal feed and then seeing how they get transferred into various meat products such as grass-fed ribeyes, conventional grain-fed liver, wild caught deer. If you have a farm and want to contribute to this product - get in touch with Travis. The next step is looking into how eating these foods affect humans over the short and long term. You can find him on: twitter.com/meatritioncom or twitter.com/Travis_Statham instagram.com/meatrition reddit.com/user/meatrition reddit.com/r/Keto4 Timestamps: 00:00 Introduction 07:08 Historical use of meat to treat diseases 13:23 Russians and the Inuit 18:48 Life expectancy among the Inuit; ketosis among the Inuit 22:29 All-meat diet in history 24:13 Ethnography database 26:25 Facultative carnivore 30:00 Gut microbiome 33:40 Travis' carnivore experience 43:37 Reintroducing foods after the carnivore diet 47:55 Running clinical trials on carnivore diet 50:12 Why historical experiments with carnivore diet didn't last 53:40 Meatrition.com Join the Community: https://carnivore.diet/join/ Book a Carnivore Coach: https://carnivore.diet/book-a-coach/ Carnivore Shirts: https://merch.carnivore.diet Subscribe to our Newsletter: https://carnivore.diet/subscribe/ . #revero #shawnbaker #Carnivorediet #MeatHeals #HealthCreation #humanfood #AnimalBased #ZeroCarb #DietCoach #FatAdapted #Carnivore #sugarfree
Shownotes First, thanks to the great Bianca Kramer we now have a transcript! You can find it here: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1zhpOk-yw8G-xLRCXDNad1zwUaxAe2Wgev77bwPUl5Y8/edit#heading=h.xvuiepf8k4aj From the newsynews: - HELIOS (Higher Education Leadership initiative on Open Scholarship): https://www.heliosopen.org/news/22/3/22 - Discussion series "Publishing in transition". In this edition, researchers will discuss the challenges of a transition to fully open access https://www.uu.nl/en/news/how-do-you-prepare-your-academic-journal-for-an-open-science-future - Session ‘Wetenschappers in de publieke arena' announcement - https://intranet.uu.nl/agenda/wetenschappers-in-de-publieke-arena-collegialiteit - Royal Academy of Science, council of social sciences: ‘Wetenschap met de ramen wijd open' publication, 10 lessons: https://www.knaw.nl/publicaties/wetenschap-met-de-ramen-wijd-open - Open Science festival is coming, although the deadline for workshop proposals has closed, you can still register at https://opensciencefestival.nl/ - NRC Opinion piece by Juliette Schaafsma en Martijn van der Meer (Tilburg): https://www.nrc.nl/nieuws/2022/05/08/verdienmodel-van-grote-uitgevers-bedreigt-onbetaalbare-academische-vrijheid-a4123727 From the interview: - Robin and Eiko's blog: https://eiko-fried.com/welcome-to-hotel-elsevier-you-can-check-out-any-time-you-like-not/utm_source=clipboard&utm_medium=text&utm_campaign=social_sharing - Elsevier rebuttal in nrc (via Tweet): https://twitter.com/vandermeer_rm/status/1526636197233233920?s=20&t=oCxmjjz802BqIpCCWvretA - Article on research infrastructure by Bjorn Brembs et al. https://zenodo.org/record/5526635 - Zotero: https://www.zotero.org/ - How long would it take to buy Elsevier (blog) https://svpow.com/2018/08/15/__trashed/
Danaja Fabčič Povše je doktorska raziskovalka na Vrije Universiteit Brussel v Belgiji, ukvarja se z etičnimi vidiki novih tehnologij v biomedicinski znanosti. S Slovenijo jo povezujejo tudi tehnologije, ki pomagajo bolnikom z Alzheimerjevo boleznijo. Kakšno je digitalno življenje z demenco, zakaj se tako redko pogovarjamo o tehnologijah za starejše, kako jih približati in kako jim kljub varnostnim pomislekom dvigniti priljubljenost? Evropska unija nima veliko možnosti, ko sprejema zakonodajo, so se pa izzivi e-zdravja spremenili zaradi pandemije. Obstoječa zakonodaja je postopke in delo ovirala, čeprav si e-zdravstvo predstavljamo kot elektronsko, čezmejno in dostopno. "Izjeme vseeno obstajajo in Evropa je lahko vzgled," pravi sogovornica. Zapiski: Tehnologije za življenje z demenco Spominčica Fitbit Official Site for Activity Trackers and More Izzivi e-zdravja Odbita do bita - Tjaša Zajc - RTVSLO.si Priporočilo Zotero | Your personal research assistant
