Organizing & Managing Research Using Digital Tools Lisa Spiro Digital Media Center March 2009 Image from http://www.flickr.com/photos/slimcoincidence/1109995859/
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Organizing & Managing Research Using Digital Tools Lisa Spiro Digital Media Center March 2009 Image from http://www.flickr.com/photos/slimcoincidence/1109995859/ Feeling Overwhelmed? Dutch researchers estimate that the Indexed Web contains at least 22.36 billion pages The hidden web (content not indexed by search engines because it is dynamically generated, protected, etc.) is estimated to be 500 times bigger than the Indexed Web Approx. 7 million books have been digitized by Google. See http://www.emc.com/digital_universe for up-to-date ticker of amount of data produced in 2008 Image: http://www.flickr.com/photos/will-lion/2595497078/ Will Abundance Lead to Better Scholarship? “Historians, in fact, may be facing a fundamental paradigm shift from a culture of scarcity to a culture of abundance… it costs no more to deliver the AHR [American Historical Review] to 15 million people than 15,000 people; it costs less for our students to have access to literally millions of primary sources than a handful in a published anthology. And we may be able to both save and quickly search through all of the products of our culture. But will abundance bring better or more thoughtful history?” --Roy Rosenzweig, "Scarcity or Abundance? Preserving the Past in a Digital Era," The American Historical Review June 2003 http://www.historycooperative.org/journals/ahr/108.3/rosenzweig.ht ml (emphasis added) Agenda Open up a discussion about the impact of digital resources and tools on research Introduce you to some useful tools that can help you Keep current in your field Organize research materials Describe some of the tools & services that the Digital Media Center (DMC) can provide “Methodology for the Infinite Archive” “The web is an archive that is constantly changing and effectively infinite. What kind of research techniques can historians develop to make use of it?” (Bill Turkel, http://digitalhistoryhacks.blogspot.com/) What You Can Do With Digital Information Search Mine Copy “Trap” Organize Tag Visualize Analyze Distribute Remix/ Mashup Etc. http://www2.vcdh.virginia.edu/emancipation/ Exploring Digital Scholarship: Lisa’s Dissertation Remix Experiment in using digital tools for research Remixing 2002 dissertation as a work of “digital scholarship” Relying primarily on web-based resources Using analytical tools to find patterns in information Disseminating research electronically & openly Blogging the process at http://digitalscholarship.wordpress.com/ Stay Current in Your Field Image: http://www.flickr.com/photos/western4uk/173094122/ Staying Current Using RSS feeds Subscribe to online content & automatically receive notification of updates. Like having a customized newspaper delivered to your doorstep rather than having to seek out information Identify sites that have RSS feeds by looking for the RSS icon Publications, e.g. the New York Times science section Blogs, e.g. Lifehacker Journals, e.g. Nature or Victorian Studies You can use a service like http://page2rss.com/ to create an RSS feed for pages that don’t support RSS How to Use RSS Set up a feedreader such as: GoogleReader: http://www.google.com/reader/ (web- based; translate feeds, share them, star them, organize them, view trends, etc.) FeedReader: http://www.feedreader.com/ (installed on local machine rather than browser based) Subscribe to the feed Browsers such as Firefox will usually display an icon in the address bar if the site has a feed. Look for words such as subscribe, feed, rss, xml, atom, or images such as Let Information Come to You: Web Alerts Google Alerts: http://www.google.com/alerts Be notified by email when Google picks up results relevant to search criteria Specify how often you’re notified & what you search Filtrbox http://www.filtrbox.com/ Specify search restrictions Get email alerts or view online View “trends” in alerts Share articles Many journals & databases also offer alerts Organize Information Via a Research Portal http://www.pageflakes.com/lspiro/ How & Why to Create a Research Portal Aggregate online resources (a bio, publication list, RSS feeds, images, etc) at a single site with minimal effort Can serve as a start page for your research, a page that you use to inform others of your research, or both Information is online and available from any computer “Widgets” include to-do lists, RSS feeds from news & info sources, search tools, etc. People can subscribe to the RSS feed for your portal It’s easy to add new content May be especially useful as a teaching tool, e.g. http://www.netvibes.com/wesch#Digital_Ethnography Free services for creating research portals: PageFlakes: http://www.pageflakes.com/ NetVibes: http://www.netvibes.com/ Organize Research Materials Using Zotero http://www.zotero.org/ “a free, easy-to-use Firefox extension to help you collect, manage, and cite your research sources. It lives right where you do your work — in the web browser itself.” Developed by scholars at George Mason’s Center for History & New Media Efficient: