[Asis-l] NFAIS Event: Social Media and the Future of Scholarly Communication / May 1 2009

McKiernan, Gerard [LIB] gerrymck at iastate.edu
Tue Apr 28 13:32:46 EDT 2009


Colleagues/

 

A May Day NFAIS Event !

 

BTW: NFAIS = National Federation of Abstracting and Information
Services_

 

/Gerry 

 

_Social Media and the Future of Scholarly Communication

 

Lyrasis Office / May 1 2009 / Philadelphia, PA 

 

BTW-2: Lyrasis = PALINET + SOLINET 

 

[snip]

 

Not so today! Information technology, the Web, and the introduction of
social media have not only broadened the geographic scope of scholarly
communication beyond that of the print environment, but have
re-introduced social dialog and immediate feedback into the scholarly
communication process on a global scale. 

 

Scholars worldwide are embracing this change. But the organizations that
have been primarily responsible for managing the flow of scholarly
communication for the past three hundred plus years publishers,
abstracting and indexing services, and librarians have not, for the most
part, discovered how to interject their function and adapt their
processes to the newly-emerging conversational communication process. 

 

This meeting will provide a glimpse at how social media are beginning to
transform the scholarly communication process and how content providers
and librarians are using social media to meet the needs and expectations
of 21st century scholars.

 

Partial Program

 

>Overview: Acceptance and Use of Social Media in Scholarly Communication


 

Steve Paxhia, Lead Analyst, Publishing Strategy & Technology
Practice,The Gilbane Group

 

>Content-Rich Scholarly Social Networks

 

Jeff Boily, CEO, BioWizard / Lettie Conrad, Online Publishing/Product
Manager, Sage Publications, Inc. 

 

>The Use of Social Media by Publishers and Scholarly Societies

 

John Sullivan, Chief Information Officer, the American Chemical Society
/ Jason Wilde, Publisher, Physical Sciences, Nature Publishing Group

 

>Technology Resources for Building Social Networks and Incorporating
Social Media

 

Dr. Bay Arinze, Professor of Management Information Systems, Drexel
University and Founder and Senior Editor of MyNetResearch / Reynolds
Guida, Director, Product Development, Thomson Reuters, Scientific and
Healthcare Unit 

 

>Social Media in the Library Environment

 

Jill Hurst-Wahl, Instructor, School of Information Studies, Syracuse
University / Wayne Hay, IT Manager, Westchester Library System, New York

 

Challenges to Adopting Social Media

 

Jay Datema, Founder, Bookism.org

 

Closing Keynote: Social Media and the Future of Scholarly Communication

 

Darin McBeath, Director of Disruptive Technologies, Elsevier

 

Registration [After April 10, 2009]

 

NFAIS Members / $345 ; PALINET Members / $365 ; Non-members / $395

 

Thanks To Marydee Ojala / Editor, ONLINE: Exploring Technology &
Resources For Information Professionals / For The Reminder !!!

 

Links to All Associated Forms/BioSketch and The Full Program, Including
Abstracts Are Available At 

 

[ http://tinyurl.com/c5cgkq ]

 

/Gerry

 

Gerry McKiernan

Associate Professor

Science and Technology Librarian

Iowa State University Library

Ames IA 50011

 

gerrymck at iastate.edu    

 

There is Nothing More Powerful Than An Idea Whose Time Has Come / Victor
Hugo 

[ http://www.blogger.com/profile/09093368136660604490 ]

 

Iowa: Where the Tall Corn Flows and the (North)West Wind Blows 

 [ http://alternativeenergyblogs.blogspot.com/ ]

 

 

 

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