Únete a la charla y comparte tus preguntas y experiencias con los locos del podcast. En esta edición del podcast de www.infotecarios.com charlaremos con Fabián Martínez Ortiz desarrollador del proyecto Calimaco Digital Fabián es Bibliotecólogo de la Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México con 4 años de experiencia en el sector de bibliotecas, archivos y docencia. Desarrolló un proyecto en el área educativa universitaria fomentando la integridad científica, cuenta con conocimientos sobre la gestión de información, repositorios institucionales (Dspace), formatos MARC; Dublin Core; FRBR, software de gestión bibliográfica (Mendeley, Zotero), acceso abierto, mapas de ciencia con VOSViewer, gestión de redes sociales y creación de páginas web. Transmitimos los sábados. Referencias a documentos del episodio Darat, Nicole, & Tello, Andrés Maximiliano. (2016). Desobediencia intelectual: resistencias a la privatización del conocimiento. Polis (Santiago), 15(43), 313-329. https://dx.doi.org/10.4067/S0718-65682016000100015 10:00 Tijuana (MX), San Diego (US) 11:00 San José (CR) 12:00 Ciudad de México (MX), Bogotá (CL), Lima (PE) 13:00 Nueva York (US), San Juan (PR), La Habana (CU) ,Caracas (VE), La Paz (BO), Santiago (CH), 14:00 Buenos Aires (AR), Montevideo (UR), Asunción (PA), Sao Paola (BR) 19:00 Madrid (ES)
Enlaces comentados: https://www.readcube.com/home https://www.mendeley.com/ https://www.zotero.org/ https://anchor.fm/horacio-ps/episodes/Estar-al-da-de-todo-lo-que-se-publica-y-researcher-app-e14gid1 https://anchor.fm/horacio-ps/episodes/60--Repositorios-de-preprints-y-Arxiv-Sanity-e1d1kqf https://anchor.fm/horacio-ps/episodes/Encuentra-nuevas-relaciones-entre-tus-ideas--PKM--Zettelkasten-y-Obsidian-e1cnpfd Para continuar la discusión sobre el episodio, puedes hacerlo dentro de nuestra comunidad en discord: https://tinyurl.com/S3E15discord O contactarme directamente a través de: https://tinyurl.com/S3E15hps o mi email horacio@horacio-ps.com Y por último, si quieres apoyar a este podcast y además acceder a contenidos adicionales premium, puedes hacerlo suscribiéndote por 9,99€/mes a la versión premium del podcast a través de: https://tinyurl.com/S3E15prem PD: Sonido Jazz Guitar: https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/ PD2: Para los oyentes del podcast, si quieres probar la herramienta de nuestra patrocinaodres auphonic.com para mejorar tu sonido de manera fácil, puedes tener 25 horas gratis de procesado si accedes a través de https://www.auphonic.com/offer/horacio --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/horacio-ps/message
Guest Jin Guo | Jinghui Cheng Panelists Richard Littauer | Eriol Fox | Memo Esparza Show Notes Hello and welcome to Sustain Open Source Design! The podcast where we talk about sustaining open source with design. Learn how we, as designers, interface with open source in a sustainable way, how we integrate into different communities, and how we as coders, work with other designers. Today, we have two amazing guests, Jin Guo and Jinghui Cheng from Montréal. Jin is an Assistant Professor at McGill University in the School of Computer Science, and she received her Ph.D. from the University of Notre Dame. She is particularly interested in the intersection between Software Engineering, Human-Computer Interaction, and Artificial Intelligence. Jinghui is an Assistant