User:Daniel Mietchen/Talks/Wikipedia for Health/Safety Research and Data 2015

About edit

This page belongs to a talk given as part of the Wikipedia for Health/Safety Research and Data (WHSRD) in Washington, DC.

Title edit

Wikimedia and scholarly communication

Abstract edit

There are multiple ways in which Wikimedia platforms interact with scholarly communications. This talk will zoom in to the interface of the two, both on a technical and a community level. It will highlight how content finds its way from scholarly communications into Wikimedia projects and sometimes vice versa, how data, metadata, software, infrastructure and the workflows of people and bots fit into the picture.

A video recording of a similar talk given at CERN some years back is available via https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Daniel_Mietchen/Talks/CERN_2012 .

Formats edit

Wikimedia edit

 
Logos of Wikimedia projects, with Wikidata missing. Counterclockwise, starting on top: Wikimania, Wikibooks, Meta-Wiki, Wikiquote, Wikispecies, MediaWiki, Wikimedia Incubator, Wikivoyage, Wikidata, Wikiversity, Wiktionary, Wikinews, Wikisource, Wikimedia Commons, Wikipedia.

Publishing edit

Wikimedia about publishing edit

Wikimedia and Open Access edit

Wikimedia and subscription access edit

Publishing about Wikimedia edit

Wikimedia about publications about Wikimedia edit

Journal ↔ wiki publishing edit

     
Bliven, S.; Prlić, A. (2012). Wodak, Shoshana (ed.). "Circular Permutation in Proteins". PLoS Computational Biology. 8 (3): e1002445. doi:10.1371/journal.pcbi.1002445. PMC 3320104. PMID 22496628.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: unflagged free DOI (link), CC BY Wikipedia: Circular permutation in proteins, CC BY-SA A journal article whose text corresponds to this version of the Wikipedia article Dengue fever, CC BY-SA. Extension of this scheme through peer review by BMJ — see unconference session by Anthony Cole.

Overview Commentary

Publishing beyond papers edit

Citing edit

Citing journals in wiki edit

Citing wiki in journals edit

Reusing edit

Reusing journal materials in wiki edit

Open Access Media Importer edit

An example of open science - from the grant proposal to all outputs.

Reusing wiki materials in journal edit

Translations edit

Curating via Wikimedia edit

Role of repositories edit

  • Interoperability
    • is key to reuse
    • requires standardization

JATS edit

Visualizations edit

Long-term vision edit

Sharing research with the world as soon as it is recorded, in a way that is integrated with research workflows rather than added on top of them (cf. Geoffrey Bilder's talk). Now imagine this with open licenses and public version histories as the default setting. Video also available on Vimeo.

Wikidata for research edit

Contact edit