
FORCE2016 Conference Slides and Recordings
Welcome session: Introductions and Insights
Jeanette Mladenovic, Cameron Neylon, Melissa HaendelOregon Health & Science University
Introduction to the Session: Communicate your scholarship effectively: We share, we write, but are we understood?
Co-chairs: Bruno Paschoal and Mercè CrosasThe curse of knowledge: why we communicate badly (in any medium)
Steven PinkerDepartment of Psychology, Harvard University
From bits to narratives: The rapid evolution of data visualization engines
Cesar A. HidalgoAssociate Professor, The MIT Media Lab, MIT
Invited talk: Communicating science: Distilling your message
Christie NicholsonAlan Alda Center for Communicating Science
Introduction to the Concurrent session: Altmetrics and my career: real barriers or limitations of our minds?
Co-chairs: Stacy Konkiel and Robin ChampieuxExploring the meaning of altmetrics
Stefanie HausteinUniversity of Montreal
Demonstrating impact as a practitioner-researcher
Heather CoatesIUPUI University Library
Using altmetrics to track open science activities
Holly BikCenter for Genomics & Systems Biology at New York University
Introduction to the Concurrent session: Libraries united in opening new scholarly platforms
Co-Chairs: Steve Van Tuyl and Robert McDonaldUniversity publishing in the UK and Jisc
Chris KeeneHead of library and scholarly futures, Jisc
Understanding the needs of scholars in a contemporary publishing environment
Maria BonnEditor Journal of Electronic Publishing, Sr Lecturer University of Illinois
Research Ideas and Outcomes
Daniel MietchenFounding Editor RIO Journal
Data Publishing and Institutional Repositories
Varsha KodiyarData Curation Editor, Scientific Data , Nature Publishing Group
Keynote talk: Digital disease detection and the future of participatory research
John BrownsteinChief Innovation Officer, Boston Children’s Hospital, Professor at Harvard Medical School, Co-Creator, HealthMap
Introduction to the Session: Data by the People, For the People
Co-chairs: Catherine Brownstein and Rose RelevoCrowdsourced human genetics: What if we put people first?
Bastian GreshakeopenSNP
Phenopackets: Making phenotype profiles fair++ for disease Diagnosis and Discovery
Melissa HaendelOregon Health & Science University
Overcoming obstacles to sharing data about human subjects
Robin RiceUniversity of Edinburgh
Peer review after results are known: Are we “parking” the cart before the horse?
Erick TurnerOregon Health & Science University
The power of the community: Letting patients speak for themselves
Dr. Erik JonesInspire
Questions & Panel discussion – Session: Data by the People, For the People
John Brownstein, Bastian Greshake, Erick Turner, Melissa Haendel, and Robin RiceConcurrent Session: Starting off on the right foot with Data Management
Co-chairs: Rebecca Boyles and Danny KingsleyIntroduction to the Concurrent session: No see, No touch traps: Still struggling to escape or free at last?
Chair: Marguerite AveryMake it machine readable, or the public (doesn’t) get it
Neil Chue HongSoftware Sustainability Institute – University of Edinburgh
Costs and benefits of open data in biomedical research
Irene PasquettoUCLA
Reaggregating Primary Research Outputs
Todd VisionUniversity of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Looking beyond gold: open access to research itself
Chris ChapmanPentandra
Keynote talk: Structural disruptions in the reward system of science
Cassidy SugimotoAssociate Professor, School of Informatics and Computing, Indiana University Bloomington
Introduction to the Session: Working beyond borders: supporting global creation of and engagement with knowledge
Dominique Babini (Chair)CLACSO
Empowering indigenous peoples’ knowledge systems related to climate change and intellectual property rights
Laura FosterDepartment of Gender Studies, Indiana University Maurer School of Law, USA