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Posted By John A. Wickenden,
23 August 2024
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UKeiG announces the 2024 call for nominations for 3 prestigious international awards
The UK e-information Group (UKeiG) is delighted to launch a call for nominations for three international awards in the fields of information retrieval, library and information services and open science.
All three awards are open to individuals or groups from anywhere in the world.
Nominations for all three 2024 awards must reach UKeiG by 6 pm GMT on Friday 27th September 2024.
The Tony Strix Award
The Tony Kent Strix Award was inaugurated in 1998 by the Institute of Information Scientists . It is presented by UKeiG in partnership with the International Society for Knowledge Organisation UK (ISKO UK), the Royal Society of Chemistry Chemical Information and Computer Applications Group (RSC CICAG) and the British Computer Society Information Retrieval Specialist Group (BCS IRSG) and awarded in recognition of an outstanding practical innovation or achievement in the field of information retrieval and search. Nominations must be for a major, sustained or influential achievement that meets one or more of the criteria listed below.
Science
The advancement of our understanding of information retrieval methods, experimentation and evaluation, at either the theoretical or the practical level. The scope includes approaches as diverse as linguistic, probabilistic, fact-checking or artificial intelligence applied to search.
Service Delivery
The development and management of systems, networks or services:
- Enhancement of the mechanisms/technology/standards underpinning information products or services
- Establishing an innovative information resource or service
- Innovations leading to improved accessibility/usability of information resources.
Education and organisational infrastructure
The provision of leadership in education, training, community development and/or collaboration to advance information retrieval at local, national or international level.
The Jason Farradane Award
The Jason Farradane Award is presented in recognition of an outstanding, creative and enterprising contribution to the wider library and information profession. It will be awarded to an individual or a team in recognition of exemplary and innovative practice. This may take the form of a specific project, a piece of research or the development of a service or resource.
The Award celebrates creativity and enterprise across the library and information profession in its broadest sense and honours Jason Farradane, who first made an impact on the LIS community with a paper on the ‘scientific approach to documentation’ presented at a Royal Society Scientific Information Conference in 1948. He was instrumental in establishing the Institute of Information Scientists in 1958, alongside the first academic information science courses in 1963 at the precursor to City University, London, where he became Director of the Centre for Information Science in 1966.
Nominations should meet one or more of the following criteria:
- Contributing to the creation, promotion and exploitation of digital resources and services
- Raising the profile of library and information services across the organisation
- Raising awareness of the value and impact of library and information services internally and/or externally
- Evidencing a significant contribution to organisational goals and strategies through internal and/or external collaborative partnerships and cross team working
- Demonstrating excellence in library and information science education and teaching
- Making a significant contribution to the theory and practice of library and information science.
The UKeiG Open Science Award
UKeiG’s inaugural open science award will be presented in recognition of an outstanding contribution in terms of digital/electronic information to one or more of the following areas of Open Science: Open Access, Open Data, Open Peer Review, Open Science Tools.
It will be awarded to an individual or a team in recognition of exemplary and innovative practice. This may, for example, take the form of a specific project, the development of a service, resource or research activity.
Nominations should meet one or more of the following criteria:
- Contributing to the creation, promotion and exploitation of Open Science resources, services and tools
- Raising awareness of the value and impact of Open Science internally and/or externally
- Evidencing a significant contribution to Open Science through internal and/or external collaborative partnerships
- Demonstrating excellence in support for and the implementation of Open Science
- Making a significant contribution to the theory and practice of Open Science.
Submission guidelines
In all cases nominations should take the form of a succinct justification (maximum 2 pages) for the individual or team nomination showing clearly which of the award criteria the nominee meets and how they are met. Please include full contact details, job title and qualifications of both the nominee and the nominator emailed to Richard Bridgen – Hon. Secretary UKeiG secretary.ukeig@cilip.org.uk and copied to: Gary Horrocks - info.ukeig@cilip.org.uk and Elizabeth Roberts – Hon. Treasurer UKeiG treasurer.ukeig@cilip.org.uk.
Please clarify in the email subject heading - ‘UKeiG 2024 award nomination’ - followed by the award name.
Self-nominations will not be accepted.
If you want your nomination to be considered in two or all three of the specified award areas, please clarify that in your justification.