Professor at Polytechnique Montréal, where he directs the Human Centered Design Lab. His research combines the field of Human-Computer Interaction with Software Engineering. Today, we hear about Jin's grant she received from the Sloan Foundation, which is supporting the open source usability for scientific software. Jin and Jinghui go in depth about things scientific researchers use, some common problems around usability, the different research methods they are using in their studies, and how they incorporate the community aspect to their research. Also, they share advice on how to get involved with research happening on open source. Go ahead and download this episode now to learn more! [00:03:45] Jin explains more about the grant they were given from the Sloan Foundation. [00:05:49] Find out what kinds of open source code scientific researchers use and some common problems around usability. [00:09:04] Jin and Jinghui tell us about the different research methods they are doing. [00:12:41] Richard wonders what Jin and Jinghui are particularly interested in learning from their study that will help their future research and what are they trying to learn on an academic sense. [00:17:47] Eriol wonders if Jin and Jinghui had similar challenges when researching open source projects. [00:22:15] Jin and Jinghui share their thoughts on incorporating the community aspect to their research. [00:25:32] Richard wonders if Jin and Jinghui can share any ideas to designers, communities which have design focus, or open source in general, on how they can get involved with research happening on open source, besides reading papers, doing a PhD, or going to their workshops. [00:28:11] Eriol asks how Jinghui views end users as a kind of designer and what that might mean for how he's doing his work, and if these workshops are a way of doing that. [00:30:25] Jin expands more on her interest in AI and how that's going to work, and how she's going to get AI to play with designers and open source communities. [00:34:10] Find out where you can follow Jin and Jinghui on the internet. Quotes [00:05:16] “We're hoping to use this grant to help advance scientific software usability, but also use the end result from our projects to benefit open source usability as a whole.” [00:15:40] “For open source usability, I think the tooling is one aspect, but the ultimate goal for our improvement on the tooling is the mindset improvement.” [00:18:38] “As a researcher, ideally we would need to make more frequent and iterative collaborations with open source projects by either interviewing them or having scientific project ideas. Balancing with them and to see what is the relevance of our research with their real concerns.” [00:19:22] “One of the things we are currently planning on is to conduct some of the workshops that are going to invite the end users and the designers to be in the same place, to work together to observe their dynamics of communicating.” [00:23:47] “What we hope is to learn the boundary of communication between those more stereotyped communities, but to make them feel welcomed to communicate with each other regardless of their title or role.” [00:27:46] “Design conferences, they need to welcome more people rather than just really fashi fashionable flashy designers doing, well I don't know, stuff for evil clients.” (Eriol) Spotlight [00:35:36] Memo's spotlight is Jamstack. [00:35:57] Eriol's spotlights are FOSS Backstage and one of their favorite academia papers called, “Non-response, Social Exclusion, and False Acceptance: Gatekeeping Tactics and Usability Work in Free-Libre Open Source Software Development,” by Mikko Rajanen, Netta Iivari, and Arto Lanamäki [00:37:17] Richard's spotlight is JS