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Social Networks in Digital Scholarship captions transcript

Social Networks in Digital Scholarship

Video recording of a presentation session at the 2014 Digital Frontiers Annual Conference. In this session, presenters discuss social networks in digital scholarship.
Date: September 18, 2014
Creator: Hall, Nathan; Chen, Stacy & Mapes, Kristen
Object Type: Video
System: The UNT Digital Library
Measurements of Atmospheric NH3, NOy/NOx, and NO2 and Deposition of Total Nitrogen at the Beaufort, NC CASTNET Site (BFT142) (open access)

Measurements of Atmospheric NH3, NOy/NOx, and NO2 and Deposition of Total Nitrogen at the Beaufort, NC CASTNET Site (BFT142)

Clean Air Status and Trends Network study on air pollution monitoring sites
Date: August 2014
Creator: United States. Environmental Protection Agency.
Object Type: Text
System: The UNT Digital Library
Faculty Attitudes Towards Institutional Repositories (open access)

Faculty Attitudes Towards Institutional Repositories

The purpose of the study was to explore faculty attitudes towards institutional repositories in order to better understand their research habits and preferences. A better understanding of faculty needs and attitudes will enable academic libraries to improve institutional repository services and policies. A phenomenological approach was used to interview fourteen participants and conduct eight observations to determine how tenure-track faculty want to disseminate their research as well as their attitudes towards sharing research data. Interviews were transcribed and coded into emerging themes. Participants reported that they want their research to be read, used, and to have an impact. While almost all faculty see institutional repositories as something that would be useful for increasing the impact and accessibility of their research, they would consider publishers’ rights before depositing work in a repository. Researchers with quantitative data, and researchers in the humanities are more likely to share data than with qualitative or mixed data, which is more open to interpretation and inference. Senior faculty members are more likely than junior faculty members to be concerned about the context of their research data. Junior faculty members’ perception’ of requirements for tenure will inhibit their inclination to publish in open access journals, or share …
Date: December 2014
Creator: Hall, Nathan F.
Object Type: Thesis or Dissertation
System: The UNT Digital Library