Please include testimonials, letters of support, references, a selective bibliography relevant to the nomination, or links to supplementary information including professional profiles or social media, for example.
Please email info.ukeig@cilip.org.uk for more information and guidance.
Deadline
Nominations for all three 2024 awards must reach the UKeiG by 6 pm GMT on Friday 27th September 2024.
Further information
Further information about UKeiG awards and bursaries is available here , and includes previous winners.
Please share the news
The library and information science community is encouraged to raise awareness of these awards with individuals and groups in their networks and help encourage nomination submissions.
All winners will be invited to present at an awards ceremony in late November 2024 and featured in UKeiG’s open access e-journal eLucidate.
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Posted By Richard G. Bridgen,
12 April 2024
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The UKeiG Management Committee is delighted to announce that it is sponsoring two full bursary places (including travel and one night’s hotel accommodation) at CILIP Conference 2024, the UK’s leading event for the library, information and knowledge community.
Bursaries are offered to CILIP members who fall into at least one of the below categories:
- Students
- Those new to the profession (having joined the profession in the last 5 years)
- With earnings below £23,000 per annum
- Or who are unwaged.
Successful bursary recipients are expected to produce a written report of their experiences of and learning outcomes from the event. It will be published in UKeiG’s open access journal eLucidate and shared with the CILIP team to publish in print and/or online. The deadline for receipt of reports is 12th August 2024. You will also be expected to actively document your time at the conference on social media to support colleagues who are unable to attend.
Last year’s successful applicants wrote:
‘As a new professional, this was the first time I had been able to attend a major event like this in-person. It was a valuable experience to attend talks and get a feel for what is taking place in the wider sector. Returning to work after the CILIP conference has given me a boost and made me feel more connected to the UK library world.’
‘I am incredibly thankful that I had the opportunity to add my own voice to the mix of discussions that were held over the two days. The CILIP Conference was full of thought-provoking discussions and presentations, and it was a fantastic opportunity to be able to learn from other professionals in the library and information sector that were facing similar challenges.’
To Apply
Please email Richard Bridgen – Hon. Secretary UKeiG secretary.ukeig@cilip.org.uk and copy in Gary Horrocks - UKeiG administrator info.ukeig@cilip.org.uk and Elizabeth Roberts – Hon. Treasurer UKeiG treasurer.ukeig@cilip.org.uk with a succinct statement of no more than half a side of A4 outlining your interest in attending Conference 2024 and how this bursary place will support your professional development.
Please also confirm the following information:
- First name
- Surname
- Email
- Phone
- CILIP membership number
- Role/job title or unwaged/student status.
Please confirm that you fulfil the bursary criteria and are currently without the financial means to attend Conference 2024.
To help with your application, UKeiG showcases and celebrates digital knowledge and expertise, ensuring that members from all sectors are savvy with R&D and innovations across the information industry. Core topics in our portfolio include artificial intelligence, digital literacy, effective information retrieval and search technologies, enterprise search, social media, data visualisation and management, research support, scholarly communication and open access publishing.
CILIP members can join UKeiG for free via the CILIP website.
Applications must be received by 6 pm on Friday 31st May 2024.
About CILIP Conference 2024
10 - 11 July
Taking place over two days at the Hilton Birmingham Metropole, the event brings together established, emerging and aspiring leaders to discuss and explore ‘top of mind’ challenges and opportunities in the sector, including:
- Intellectual freedom, censorship and information rights
- Developing future literacy as a leader
- The sector’s response to the UN Sustainability Goals
- Crisis and strategic communications
- Building future resilience in the face of continuing resource and budget pressures.
As well as informing delegates of the sector’s latest developments, CILIP Conference will help delegates to move the needle on pressing issues within their organisation and aim to support a generation of emerging and aspiring leaders as they progress through the sector.
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CILIP Conference
UKeIG
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Posted By John A. Wickenden,
07 August 2023
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UKeiG is delighted to launch a call for nominations for three international awards in the fields of information retrieval/search, library and information services and open science.
All three awards are open to individuals or groups from anywhere in the world.
Nominations for all three 2023 awards must reach UKeiG by 6 pm GMT on Friday 29th September 2023.