Montreal. [00:37:41] Jinghui's spotlights are projects that influenced him and his research which are Atom, Jupyter notebook, and PyTorch. [00:38:44] Jin's spotlights are two projects that influenced her previous work and current work which are scikit-learn and Zotero. Links Open Source Design Twitter (https://twitter.com/opensrcdesign) Open Source Design (https://opensourcedesign.net/) Sustain Design & UX working group (https://discourse.sustainoss.org/t/design-ux-working-group/348) Sustain Open Source Twitter (https://twitter.com/sustainoss?lang=en) Richard Littauer Twitter (https://twitter.com/richlitt?ref_src=twsrc%5Egoogle%7Ctwcamp%5Eserp%7Ctwgr%5Eauthor) Eriol Fox Twitter (https://twitter.com/EriolDoesDesign?ref_src=twsrc%5Egoogle%7Ctwcamp%5Eserp%7Ctwgr%5Eauthor) Memo Esparza Twitter (https://twitter.com/memo_es_) Jin L.C. Guo Twitter (https://twitter.com/jin_lc_guo?lang=en) Jin L.C. Guo Website (http://jguo-web.com/) Jinghui Cheng Twitter (https://twitter.com/jinghuicheng?lang=en) Jinghui Cheng Website (https://jhcheng.me/) Jinghui Cheng Linkedin (https://www.linkedin.com/in/jinghuicheng/) Alfred P. Sloan Foundation (https://sloan.org/) Argumentation theory (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Argumentation_theory) Jamstack (https://jamstack.org/) FOSS Backstage 2022 (https://foss-backstage.de/) “Non-response, Social Exclusion, and False Acceptance: Gatekeeping Tactics and Usability Work in Free-Libre Open Source Software Development,” by Mikko Rajanen, Netta Iivari, and Arto Lanamäki (https://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007%2F978-3-319-22698-9_2) JS-Montreal (https://js-montreal.org/) Scikit-learn (https://scikit-learn.org/stable/) Zotero (https://www.zotero.org/) Atom (https://atom.io/) Jupyter (https://jupyter.org/) PyTorch (https://pytorch.org/) Credits Produced by Richard Littauer (https://www.burntfen.com/) Edited by Paul M. Bahr at Peachtree Sound (https://www.peachtreesound.com/) Show notes by DeAnn Bahr Peachtree Sound (https://www.peachtreesound.com/) Special Guests: Jinghui Cheng and Jin L.C. Guo.
Inger had a unexpected visit to the hospital and Jason had trouble getting the tinny out to sea and back again, so it was quite a week for the On The Reg Team. Full of the dramas.Inger digs out a paper her 'interesting shit' folder on Zotero, which is basically stuff she found while Jason was on #epictrip and saved for later. The findings of the paper send the pair into a deep nerd spiral on all things email but you know, in a fun way.Inger muses on the 1970s books on lectures she stole from the compactus in building 10T1, while Jason tells Inger about the one thing he found worth watching on Disney+We finish with some 2 minute tips which deal with anxiety and procrastination, in other words - the good stuff. Inger didn't edit much of this one out, so dial up a long walk or some gardening and let us give you some good nerd company!LinksLinks to stuff we mentioned in the Pod:Research Article: Should I open this email? Links to previous On The Reg eps we mentioned in this episode:That other episode where we talked about emailProcrastination (Part 1) [episode 20]Procrastination (Part 2) [episode 21]Procrastination (Part 3)[episode 22]Leave us a message on www.speakpipe.com/thesiswhisperer. Email Inger, she's easy to find. You will not be able to find Jason's email (he likes it that way).Talk to us on BlueSky by following @thesiswhisperer and @drjd. Inger is sadly addicted to Threads, but cannot convince JD to join. You can find her there, and on all the Socials actually, as @thesiswhisperer. You can read her stuff on www.thesiswhisperer.com. You can support the pod by buying our Text Expander guide for academics from the Thesis Whisperer website.
