10,713 research outputs found

    Benefits and (Sometime Hidden) Costs of Open Science

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    <p>Rick Anderson presented "Benefits and (Sometime Hidden) Costs of Open Science" during the 2023 Annual Forum for Open Research in Abu Dhabi, UAE. </p&gt

    Folding down the sheets/Merry Blacksmith

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    audioThis is a 1:12 sound file. Track 2 of a clawhammer banjo demo CD by Rick Anderson

    Red-Haired Boy/Speed the Plough/Old Mother Flanagan

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    audioThis is a 1:51 sound file. Track 3 of a clawhammer banjo demo CD by Rick Anderson

    Rickett\u27s/Staten Island/The Black Horse (Hornpipes)

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    audioThis is a 1:53 sound file. Track 1 of a clawhammer banjo demo CD by Rick Anderson

    Rick Anderson: Reconciling the Needs of Analysis and Advocacy in Scholarly-Communication Reform

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    A presentation by Rick Anderson, President of the Society for Scholarly Publishing & Associate Dean for Collections and Scholarly Communication at the University of Utah, at SFU Vancouver on October 25, 2016, during Open Access Week 2016. This talk was presented by the BC Research Libraries Group in celebration of Open Access Week 2016

    [2018 Part 1] Research publishing strategies: Asking the right questions in the right order

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    Rick Anderson, Associate Dean for Collections and Scholarly Communication at the University of Utah, is a regular contributor to the 'Scholarly Kitchen Blog' and past president of the Society for Scholarly Publishing. He is a popular speaker on subjects related to the future of scholarly communication and research libraries. Mr. Anderson will provide an interdisciplinary presentation on research publication strategies including traditional publishing avenues, open access options, author/publication charges, and how to watch out for predatory publishers.University Librarie

    Chapter 14: MD Anderson Publications and Publication Ethics

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    Dr. Goepfert has served on a number of editorial boards and is keenly interested in the educational dissemination of information critical to cancer research. In this section he talks about some of MD Anderson’s publications and also addresses some controversies with publication. He first raises the ethical issue of how authorship is assigned to a manuscript going out for publication. Today there are guidelines for assigning authorship, but twenty years ago, he explains, some department chairs at MD Anderson reviewed all manuscripts going for publication and insisted on being listed as first author of an article, whether they made any contribution to the research or not. Dr. Goepfert contrasts his own practice of putting his name on a paper only if he has contributed. Dr. Goepfert then shifts subjects and describes several MD Anderson educational publications, beginning with Cancer Bulletin, distributed free to all physicians across Texas.https://openworks.mdanderson.org/mchv_interviewchapters/2010/thumbnail.jp

    Research publishing strategies: Asking the right questions in the right order

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    Presenter Bio: Rick Anderson is Associate Dean for Collections and Scholarly Communication in the J. Willard Marriott Library at the University of Utah. He has worked previously as a bibliographer for YBP, Inc., as Head Acquisitions Librarian for the University of North Carolina, Greensboro, and as Director of Resource Acquisition at the University of Nevada, Reno. He serves on numerous editorial and advisory boards and is a regular contributor to the "Scholarly Kitchen." He has served as president of the North American Serials Interest Group (NASIG), and is recipient of the HARRASSOWITZ Leadership in Library Acquisitions Award, In 2015 he was elected President of the Society for Scholarly Publishing.Rick Anderson provides an interdisciplinary presentation on research publication strategies including tried-and-true traditional publishing avenues, open access options, author/publication charges, and how to watch out for publication options that are too good to be true (predatory publishing).University Lecture Series Sponsored Event, Texas State UniversityUniversity Librarie

    Promise - Spring 2020

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    Rogers Award honors MD Anderson nursing assistant MD Anderson awards highest nursing honor Low-grade serous ovarian cancer survivor establishes research nonprofit Celebrity Chef Cooking Demo makes young cancer patients sous-chefs for a day Bob’s Encore: hope in the fight against pancreatic cancer Board of Visitors welcomes seven new members Board of Visitors awards highest distinction to longtime member A Conversation with a Living Legend raises 4millionBootWalkraises4 million Boot Walk raises 2 million for cancer research, education and prevention Get to know Advance Team’s Laura Nelson Cookbook author leaves her mark on gastric cancer researchhttps://openworks.mdanderson.org/promise/1001/thumbnail.jp

    Chapter 09: Strengthening Biomedical Editing Nationwide and Within MD Anderson

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    In this Chapter, first briefly notes his involvement with the Southwest Chapter of the American Medical Writer’s Association and the Council of Biology Editors (with a 22-year membership). He then explains that he had his biggest impact while he served on the Board of Editors in the Life Sciences and in the late 80s worked on the Editorial Certification Examination Development Committee. He describes the examination he helped create to certify competence for editors of biomedical articles and explains the significance of certification. He notes that the Department of Scientific Publications at MD Anderson uses its own battery of tests to evaluate editors’ abilities for abstract reasoning, grammar, and other skills and talents. Next, Mr. Pagel talks about his Department’s blog, “The Write Stuff,” and two significant projects: his role on the Historical Resources Center Steering Committee, and the development of panel discussions for the Department of Scientific Publications. To begin the discussion of the Steering Committee, he notes that Scientific Publications wrote The First Twenty Years, the first history of MD Anderson. Because of this association with the institution’s history, Mr. Pagel was asked to be part of the Steering Committee when the Historical Resources Center was formed and set as its first goal the publication of an updated institutional history. Mr. Pagel wanted the perspective to be broader than the first book, situating MD Anderson and cancer research in a larger context of other cancer institutions and the history of cancer research. Though not alone in holding this view, he says he had something to do with articulating it for the benefit of the Steering Committee. He describes how James Olsen was selected to be the author and notes other Steering Committee activities.https://openworks.mdanderson.org/mchv_interviewchapters/2275/thumbnail.jp
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