Given the expansion of machine interaction and content navigation, the robustness of the scholarly graph is vital, meaning persistent identifiers are vital as well.
The interactive virtual conference will bring together participants from across the information community and around the world to tackle the “big issues” in scholarly communications.
Just-released research centers on current collaborative models in place, lessons learned thus far, and stakeholder insights. Shown is lead author Tracey Bergstrom, Program Manager, ITHAKA S+R.
The article published by the ACM reviews a variety of tools useful to organizations seeking to improve their cybersecurity and protect digital assets from unauthorized incursions.
The Office's report on uses of artificial intelligence will be released in several parts. This segment specifically addresses the topic of AI and (fake) digital replicas.
ISO standards on ergonomic principles and agile, support for internationalization scripts from Unicode and W3C, W3C accessibility, and Core scholarship application.
This initiative from the Copyright Clearance Center represents the first-ever collective licensing solution for the internal use of copyrighted materials in AI systems.
The authors argue for the critical importance of the accurate identification and labeling of retracted scientific literature in content provider databases.
As part of the American Library Association Annual Conference in San Diego, attendees of the Annual NISO-BISG Forum explored potential opportunities and the impact of AI in publishing.
After a brief hiatus, NISO's programs return with a two-part series on collaborative collections, followed by two events: webinars on the importance of metadata in AI and solutions for improving website accessibility.
Hargitt is enthusiastic about the value of the Recommended Practice for vendors and systems suppliers as they work to communicate retractions and errors.