Jeff Zuckerman holds master's degrees in social work and journalism from the University of Minnesota. He was a social worker, a newspaper reporter and editor, and for many years the director of the writing center at Walden University. He was a reviewer of the APA style manual, 7th edition. Over the past 25 years he has edited more than 1,600 dissertations in the behavioral and social sciences, and he has talked with thousands of doctoral students about writing. Jeff is the author of "Unglued: A Bipolar Love Story," his 2020 memoir about the turmoil of caregiving and self-care following his wife's diagnosis with a late-onset mental illness.Tips for Academic Writing:1. Understand this is like a foreign language; an editor/coach can help. 2. Find academic writing that you enjoy and emulate that. 3. Start with an outline (and be OK with it changing).4. Read the book: Writing for the Social Scientist by Howard S. Becker: https://amzn.to/3D6cbDf5. Use the MEAL method: Main idea, Evidence, Analyze, Lead into next paragraph6. If you have access to a Writing Center – USE IT!7. Use the feature on Word to LISTEN to your writing8. Use a reference software like Zotero: https://www.zotero.org/9. Use Grammarly: https://grammarly.go2cloud.org/aff_c?offer_id=3&aff_id=66812&source=website10. Use an editor for things that will take you time and cost you your sanity – it might be things that just need to be created like a Table of Contents, Tables, Figures, etc. It might be that you will save time and your health by hiring a coach who you work with weekly. 11. Practice, practice, practice Bonus Tips:Try to not be too Type A - it will never be PERFECT!In the end: Good enough is good enough!Other resources available at: http://Expandyourhappy.com/storeHappy Doc Student Swag: https://www.bonfire.com/store/happy-doc-student-podcast-swag/Support this free content and keep Heather going with a yummy green tea: https://www.buymeacoffee.com/expandyourhappyGet the Happy Doc Student Handbook here: https://www.amazon.com/dp/0578333732
In this episode we hear from pre-candidacy doctoral students Biljana and Lily as they chat about experiences of writing early on in a doctoral program, finding your niche, balance, and thinking about feedback. Find out more about the material mentioned in this episode: Actionable Community-Oriented Research Engagement (ACORN): https://pcc.uw.edu/research/acorn-program/ Zotero – Zotero is a citation manager. Find links to Zotero and other similar apps in the UW Libraries' research guide on digital history tools under “Productivity” https://guides.lib.uw.edu/c.php?g=341991&p=2300129.
I have talked alot about DevonThink – this episode is about Zotero. I have talked alot about DevonThink – this episode is about Zotero.
Take-home message: Utilize the librarian and your library! Anna Uribe: Masters of Library and Information Services and lead instruction librarian and the liaison for doctoral programs at the University of Arizona global campus, AUGC.Tips:1. Don't use links to save your research2. Download that resource3. Figure out how you will organize your references: Zotero, Mandalay, Refworks (check to see if your tuition covers citation software – if not, check out the free links I have on my website: https://www.expandyourhappy.com/online-resources)4. Book a one-on-one appointment with a librarian to discuss your research area5. Don't spend more than 30 minutes being confused or frustrated!6. Start learning how to do advanced searches now so you have this under your belt by the time you get to your dissertation/doc project7. Librarians are experts in finding information - they do this for their JOB and they LIKE IT! (utilize them: 24/7 chats, emails, phone calls, etc.)8. Estimate that it will take you 90 minutes to find ONE resource – this includes searching, evaluating search results, reviewing an article, and note taking9. Schedule time to be in the library to work on your research (communicate your need for this dedicated time with your family and friends)10. Research AND then write (don't try to do both together)Other recommended resources: https://www.expandyourhappy.comGet the article: The Doctoral Journey - 12 Things You Should Know (that they probably won't tell you!): https://www.expandyourhappy.com/HDSP121 Support this free content and buy Heather a yummy green tea: https://www.buymeacoffee.com/expandyourhappyGet the Happy Doc Student Handbook here: https://www.amazon.com/dp/0578333732
Welcome to the DNP Project Podcast where we share tips, inspiration, and more!It's time to get back to school. Our goal is to offer some quick tips for DNP Students. Today's Tip: APA 7th Edition UpdateThe American Psychological Association (APA) released an updated Publication Manual in October of 2019, which likely you will hear called “APA 7th edition.” The reason we have to use standardized formatting for papers is so that we have a common language of communication. If you are a DNP student who was using the 6th edition, make sure you talk to your faculty about the plan for transitioning. In this episode, we have put together some quick updates to share with you. As an overview, you will be pleased to know that some of the biggest changes were really needed when you think that we were operating on a 6th edition