The Knowledge Management Discussion is issues of the "new" field of knowledge management, particularly with regard to setting up such a function in their libraries or organizations.
Thursday, January 29, 2015
[KMDG-L] [ANN] Virtual Meeting today: IoT: Beyond Semantic Sensor Network Ontologies
Thursday January 29 on the topic
Beyond Semantic Sensor Network Ontologies
The session will be chaired by Torsten Hahmann and Gary Berg-Cross,
with Jeff Voas and Cory Henson as invited speakers.
Meeting participation is virtual
* Date: Thursday, 29-Jan-2015
* Start-time: 9:30am PST / 12:30pm EST / 6:30pm CEST / 5:30pm BST / 1730
UTC
** world clock:
http://www.timeanddate.com/worldclock/fixedtime.html?iso=20150129T1230&p1=179
** Duration: ~2.0 hours
All other details can be found at
http://ontolog-02.cim3.net/wiki/ConferenceCall_2015_01_29
and the main Ontology Summit page at
http://ontolog-02.cim3.net/wiki/OntologySummit2015
- Michael Gruninger and Mark Underwood
Chairs, Ontology Summit 2015
Sunday, January 25, 2015
[KMDG-L] Survey on Effect of Knowledge Management on Service Innovation in Academic Libraries
I'm a Ph.D. student at the Japan Advanced Institute of Science and Technology, Ishikawa, Japan. In collaboration with Professors Ikeda and Agarwal, I am conducting a survey study to determine the effect of knowledge management on service innovation in academic libraries.
We'd be obliged if you could kindly participate in the survey by clicking on any one link below. It should take you about 15 minutes.
or
https://docs.google.com/forms/d/1Lke--9r63D_cRX7SmO-zhHNr9TuHzT0-VmHmAb8ov24/viewform
Thanks and best wishes
_________________________________
Md. Anwarul Islam
Doctoral Student
School of Knowledge Science, JAIST, Japan
&
Assistant Professor
Department of Information Science and Library Management
University of Dhaka, Dhaka-1000
E-mail: anwar81du@gmail.com
http://www.du.ac.bd/department/common/facultymemberdetail.php?memberid=FMLIS20023&bodyid=LIS
Professor Mitsuru Ikeda
School of Knowledge Science, JAIST, Ishikawa, Japan
http://www.jaist.ac.jp/profiles/info_e.php?profile_id=346
Dr. Naresh Agarwal, Assistant Professor
Graduate School of Library and Information Science, Simmons College, Boston, USA
http://www.simmons.edu/gslis/faculty/fulltime/agarwal.php
Tuesday, January 13, 2015
[KMDG-L] ISKO UK meeting The Great Debate: "This House believes that the traditional thesaurus has no place in modern information retrieval" 2pm Feb 19 in London, preceded by AGM
ISKO UK AGM, followed by The Great Debate: "This House believes that the traditional thesaurus has no place in modern information retrieval"
Afternoon of Thursday, 19th February, at the British Dental Association, 64 Wimpole St, London.
Book now at <http://www.iskouk.org/events/debate_Feb_2015.htm>
Once upon a time, the thesaurus was venerated. It marked a breakthrough in the retrieval of very specific needles of information hidden in large haystacks. Some of the veneration rubbed off on to the trained information professionals, who alone mastered the occult art of using it to concoct effective search strategies. All this was in the time before we had a computer on every desk, when a collection of 10,000 articles was considered large, and long before the Google era.
But now, who has the patience to consult a complicated thesaurus? Only a dedicated few. Has the thesaurus passed its sell-by date? And even its use-by date? Join us at the Great Debate, where you'll get a chance to air your own views, and perhaps win over some voters. Can you point to the way ahead - whether it involves effective thesaurus use behind the scenes, or bypasses all vocabulary aids on the route to retrieval success?
Leading the assault on thesauri will be consultants Judi Vernau and Helen Lippell, both of them experienced in user expectations and technology-driven opportunities. Defending the thesaurus fortifications, Vanda Broughton of University College London and Leonard Will of Willpower Information will man the buttresses of faceted construction techniques. As and when the audience threatens to storm the barricades, the job of maintaining order will fall to Martin White, our Chairman for the afternoon.
At 13.00 hrs on the same day ISKO UK will be holding its AGM, at which non-members are welcome as observers, while members are urged to come and help us make the right decisions for 2015.
After the AGM at 13.00 on 19th February, registration for the Debate opens at 13.30 and the main proceedings will start at 14.00 hrs. Please book by 15th February at latest. Full details are on the ISKO UK site at http://www.iskouk.org/events/debate_Feb_2015.htm . The event is free to ISKO members and to full-time students. The fee for non-members is just £40. All fees must be paid in advance - there is no provision for payment on arrival. Please pass this invitation on to any colleagues who may be interested. We hope to see you
ISKO is a not-for-profit scientific/professional association with the objective of promoting research and communication in the domain of knowledge organization, within the broad field of information science and related disciplines. Founded in 2007, our UK Chapter has been attracting lively and steadily growing audiences to its afternoon meeting series (see slides and recordings at http://www.iskouk.org/events.htm) as well as its very successful third biennial conference (http://www.iskouk.org/conf2013/index.htm) last year.