1 - Information retrieval/search – The Tony Kent Strix Award
The Tony Kent Strix Award was inaugurated in 1998 by the Institute of Information Scientists. It is presented by UKeiG in partnership with the International Society for Knowledge Organisation UK (ISKO UK), the Royal Society of Chemistry Chemical Information and Computer Applications Group (RSC CICAG) and the British Computer Society Information Retrieval Specialist Group (BCS IRSG) and awarded in recognition of an outstanding practical innovation or achievement in the field of information retrieval and search. Nominations must be for a major, sustained or influential achievement that meets one or more of the criteria listed below.
Science
The advancement of our understanding of information retrieval methods, experimentation and evaluation, at either the theoretical or the practical level. The scope includes approaches as diverse as linguistic, probabilistic, fact-checking or artificial intelligence applied to search.
Service Delivery
The development and management of systems, networks or services:
Ø Enhancement of the mechanisms/technology/standards underpinning information products or services
Ø Establishing an innovative information resource or service.
Ø Innovations leading to improved accessibility/usability of information resources.
Education and organisational infrastructure
The provision of leadership in education, training, community development and/or collaboration to advance information retrieval at local, national or international level.
2 - Library and information services – The Jason Farradane Award
The Jason Farradane Award is presented in recognition of an outstanding, creative and enterprising contribution to the wider library and information profession. It will be awarded to an individual or a team in recognition of exemplary and innovative practice. This may take the form of a specific project, a piece of research or the development of a service or resource.
The Award celebrates creativity and enterprise across the library and information profession in its broadest sense and honours Jason Farradane, who first made an impact on the LIS community with a paper on the ‘scientific approach to documentation’ presented at a Royal Society Scientific Information Conference in 1948. He was instrumental in establishing the Institute of Information Scientists in 1958, alongside the first academic information science courses in 1963 at the precursor to City University, London, where he became Director of the Centre for Information Science in 1966.
Nominations should meet one or more of the following criteria:
Ø Contributing to the creation, promotion and exploitation of digital resources and services
Ø Raising the profile of library and information services across the organisation
Ø Raising awareness of the value and impact of library and information services internally and/or externally
Ø Evidencing a significant contribution to organisational goals and strategies through internal and/or external collaborative partnerships and cross team working
Ø Demonstrating excellence in library and information science education and teaching
Ø Making a significant contribution to the theory and practice of library and information science.
3 – The UKeiG Open Science Award
UKeiG’s inaugural open science award will be presented in recognition of an outstanding contribution in terms of digital/electronic information to one or more of the following areas of Open Science: Open Access, Open Data, Open Peer Review, Open Science Tools.
It will be awarded to an individual or a team in recognition of exemplary and innovative practice. This may, for example, take the form of a specific project, the development of a service, resource or research activity.
Nominations should meet one or more of the following criteria:
Ø Contributing to the creation, promotion and exploitation of Open Science resources, services and tools
Ø Raising awareness of the value and impact of Open Science internally and/or externally
Ø Evidencing a significant contribution to Open Science through internal and/or external collaborative partnerships
Ø Demonstrating excellence in support for and the implementation of Open Science
Ø Making a significant contribution to the theory and practice of Open Science.
Submission guidelines
In all cases nominations should take the form of a succinct justification (maximum 2 pages) for the individual or team nomination showing clearly which of the award criteria the nominee meets and how they are met. Please include full contact details, job title and qualifications of both the nominee and the nominator emailed to
Richard Bridgen – Hon. Secretary UKeiG secretary.ukeig@cilip.org.uk and copied to:
Gary Horrocks - UKeiG administrator info.ukeig@cilip.org.uk and
Sue Silcocks – Hon. Treasurer UKeiG treasurer.ukeig@cilip.org.uk.
Please clarify in the email subject heading - ‘UKeiG 2023 award nomination’ - followed by the award name.
Self-nominations will not be accepted.
If you want your nomination to be considered in two or all three of the specified award areas, please clarify that in your justification.
Please include testimonials, letters of support, references, a selective bibliography relevant to the nomination, or links to supplementary information including professional profiles or social media, for example.
Please email info.ukeig@cilip.org.uk for more information and guidance.
Deadline
Nominations for all three 2023 awards must reach the UKeiG by 6 pm GMT on Friday 29th September 2023.