Supports tagging, sorting by tags, automatic download of citation information and PDFs of articles Search your collections, including tags & HTML documents Innovative: Will ultimately support groups and recommendation system, etc. Need to download an extension to insert references into Word Requires Firefox 2.0+ How to Use Zotero Click on the page icon in the address bar to automatically download citation info & assoc. files Alternatively, you can add item from Zotero toolbar Organize cites into collections Add tags & relationships to make everything more findable Take notes New Features in Zotero 1.5 Automatic synchronization of collections across multiple computers. Free automatic backup of your library data at Zotero.org. Rich-text notes. Automatic detection of PDF metadata (author, title, etc.) Browse through your library online. New user profiles tied to Zotero accounts. Preliminary support for following other Zotero users WYSIWYG CV creator. Ultimate goal: “aggregate & analyze shared wisdom” (Dan Cohen) Zotero 1.5 Researcher Page http://www.zotero.org/tjowens/358 Zotero 1.5 Library Analyzing Zotero Collections: SEASR Analytics for Zotero 0.3.2 What You Can Do with SEASR Analytics for Zotero 0.3.2 http://seasr.org/documentation/zotero/ Uncover patterns in data Submit items or collections for analysis & retrieve, display, and store the results in Zotero Currently supports Author Centrality Analysis Author Degree Distribution Analysis Author Hits Analysis Information Management Tools Mendeley: “free social software for managing and sharing research papers. It is also a Web 2.0 site for discovering research trends and connecting to likeminded academics.” Devon: Store files, categorize them, take notes, run sophisticated searches EverNote: Take notes, synchronize across devices Papers: “iTunes for Research” See http://digitalresearchtools.pbwiki.com/OrganizeResearch-Materials Learn about software that you can use in your research: DiRT http://digitalresearchtools.pbwiki.com/ Cautions Tools come and go. To avoid getting trapped, choose tools that: Are fairly mature Have a number of adopters Allow you to easily export data in standard formats. Some tools that you download from the Internet may bring with them risks of viruses. Check for reviews to verify that the software is secure & authentic. You may be sacrificing some privacy (or dignity) in exchange for access to some tools. For instance, PageFlakes briefly put up ads for diet pills on user pages. Sometimes you can waste a lot of time learning to use a new tool that doesn’t do what you thought it would do. Investigate the tool before downloading it. How the Digital Media Center Can Support Your Research http://dmc.rice.edu/ Location: Herring 129 Part of Fondren Library Mission: The Digital Media Center (DMC) supports the use and creation of multimedia in education, scholarship, and creative expression. Towards this end, we: provide hands-on training consult with patrons on digital projects offer access to the essential tools for creating digital resources. QuickTime™ and a decompressor are needed to see this picture. Borrow Equipment from the DMC Available equipment: 12 video camcorders 8 audio recorders QuickTime™and a decompressor are needed to see this pi cture. 5 digital cameras Supporting gear: mikes, tripods, etc. Check out for up to 3 days Reserve in advance Free to the Rice community, although you must provide your own media, e.g. DVDs & miniDV tapes QuickTime™ and a decompressor are needed to see this picture. Digitize Materials & Create Multimedia Scan documents, oversized materials, slides/film, etc. Convert LPs, audio tapes, VHS tapes, etc. into digital formats Workstations: 3 audio editing stations 6 video editing stations 7 graphics editing, web development, etc. 1 podcasting booth (in collaboration w/ IT) Print out posters on a plotter Get help with all of the above QuickTime™ and a decompressor are needed to see this picture. QuickTime™ and a decompressor are needed to see this picture. Take a Class at the DMC 13 free hands-on workshops sponsored by the DMC in Spring 2009 Classes include: Video editing Podcasting Flash Creating DVDs Using the Web for Research Zotero Digital Storytelling Study or hold meetings at the DMC 2nd floor devoted to study & meeting spaces Beautiful views Comfortable seating Configurable: move furniture around Can reserve classroom/meeting space, which features large display Videoconferencing unit on 2nd floor QuickTime™ and a decompressor are needed to see this picture. QuickTime™ and a decompressor are needed to see this picture. QuickTime™ and a decompressor are needed to see this picture. Work with Geospatial Data at the GIS/Data Center http://library.rice.edu/services/gdc/the-gis-data-center Location: basement of Fondren Library Resources Contact me with questions, comments, etc: [email protected] Visit the DMC web site: http://dmc.rice.edu/ Download your own copy of these slides from http://scholarship.rice.edu/handle/1911/21663 Find links cited in this talk at http://www.diigo.com/user/lspiro/dirtclass Visit DiRT (http://digitalresearchtools.pbwiki.com/) to find more information about digital research tools--and please provide feedback