Anna Harvey
ISKO UK
www.iskouk.org
Monday, January 12, 2015
[KMDG-L] Call for Papers IFLA KM Open Session Cape Town 2015
Thursday, January 8, 2015
[KMDG-L] CALL for PAPERS: IFLA Knowledge Management Section Satellite Meeting in Cape Town, 14 August 2015
The IFLA Knowledge Management Section invites proposals for the Satellite Meeting(SM) to be held at Goethe Centre in Cape Town on August 14, 2015. The theme of the
SM is: Knowledge Management and Innovation: the transformation of 21st century
library services.
Please refer to the IFLA website: http://conference.ifla.org/ifla81/node/991 where
you will find detailed information.
The deadline for submitting your proposals (title, abstract, author information, CV
and contact details) is January 31, 2015.
Thank you in advance for your proposals,
Eva SemertzakiIFLA KM Satellite Program chairWilda
Tuesday, January 6, 2015
[KMDG-L] Agricultural Libraries -Call for Papers IFLa 2015
Agricultural Libraries Special Interest Group
Theme:
Synergizing Agricultural Extension and Library and Information Services (LIS) for Agricultural Productivity and Food Security: An International Perspective
More online at: http://conference.ifla.org/ifla81/node/1020
Best regards,
Deva E.Reddy,PhD
Associate Professor
Texas A&M University Libraries
College Station, TX 77843-5000,USA
Tel.979-862-1062 Fax.979-458-0112
dereddy@tamu.edu
Secretary, IFLA Science & Technology Libraries Section
Program Chair, IFLA Agricultural Libraries
Monday, January 5, 2015
[KMDG-L] CFP: Classification and Authority Control: Expanding Resource Discovery - Lisbon, 29-30 October 2015
CLASSIFICATION AND AUTHORITY CONTROL:
Expanding Resource Discovery
VENUE: National Library of Portugal
Campo Grande 83
Lisbon, Portugal
WEBSITE: http://seminar.udcc.org/2015/
CONTACT: seminar2015@udcc.org
Linked data practices and techniques have opened new possibilities in exploiting controlled vocabularies and improving resource discovery. Authority data held in library systems, including classification schemes find new ways of expanding its potential as shared knowledge structures across the linked data environment.
We invite experts in authority control, classification schemes and linked data to provide overviews, illustrations and analysis of classification data management and exploitation. Contributions are welcome on high quality, innovative research and practice on the following topics:
• Classification as a component of subject authority control
• Classification authority data formats and modeling
• Classification and multilingual subject access
• Sharing classification data from authority files
• Classification data in the open linked data context
CONTRIBUTIONS:
Two kinds of contributions are invited: conference papers and posters. Authors should submit a paper proposal in the form of an extended abstract (1000-1200 words, including references, for papers; and 500-600 words for posters). The submission form is provided on the conference website.
Proposals will be reviewed by the Programme Committee consisting of an international panel of experts. Each submission will undergo a blind review by at least three reviewers.
The Conference proceedings will be published by Ergon Verlag and will be distributed at the conference.
IMPORTANT DATES
28 February 2015 Paper proposal submission deadline
23 March 2015 Notification of acceptance & paper submission instructions
15 May 2015 Papers submission (camera ready copy)
ORGANIZER: Classification & Authority Control: Expanding Resource Discovery is the fifth biennial conference in a series of International UDC Seminars organized by the UDC Consortium (UDCC). UDCC is a not-for-profit organization, based in The Hague, established to maintain and distribute the Universal Decimal Classification and to support its use and development. UDC is one of the most widely used knowledge organization systems in the bibliographic domain.
Friday, January 2, 2015
[KMDG-L] Just Published: Book Review of "Collaboration in International and Comparative Librarianship" -- A Professor S.B. Ghosh Festschrift Volume in IFLA Asia & Oceania Section Newsletter, December 2014.
This issue also contains an obituary "A Bright Star from the Horizon of Library and Information Science Falls: A Tribute to Professor A. Neelameghan (Jul 1926 – Jul 2014)" [http://www.ifla.org/files/assets/asia-and-oceania/newsletters/dec-_2014.pdf#22]. Professor A. Neelameghan contributed two chapters in the above-mentioned book and was also an Editorial Adviser to this book.
