Here are our favorite tweets from the second Day of the Science 2.0 Conference – make sure you don’t miss our #sci20conf-Review of the first conference day and our outtakes on the bottom of this post.
Big Data, Big Science, and Beyond
By Professor Ralph Schröder, Oxford Internet Institute.
A new morning at science 2.0 conferece. Beginning with Prof. Schröder from Oxford Internet Institute about Big Data and beyond #sci20conf
— Athanasios Mazarakis (@warfair) March 27, 2014
Schröder: Main use of big data sources for commercial companies are to sort people into categories to ‘manipulate them’ #sci20conf
— Catriona MacCallum (@catmacOA) March 27, 2014
the always quotet paper by Chris Anderson on the end of theory (due to big data etc.) http://t.co/GnwReiC7gs #sci20conf
— Katrin Weller (@kwelle) March 27, 2014
Schroeder: Implications of Big Data – Big Brother but also Brave new World #sci20conf pic.twitter.com/cMoNk3XBJU
— IPN Library (@IPN_Library) March 27, 2014
Science 2.0 arrived – and what’s next?
By Dr Paweł Szczęsny, Department of Bioinformatics, Institute of Biochemistry and Biophysics, Polish Academy of Sciences
Paweł Szczęsny: The philosophy of openness connects science 2.0 (informal comms), #openaccess & citizen science – it is the fuel #sci20conf
— Catriona MacCallum (@catmacOA) March 27, 2014
Science goes global! @freesci #sci20conf pic.twitter.com/6QeeRVWyFe
— IPN Library (@IPN_Library) March 27, 2014
"There is no way in coming back to the old way of read and write academic papers." by @freesci #sci20conf
— Christian Heise (@christianheise) March 27, 2014
Slides from my talk at Science 2.0 conference are available http://t.co/ZpLasCRkGy #sci20conf Download PDF if you see blurred text
— Pawel Szczesny (@freesci) March 27, 2014
Science and the Beta-Society: How Web 2.0 platforms challenge scholarly communication?
By René König, Institute for Technology Assessment and Systems Analysis (ITAS), Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT)
René König discussing ‘Beta-Society’ in context of Raymond: Release early. Release often. And listen to your customers. #sci20conf
— Catriona MacCallum (@catmacOA) March 27, 2014
@R_Koenig: Software dev today is neither cathedral nor bazaar, it’s mall: highly structured, permanently monitoring customers #sci20conf
— Lambert Heller (@Lambo) March 27, 2014
König: the RG score measures your involvement in ResearchGate, not your scientific impact. #sci20conf
— Cornelius Puschmann (@cbpuschmann) March 27, 2014
google scholar is vunlnerable to manipulation (hidden text) #sci20conf
— Marco Schmitt (@digi_socscience) March 27, 2014
Sorry for being so passive at #sci20conf. Didn´t get much sleep. But since I´ve been asked, here are my slides: https://t.co/dtVXWFlKbr
— René König (@R_Koenig) March 27, 2014
Open Research Data in Horizon 2020
By Dr Celina Ramjoué, Head of Sector ‘Open access to scientific publications and data’
attention now: open research data in Horizon2020 #sci20conf
— Hendrik Bunke (@hbunke) March 27, 2014
Ramjoué: Open Access is the first frontier, open data the second, and open digital science the third #sci20conf
— Catriona MacCallum (@catmacOA) March 27, 2014
What the #horizon2020 people think of open digital science. Now at #sci20conf pic.twitter.com/pM2sGZwPmT
— Katrin Weller (@kwelle) March 27, 2014
Ramjoué: Open data is data that can be accessed, mined, exploited, reproduced and disseminated (and data includes text) #sci20conf
— Catriona MacCallum (@catmacOA) March 27, 2014
Ramjoué H2020 data pilot: data management plan will be obligatory re what data, what standards, what will be shared etc #sci20conf
— Catriona MacCallum (@catmacOA) March 27, 2014
Information about open research data in Horizon 2020 http://t.co/8Cnu9N3XYn #sci20conf #servicetweet
— Ralf Toepfer (@thiaru) March 27, 2014
Libraries go Science 2.0
Practical Spotlights – Lightning-Talks + Discussions moderated by Goportis – Leibniz Library Network for Research Information
#SCI20CONF Ulrich Korwitz, ZBMED, eroeffnet "Libraries go Science 2.0" mit Kurzbeitraegen der beteiligten Einrichtungen
— DGI (@DGIInfo) March 27, 2014
@hbunke talk about Bridging the Gap between Academic Journal & Open Science – 'Economics', the OA, Open Assessment e-Journal #sci20conf
— IPN Library (@IPN_Library) March 27, 2014
Some lessons learned from #CoScience Book Sprint are written down here (in German only, sadly) http://t.co/u1HiIHtb22 #sci20conf
— Lambert Heller (@Lambo) March 27, 2014
This is what the SLUB imagine a Data Management Platform in Library Structure #sci20conf pic.twitter.com/TZ1o6iZObY
— IPN Library (@IPN_Library) March 27, 2014
Korwitz cited a Prof about Libraries: care about my Publi. – OA, care about my Research Data – OA, care about my Software – OS #sci20conf
— IPN Library (@IPN_Library) March 27, 2014
Interesting Lightning Talk session this afternoon at #sci20conf in Hamburg, however, some concepts are missing a sustainable business model.
— Alexander Grossmann (@SciPubLab) March 27, 2014
Can We Predict Scientific Impact with Social Media? A Comparison with Traditional Metrics of Scientific Impact
Professor Denis Helic, Institute for Knowledge Management (KMI), Graz University of Technology
Causality or Correlation between twitter mentions, downloads and citation? Not obvious! need more analysis and interpretation #sci20conf
— IPN Library (@IPN_Library) March 27, 2014
Can we predict scientific impact with social media? Do we already have enough data for this? #Summary #sci20conf pic.twitter.com/uZ5P1sKm95
— Christian Heise (@christianheise) March 27, 2014
Smart Campus: Services with and for People
By Dr Marco Pistore, Institute for Scientific and Technological Research, Fondazione Bruno Kessler,
Platform of a Smart Campus #sci20conf pic.twitter.com/ZMFD4uK8Yn
— IPN Library (@IPN_Library) March 27, 2014
Outtakes
sexist sweets on the tables at #sci20conf pic.twitter.com/QOYuEEgmBV
— Hendrik Bunke (@hbunke) March 27, 2014
! MT @RLUK_David: #Elsevier profits +6% 2013 (to 39%), you would think they would have the resources to fix #OA bumps quickly #sci20conf
— ScienceOpen (@Science_Open) March 27, 2014
Are the 6-minute talks really 6 minutes long? #sci20conf
— Cornelius Puschmann (@cbpuschmann) March 27, 2014
Sides and videos will be published after the #sci20conf on http://t.co/4pu9LOLNhl We would like you to continue discussing. Please RT :-)
— Leibniz-Science2.0 (@lfvscience20) March 27, 2014
I agree, #sci20conf was pretty much perfectly organized, thanks a lot! Only one little point: Next timer better coffee, please ;)
— René König (@R_Koenig) March 27, 2014
Thank you for visiting the #sci20conf &/or following it online. Have a safe journey back to your homes. See you next year!
— Leibniz-Science2.0 (@lfvscience20) March 27, 2014
Goodbye #sci20conf – need to catch my train to Kiel for some other duties. pic.twitter.com/2cdueokJSj
— Ansgar Scherp (@ascherpuokob) March 27, 2014