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Awards
Farradane
Open Access
Strix
UKeiG
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Posted By John A. Wickenden,
07 August 2023
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UKeiG's professional development workshop portfolio includes practical insight into topics including: digital literacy, information science, retrieval and search technologies, AI (including natural language processing), enterprise search, social media, research support, data management (including visualisation), scholarly communication, publishing and open science/open access.
Upcoming courses for the last quarter of 2023 include:
Communicating and tracking research impact using social media, blogs and altmetrics.
18/10/2023
This workshop will explore the benefits and potential drawbacks of the rapidly changing world of social media as a knowledge network. It will enable you to make informed decisions about communication platforms that you should consider investing your time in. There will be advice and tips on deploying short form social media tools including Twitter and Mastodon more efficiently in a professional setting. We will cover the often ignored but hugely important issue of reputation management and how you can protect your social media profile from threats and deal with issues that might impact negatively on you or your organisation’s reputation. The workshop will also address the longer form of written research communications and you will learn useful skills to assist you in blogging and writing lay summaries. Delegates will explore how to write for the media and how to respond when the media takes an interest in your research. We will also address maximising impact, how altmetrics work as a complement to traditional bibliometrics, and why they are an important tool for tracking interest and engagement relating to your communications and outputs. AI tools to help save you time and communicate research better will be highlighted during the workshop.
Artificial intelligence for librarians, information and knowledge professionals
26/10/2023
AI has provided daily news headlines over the last six months, sparking curiosity but also uncertainty, even anxiety. There is hype, but also hope. It is a key professional issue touching on every aspect of the work of the library and information science community, with relevance to the critical appraisal of content validity, data quality and management, ethics, intellectual property, plagiarism and legal compliance. This three-hour workshop seeks to inform delegates about the nature of AI and to get to grips with how to use it responsibly. This workshop is an introduction to AI designed specifically for library, information and knowledge professionals to enable them to get up to speed on this critical topic. As well as introducing the applications of AI in an accessible way, part of the course is designed to give delegates an insight into what is involved ‘under the hood’ of AI applications. We aim to provide you with theoretical and practical experience of working with some AI tools.
Search Usability
08/11/2023
This workshop explores the fundamental concepts and principles of User-Centred Design for information search and discovery and demonstrates how to apply them to a range of practical contexts. Participants will learn how to differentiate between various types of information-seeking behaviour, develop an understanding of key dimensions within the search user experience, and discover how to apply UI design principles to commercial search applications. The session includes an opportunity to apply these skills to a range of practical design challenges.
Research Data Management for information professionals – from researcher need to effective service
09/11/2023
Who are your researchers and how do they perceive their research? What is their data and in what ways does it need managing better? What are their drivers and barriers for sharing data? What is the best way to find out what your researchers need? What services do researchers need through the research lifecycle?
Making your research stand out from the crowd using video, animation, infographics and podcasts.
16/11/2023
This workshop will explore the benefits of video, animation, infographics and podcasts as a complement to short and long form communication techniques like Twitter and blogging. Video, animation, infographics and podcasts can broadcast your research and professional activities to a diverse international audience, showcasing and engaging in ways that traditional forms of scholarly communication cannot. While evidence suggests that visually stunning research outputs can increase the reach and impact of your research, many academics and research professionals are reticent to deploy multimedia tools feeling that they lack the creative and technical know-how. This workshop will demystify many of the issues by exploring a portfolio of affordable and free online tools you can use to enhance your communication activities.
Data Visualisation for librarians, information and knowledge professionals
27/11/2023
Data Visualisation - the representation, interpretation and understanding of data through graphics - offers invaluable opportunities to transform your datasets and communicate complex research outputs and quantitative information to a much wider audience. It can surface insightful and compelling context and enables you to explore data relationships not immediately apparent using traditional statistical methods and analysis. It is crucial to understand the opportunities open access tools can offer in visualising data. The library, information and knowledge sector is data-rich, regularly collating statistics to evidence service value and impact and advise decision makers. This data may take the form of library usage and stock circulation statistics, utilisation of digital content, satisfaction surveys and user experience studies, for example. Open data science and linked data are an integral part of Open Science and Open Access, and Artificial Intelligence is built on data literacy, management, validity and integrity. This workshop will introduce and explore data visualisation theory and applications with advice and tips throughout. A key practical element of the workshop will include hands on experience of setting up and working with a visual analytics platform.
