Showing posts with label research. Show all posts
Showing posts with label research. Show all posts

9.12.10

Searcher - a one stop shop for accelerated full text results

Searcher allows DIT users to accelerate your searching across up to 16 DIT library databases at once, with more databases to be added in the next few weeks. A list of the databases covered is available on the Advanced Search page.
  • Results can be emailed or downloaded to a citation reader.
  • Searcher removes duplicate results, and then weighs the relevance of each result.
  • Define your search using including specific phrases and complex Boolean operators.
  • Advanced search - search for the precise details needed, like an author name or a publication date.

See for yourselves  from the Library Services Homepage (half way down, left hand side).

We welcome your feedback




24.8.10

MyRI Project- Measuring your research impact

DIT Library & Partners Win Funding for Bibliometrics Research
Introducing the MyRI project - Measuring Your Research Impact

This is a collaboration between four academic libraries
and two academic units: UCD Library (project lead); DCU Library; DIT Library; the library at NUI Maynooth; the School of Computer Science & Informatics at UCD; the Department of Geography at Maynooth.

Bibliometrics is used to measure research publications and is one key approach being used to assess research impact. This project will lay the ground for collaborations between the six partners to make best use of expertise, to maximise our research impact.


A successful bid was made for project funding from the NDLR LInCS (National Digital Learning Resources - Learning Innovation Community Support) 2010 programme with the materials available at the end of the year and showcased in the annual NDLR event. We are very pleased with the success of this proposal given the strength of the competition this year - only 12 of 41 submissions were accepted.

8.6.10

Ireland's National Portal for Open Access to Research Goes Live



Ireland’s new national portal for Open Access to Irish published research will go live today.




RIAN - http://www.rian.ie/ will act as a single point of access to national research output, and contains content harvested from the institutional repositories of the seven Irish Universities and Dublin Institute of Technology. RIAN will significantly increase the visibility and impact of Irish research and will expand to harvest content from other Irish Open Access providers as the service develops.

A national network of institutional repositories will increase the exposure of national research output, and allows services, such as enhanced searching, and statistics generation, to be developed using economies of scale. RIAN will demonstrate the impact of research to potential funders, who recognise the value of wider research dissemination.

The Irish Government has identified growth in research as critical to its future as a knowledge economy. Raising the research profile is a key strategy in the Universities’ strategic plans, and the ability to showcase research output and identify institutional research strengths is extremely important in attracting new funding and high quality staff.

The development of RIAN was managed by the Irish Universities Association Librarians' Group and is supported by the Association. This three year project was equally funded by the Universities and the Irish Government’s Strategic Innovation Fund which is administered by the Higher Education Authority.

19.1.10

Open Access Mandate - Another first for DIT


The open access mandate makes the results of DIT's research activity available over the Internet via Arrow. It ensures the rapid dissemination of results, and is free of charge to all end users. As a consequence, the impact of the research is greatly increased and the reputations of individual researchers, Schools and DIT as a whole are all considerably enhanced. The current issue of Update has the full story.

12.11.09

Scholarly communication in the 21st Century


A one-day seminar will be held on Friday 4th December in Room 5/050 in Aungier Street.

Increasingly, researchers and their institutions are providing free, online and immediate open access to the results of their work - including full text journal articles, conference papers, reports book chapters, visual images....... The seminar will explore issues surrounding this trend, offering answers to some frequently asked questions.

The keynote speaker is Professor Jane Grimson of Trinity College Dublin and Chair of IRCSET: The Irish Research Council for Science, Engineering and Technology.

The seminar is free of charge and includes lunch but places are limited. Please register here. Registration closes on 27th November. Full programme details are available here.

This event is organised by DIT Library Services - as part of its ongoing efforts to support research activity in the Institute and in the wider academic community in Ireland.

20.10.09

Open Access Week



This week is Open Access Week – celebrating the global reach of free, online and immediate open access to the results of scholarly research from leading Universities and researchers. Further details are at http://www.openaccessweek.org/

The Institute contributes to this world-wide movement with Arrow@dit which is our own open access collection of full text publications from researchers at DIT. It includes journal articles, conference papers, reports, book chapters and theses.
Information about authors' rights to the work they produce is presented in a short YouTube video at http://youtube.com/watch?v=9zVkoovsG2s

Information about Arrow is available from Yvonne Desmond, the Arrow Repository Manager. Contact Yvonne for any other information you require.

27.4.09

Change of Venue - Web of Knowledge Training April 30th

Guillaume Rivalle - customer trainer from Thomson Reuters will present a training session on Web of Knowledge in Lecture Theatre Room 4079 on April 30th, starting at 9.30am. Training will cover Journal Citation Reports as well as searching across the 3 citation indexes - Social Sciences, Arts and Humanities and Science. Training is open to academic and library staff as well as research students and will include specific training for researchers on citation impact factors, how to improve them, the h-index etc.

If you would like to attend, please e-mail:-
anne.ambrose@dit.ie Places are still available.

25.2.09

Publishing Essentials

All books and reports published in Ireland must be 'deposited' in a small number of libraries - to ensure copies are available for public access. In addition, an ISBN: International Standard Book Number is available for all such works. A book with an ISBN often sells better than one without!

Further details about legal deposit and ISBNs are available at http://update.dit.ie/16-02-09/04news-briefs-PublishinginDIT.php


Dr Philip Cohen

Head of Library Services

Dublin Institute of Technology


http://www.dit.ie/library