{"id":1898,"date":"2013-11-16T05:14:03","date_gmt":"2013-11-16T05:14:03","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/notebooks.dataone.org\/?p=1898"},"modified":"2013-11-16T05:14:03","modified_gmt":"2013-11-16T05:14:03","slug":"archiving-citation-libraries-for-open-notebook-science","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/notebooks.dataone.org\/data-science\/archiving-citation-libraries-for-open-notebook-science\/","title":{"rendered":"Archiving Citation Libraries for Open Notebook Science"},"content":{"rendered":"
In May when my open notebook was first set up, I considered the idea of “media management” in a post called “Open Notebook Science – Media Management.<\/a>”<\/p>\n I touched on Mendeley, Figshare, and Flickr as potential ways of sharing media.<\/p>\n I now want to point out another post by Carly Strasser<\/a> under the DataONE for Librarians category<\/a> entitled “Researcher Needs Assessment Bibliography<\/a>” because it includes another tool I had not considered called “Cite U Like.”<\/p>\n Either comment on this blog post or\u00a0join CiteULike<\/a>\u00a0and add a reference to the\u00a0RDMneeds Group Library<\/a>.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n I’m thinking of this because yesterday<\/a> I made some notes about “I like this” in regards to citations. \u00a0It’s worthwhile to copy and past things out to reference later – but in terms of accessing it I’d prefer to have something more dynamic, open, and broadly accessible.<\/p>\n It does concern me that something like CiteULike<\/a> could go the way of Connotea, Magnolia<\/a>, or Google Reader. A more complex story is that of the social bookmarking service “del.icio.us” or “Delicious” promising “tastiest bookmarks on the Web.” Ultimately Yahoo! decided that tasty bookmarks were no longer its strong suite; they sold Delicious and all the bookmarks therein. However I can attest that while the bookmarks were preserved, not all the functionality was, or even all of the bookmark: the new site had a tighter character limit on descriptive text. \u00a0(I moved my bookmarks to Diigo soon after Delicious’ uncertain future was announced)<\/p>\n The point of this is to say that an open notebook science workflow needs to account for the possibility \/ likelihood that an online media management system might end up going extinct – or at least undergo a “loss” mutation.<\/p>\n So in setting up something like the “Researcher Needs Assessment Bibliography” group at <http:\/\/www.citeulike.org\/group\/18394<\/a>> or some other document libraries set up, for example, by 2011 DataONE summer intern Jonathon Carlson<\/a>\u00a0who created a handful of document libraries on Mendeley – see for example <https:\/\/notebooks.dataone.org\/data-reuse\/links-to-mendeley-data\/<\/a>> there needs to be a mechanism for “hands free” importing of bookmarks.<\/p>\n As an aside – this is actually fascinating in how closely aligned to the CiteULike group this is – there is a “Data Management For Librarians<\/a>” group on Mendeley which former DataONE summer intern Carlson is also a member.<\/p>\n Regarding exports of bookmarks \/ bibliographies on autopilot – CiteULike provides the following export options – even to someone like myself who is not logged in:<\/p>\n