from 2009. Some changes have to do with biased free language, better examples of how to cite social media, and a student-specific paper format. What I am the most excited about is the visual appeal of the book, the spiral binding (there are options, but I would recommend to get the spiral bound if possible), and it is flat out easier to read and find what you are looking for. The publisher location is no longer included in the citation of a book.Section 9.29, p 295Citing webpages has changed - no more “Retrieved from:”Section 9.16, p 290Biased free language, Ex: “They” is considered singular, not pleuralSection 5, p 140More fonts to choose from:Times New Roman (12 pt) Arial (11pt) Georgia (11pt) Calibri (11pt) Lucida Sans Unicode (10pt)Section 2.19, p 44In-text citations are shorter (author list - et al.,) but reference page author list is longerSection 8.17, p 266 (in-text citations)Section 9.8, p 286 (reference page authors)If you are a new DNP student, I can't emphasize enough the importance of learning citation management, particularly with software like Zotero, EndNote, or RefWorks. These softwares allow you to switch between different styles of citation. Very important if you are publishing in a format you are not familiar with. So, if you have to learn a new APA, consider also learning a software to go with it. Last, but never least, get the cover page right! As a faculty member, when I have to grade multiple papers, having an incorrect cover page automatically puts me in a bad mood. First impressions count, even in written work. So, just a tip, get that part right!Dr. Molly BradshawRemember to “Subscribe,” hit “Like,” and “Write a Review” so that we can help others. Find us on YouTube, Apple Podcasts, Google Play, Spotify, and other platforms.To get your copy of The DNP Project Workbook, go to: Springer: https://www.springerpub.com/the-dnp-project-workbook-9780826174321.html*** Always follow the guidelines from YOUR DNP Program
This week we talk with Emily Nix. Emily is an Assistant Professor of Finance and Business Economics at the USC Marshall School of Business. We talk with Emily about her research & about lightboards, which could be a great tool for online teaching. We talk about how to make one and a number of question about using them. Sebastian Tello-Trillo is an Assistant Professor of Public Policy and Economics at the Frank Batten School of Leadership and Public Policy in the University of Virginia. Alex Hollingsworth is an Assistant Professor of Economics at the O'Neill School of Public and Environmental Affairs in Indiana University. Recommendation of the week: Emily's - Rescue time, Automatic Time-Tracking Software and Alias (on Hulu). Sebastian's - Zotero, a reference manager Alex's: Papership Show notes: Alex making a lightboard If you want to learn how to make a lightboard, here are some videos Markers for lightboard Plexiglass Brackets LED Strip Black Tablecloth Metal Clamps OBS Software - Software to show several screens on your webcam under "one screen". --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/hidden-curriculum/message
Today's featured PhD Tip is getting your Research Organized! Cliff Freeman, a PhD student at Boston University, studying Math And Science, shares his experience using Zotero, an efficient way to keep track of all his research throughout his academic journey. Zotero is a open source and free to use software which can be downloaded from Zotero.org.
Happy Labor Day from The Beaker Report. Steve spent his weekend moving into a new house. The guys start by talking about living with someone after having lived on their own and how having your own space is essential. After recapping their Labor Day activities they discuss their first week of fall semester. They talk about what it is like to teach labs and some of the differences in teaching Bio majors vs non-majors. Next, they give some advise on how to keep track of references when writing research papers. Sometimes it can be a challenge to keep it all organized and a reference manager program like Endnote or Zotero can be really helpful. They also talk about how important math in biology can be. If you are interested in research, do yourself a favor and keep taking math courses beyond Calculus I. Finally, the guys get into some travel stories. Steve bashes on United Airlines and Caleb retells some stories of his military experiences. Website Facebook Instagram Twitter
Jeg kan jo godt lide systemer, struktur og overblik - og jeg har i mange år været på jagt efter værktøjer, der kan hjælpe, uden dog nogensinde at finde det helt rigtige. De primære behov er noget med at kunne samle links, artikler og pdf’er, organisere og strukturere samlingen, lave highlights og noter i dem, og så også gerne kunne dele eller eksportere de highlights til de apps, jeg så skriver i. I denne sommer har jeg taget endnu en tur, og set på adskillige håndfulde tjenester og apps, uden dog at være blevet helt tilfreds. Det fortæller jeg om i denne lidt specielle episode, hvor jeg selv er gæst… Og husk - har du tips om apps jeg ikke har nævnt (eller hvis du har fundet features, jeg åbenbart har overset), så sig endelig til! Det samme gælder naturligvis, hvis du mener du rent faktisk kan lave præcis det værktøj, jeg har behov for