For more information, including presenter profiles, learning outcomes, cost and online booking please go to:
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Artificial Intelligence
CPD
UKeiG
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Posted By Administration,
31 May 2023
Updated: 30 May 2023
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The 45th Annual General Meeting of UKeiG, the UK eInformation Group, will be held via Zoom on Thursday 29th June 2023
Motions for the Annual General Meeting must be sent in writing via email to: Richard Bridgen, UKeiG Honorary Secretary, secretary.ukeig@cilip.org.uk
Motions must be signed by two members of the Group.
Motions must reach the Honorary Secretary by Wednesday, 21st June 2023.
The AGM will be held before UKeiG's Members' Forum. Full details and booking here.
See AGM Documents here.
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Artificial Intelligence
eLucidate
Open Access
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Posted By Emma Deacon,
22 February 2023
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The UK electronic information Group (UKeiG) is pleased to announce three half-day online CPD courses that will interest research and research support staff.
Opportunities to communicate research to specialist and wide audiences have never been better. Inexpensive and effective technologies alongside social media and blogging platforms means impactful scholarly communications do not have to take much time and effort if used properly. Platforms for communicating research such as Twitter, YouTube, traditional media and blogs, give academics and their project teams greater visibility than ever before.
Infographics, data visualisation, podcasts and animation provide quick and simple ways to disseminate research and ideas if you find your voice, audience and the time. Many of these tools are free and can work in tandem to create a visual identity for any academic regardless of their field of work. In addition, researchers will be empowered to reach diverse new audiences that are not just academic peers, but publishers, editors, fund holders and the public.
- Making your research stand out from the crowd using video, animation, infographics - 1 pm - 4 pm on Thursday 9th March 2023. Topics covered include: tools to help you turn a piece of research into a video presentation, screencast or animation and creating research communication podcasts, infographics and eye-catching posters
- Interactive tools for presentations - 1 pm - 4 pm on Thursday 23rd March 2023. How do we truly engage our audience when presenting ideas? There are plenty of freely available tools which allow more interaction, which can be used either instead of or alongside traditional presentation tools like PowerPoint
- Communicating and tracking research using social media, blogging and altmetrics - 1 pm - 4 pm on Wednesday 29th March 2023. Topics covered include: managing your reputation online, research blogging and working with the media - how to turn a piece of research into a blog article, altmetrics and alternative indicators of scholarly interest
Booking and payment
Each course (including presentation slides and documentation) costs:
UKeiG/CILIP members £50 + VAT
Non-members £80 + VAT
Employer Partner staff £64 + VAT (Please contact your rep or email employerpartners@cilip.org.uk for the discount code)
Credit and debit cards are the preferred method of payment. Invoices are available on request using the online ‘Bill Me’ option.
For more information, and to book online, go to: https://www.cilip.org.uk/events/event_list.asp?show=&group=201314
Tags:
CPD resources
Events
Professional Development
Social Media
training course
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Posted By John A. Wickenden,
22 December 2022
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We are pleased to announce that the joint winners of the prestigious international 2022 Tony Kent Strix Memorial Award given in recognition of an outstanding practical innovation or achievement in the field of information retrieval are:
- Iadh Ounis, Professor of Information Retrieval, School of Computing Science, University of Glasgow, and
- Dr. Ryen White, General Manager and Partner Research Director at Microsoft Research
The judging panel congratulates them on their prolific and significant contributions to information retrieval research and development on multiple fronts, most notably the search experience. Their high impact publication records and scholarly contributions are peerless and international support for their nominations was overwhelming across the information retrieval community.
Professor Ounis is noted for his sustained contributions to advances in information retrieval, his inspirational leadership, commitment to PhD education and research and contributions to R&D through open-source software and information retrieval tools. The highly valued Terrier and PyTerrier platforms have been utilised extensively across the information retrieval community and advanced research significantly. He has focused on designing intelligent technology that enables people to access information, developing new models and techniques for search engines. His work is at the intersection of information retrieval, machine learning and big data systems where data driven models are learned from the users' interactions with the system. His work on many information retrieval tasks including expert search models, search results diversification, search ranking, recommendation, fake news detection and query performance prediction has furthered the community’s understanding of some of the most fundamental information retrieval questions.