Just Published "Collaboration in International and Comparative Librarianship"
Edited by Susmita Chakraborty (University of Calcutta, India) and Anup Kumar Das (Jawaharlal Nehru University, India)
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-4666-4365-9
ISBN13: 9781466643659,
EISBN13: 9781466643666
http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-4666-4365-9
Cite:
Chakraborty, S., & Das, A. K. (2014). Collaboration in International and Comparative Librarianship (pp. 1-406). Hershey, PA: IGI Global. doi:10.4018/978-1-4666-4365-9
Description
With the introduction of the Bologna Process, the emphasis on the importance of international librarianship and its activity between governmental or non-governmental institutions, organizations, and groups of nations has continued to grow. Collaboration in International and Comparative Librarianship highlights the importance of international librarianship in governmental and non-governmental institutions, organizations, and groups in order to promote, develop, and maintain librarianship and the library profession around the world. This publication is essential for graduate students, researchers, teachers, and LIS administrators in the field of library science.
Table of Contents
Foreword by Dan Dorner
Preface by Susmita Chakraborty, Anup Kumar Das
Chapter 1: Prof. S. B. Ghosh, alias Badal, as I Know Him (pages 1-8) by A. K. Dasgupta
Chapter 2: Introduction: Comparative and International Librarianship (pages 9-16) by Anup Kumar Das, Susmita Chakraborty
Chapter 3: Donations to Libraries: A Problem in International Cooperation (pages 17-27) by Paul Sturges
Chapter 4: Globalization and Library and Information Science: Ethical Challenges (pages 28-36) by Ismail Abdullahi
Chapter 5: Philanthropy in Libraries (pages 37-50) by Achala Munigal, Susmita Chakraborty
Chapter 6: International Librarianship: One Librarian's Experience in Reducing the Digital Divide (pages 51-62) by Alan Hopkinson
Chapter 7: The Role of the Special Libraries Association in Promoting Library Professionals on a Global Scale (pages 64-84) by Sheila L. Rosenthal
Chapter 8: Role of IFLA in Marketing Initiatives in Library and Information Services (pages 85-93) by Dinesh K. Gupta
Chapter 9: International Scholarship and the Role of American Research Libraries (pages 94-100) by Barbara I. Dewey
Chapter 10: International Cooperation in the Domains of Agricultural Research and Information (pages 102-110) by Deva Eswara Reddy
Chapter 11: Energy, Environment, and Sustainable Development Knowledge Center: A TERI LIC Case Study (pages 111-124) by Reeta Sharma, Shantanu Ganguly
Chapter 12: Collaboration in Editorship: "Global Perspectives on School Libraries" (pages 126-136) by Luisa Marquardt, Dianne Oberg
Chapter 13: Building the Capacity of Librarians through Collaboration: The Experience of the University of Bergen and Makerere University Libraries with their New Partners in the North and South (pages 137-147) by Maria G. N. Musoke, Ane Landoy
Chapter 14: Innovation Network in IT Sector: A Study of Collaboration Patterns Among Selected Foreign IT Firms in India and China (pages 148-170) by Swapan Kumar Patra
Chapter 15: Library and Information Science Collaborations in the Philippines and Beyond (pages 171-194) by Ana Maria B. Fresnido, Joseph M. Yap
Chapter 16: Collaboration at an International Level: Germany (pages 195-203) by Hella Klauser
Chapter 17: Across the Seas: Collaboration between Australia and the Pacific Islands (pages 204-217) by Jayshree Mamtora, Peter Walton
Chapter 18: International Satellite Communications to Support and Supplement Web-Based Information Exchange: A Co-Operative Programme (pages 219-226) by A. Neelameghan
Chapter 19: Content in the Cloud: Towards a Green Information Service Model (pages 227-238) by Gobinda G. Chowdhury
Chapter 20: International Cooperation in Developing a Digital Library Software and South Asia Network (pages 239-255) by A. Neelameghan, K.S. Raghavan
Chapter 21: Digital Library in a Collaborative Context: Romania and Norway 2003-2012 (pages 257-272) by Angela Repanovici, Ane Landoy
Chapter 22: Curriculum Contents of Digital Library Education (DLE) in Europe (pages 273-296) by Nafiz Zaman Shuva, Ragnar Andreas Audunson
Chapter 23: Internationalization of LIS Education in India: ICT-Based Collaborative Approach (pages 297-306) by Swati Bhattacharyya
Chapter 24: Learning Mode of the Future: Open and Distance Education– Role of Libraries (pages 307-313) by M. P. Satija
Chapter 25: Internationalization of LIS (Library and Information Science) Education: The Bologna Process Approach (pages 314-320) by Anna Maria Tammaro
Chapter 26: Collaboration Scenario in the Indian LIS Papers of the 21st Century (pages 322-328) by Bimal Kanti Sen
Chapter 27: Anatomy of Social Science Research Literature: A Scientometric Evaluation of Global Productivity (pages 329-337) by K. C. Panda, Bipin Bihari Sethi
Afterword by A. Neelameghan
Sample PDFs are available for all chapters.
Further Details: http://www.igi-global.com/book/collaboration-international-comparative-librarianship/
--
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Dr. Anup Kumar Das
Jawaharlal Nehru University
New Delhi - 110067, India
W: www.anupkumardas.blogspot.com
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