Effective Reasoning and problem solving

Cyberinfrastructure For Us All: An Introduction to Cyberinfrastructure and the Liberal Arts

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Made possible by dramatic advances in networking technologies, cyberinfrastructure promises to combine new computing capabilities, massive data resources and distributed human expertise to enable qualitatively different creative product from new generations of "knowledge environments." Introducing this timely collection of observations on how this will affect liberal arts disciplines and institutions, David Green reviews the distance we've come in the last 15 years and identifies the main themes of the essays, interviews and reviews that follow.

Beyond the ACLS Report: An interview with John Unsworth

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John Unsworth chaired the ACLS Commission that authored Our Cultural Commonwealth. In a conversation with Kevin Guthrie, he offers his own well-developed definition of cyberinfrastructure, talks about why and how the needs of the humanities should be considered separately, and explains how the report's framework has been useful already in developing new implementation strategies.

The Virtual Observatory and the Roman de la Rose: Unexpected Relationships and the Collaborative Imperative

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Scientists were not always good collaborators. In pondering the "unprecedented convergence of interest across C.P. Snow's Two Cultures in the promise of cyberinfrastructure and of data-driven research," the computer scientist/digital librarian Sayeed Choudhury and medieval scholar Timothy Stinson propose a new relationship between humanities scholars, their resources and their colleagues.

Cyberinfrastructure as Cognitive Scaffolding: The Role of Genre Creation in Knowledge Making

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This gripping account describes what the process and products of a new cyberscholarship might look like in the age of the Semantic Web, in which cyberinfrastructure’s potential as a "facilitator of a vast social process of meaning making" might be further developed.

Cyberinfrastructure: Leveraging Change at our Institutions. An interview with James J. O'Donnell

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Provost O'Donnell, author of Avatars of the Word, is fascinated by how "institutions full of creative, innovative, iconoclastic people" are paradoxically "bastions of conservatism." Guiding us through the texture of change since the Internet hit 15 years ago, O"Donnell posits that incremental change is perhaps the best we can do until the fundamental instruments of scholarly communication and the academic reward structure change: "until the problem we have to solve is defined persuasively enough that we get enough people interested in solving it."

Profiles of Key Cyberinfrastructure Organizations

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We present here a collection of short profiles, specially written for Academic Commons, on key service organizations and networks that will be poised to assist and lead others who are working to bring a rich cyberinfrastructure into play. Some are older humanities organizations for which cyberinfrastructure is a totally new environment, others have been created specifically around the provision of digital resources and support.

HCIL Symposium May 31, University of Maryland

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The 24th annual symposium of the always-compelling Human Computer Interaction Lab at the University of Maryland is this Thursday May 31. An interesting program, though it seems no webcast will be available.

 http://www.cs.umd.edu/hcil/soh/symposium.shtml

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