Dr. White has made important contributions to information retrieval, search interaction models and health informatics, mainly focussed on understanding and enriching user interactions with information retrieval systems. He leads multidisciplinary research teams that have developed new techniques and advanced the state of the art in projects spanning artificial intelligence, human-computer Interaction and systems development. His user- and task-centric collaboration with Microsoft colleagues has pushed the boundaries in web and enterprise search. His research has underpinned the development and enhancement of widely available Microsoft products and services including the Cortana digital assistant, Bing, Xbox, Internet Explorer, Skype, Windows, Office and Azure. He was also the chief scientist at Microsoft Health.
For details go to the Tony Kent Strix Award page.
A Zoom date for your diary
Two online Strix Memorial Lectures will be presented by Professor Ounis and Dr. White on the afternoon of Thursday 23rd February 2023. Book your place here. The event will be free of charge.
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Posted By John A. Wickenden,
04 November 2021
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CILIP Special Interest Groups, the Knowledge and Information Management Group (K&IM) and the UK e-information Group (UKeiG), are delighted to announce that the winner of their prestigious Information Manager of the Year Award, 2021 is Dr Andrew Cox, Senior Lecturer, Information School, Sheffield University.
The award will be presented at the Knowledge & Information Management virtual Awards evening on Wednesday 10th November starting at 5. 30 pm. Please join us for this free event as we celebrate all the K&IM Award winners for 2021.
Book to attend the awards here.
The Information Manager of the Year Award is presented to professionals who have raised awareness of, and made a significant contribution to, the value and impact of knowledge and information management in the workplace and across the LIS sector.
The judging panel was unanimous in its decision that Andrew has had an outstanding and distinguished career as a library and information science researcher, teacher and author. His research interests include the evolution of library work in response to contemporary challenges like big data, RDM and AI; new modes of learning; and the crisis in mental health and well-being.
His independently researched report – ‘The Impact of AI, machine learning, automation and robotics on the information profession’ - published by CILIP in 2020 with the support of Health Education England ’ - called for a ‘joined-up and coherent response from information professionals, enabling us to maximise the benefits of AI, machine learning, automation and robotics for information users while mitigating the emerging risks.’
Details of Dr Cox’s teaching and research activities and a full list of his publications can be found here.
Andrew’s nomination was accompanied by a glowing seal of approval from Nick Poole, CEO CILIP and Sue Lacey-Bryant, National Lead, NHS Knowledge and Library Services and CILIP Trustee.
‘Dr Cox is a leading figure in developing new thinking about the implications of new technologies for the information community. His 2017 research paper for SCONUL, “Mapping the Future of Academic Libraries” – (co-authored with Stephen Pinfield and Sophie Rutter) - enabled the HE/academic library community to re-think their role in an age of AI, machine learning and big data. His recent AI report is a landmark piece of research, a central contribution to the development of a “future-ready” library, information and knowledge workforce which sets an agenda for the development of our specialist workforce of today and tomorrow. Crystallising the implications of the fourth industrial revolution for the sector, his work demonstrates a talent for grasping complexity while remaining strongly connected to the core purpose of librarianship and information science.’
Tags:
Artificial Intelligence
Automation
Information Management
Information Manager
K&IM
Machine Learning
Robotics
Sheffield University
UKeiG
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Posted By John A. Wickenden,
08 October 2021
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The International Library & Information Group (ILIG) and the UK electronic information Group (UKeiG) are pleased to announce a free informal event ‘Partnerships with Global South countries: developing a generic model’ from 6pm on Wednesday 20th October 2021.
CILIP has the potential to play an important role in partnering with Global South countries, multinational agencies and funders in order to:
- improve Global South countries’ information and knowledge infrastructures
- raise awareness of their needs
- learn from their innovations and practice.
The role might be characterised as a catalyst, leveraging (pro bono) the professional expertise of CILIP members to develop and support projects in partnership with funders, multinational agencies and individual countries.
This joint Informal session will facilitate discussion about the concept of a generic model and how it might be developed. It will be led by David Ball; with additional speakers to be announced.
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Global South
ILIG
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Posted By John A. Wickenden,
04 October 2021
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We are pleased to announce four upcoming online CPD workshops. Programme details, pricing and online registration will be available here: https://www.cilip.org.uk/events/event_list.asp?show=&group=201314 (or click on the title links below)
Tags:
CPD
eResources
information management courses
Professional Development
training course
UKeiG
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