ASIS&T annual meeting pre-conference activities: The history of ASIS&T and information science and technology

Author(s):  
Karen Miller
2014 ◽  
Vol 31 (1) ◽  
pp. 8-10
Author(s):  
Annamarie C. Klose

Purpose – The purpose of this article is to report on sessions the author attended at the 2013 ASIS&T Conference. Design/methodology/approach – The approach is an informal review of sessions and events the author attended. Findings – This report condenses the author's notes from various events and sessions at the conference. Originality/value – This is an original conference report written after attending the conference.


2020 ◽  
Vol 4 (2) ◽  
pp. 119-126
Author(s):  
Angela P. Murillo ◽  
Renata G. Curty ◽  
Wei Jeng ◽  
Daqing He

AbstractAs the availability of data is increasing everyday, the need to reflect on how to make these data meaningful and impactful becomes vital. Current data paradigms have provided data life cycles that often focus on data acumen and data stewardship approaches. In an effort to examine the convergence, tensions, and harmonies of these two approaches, a group of researchers participated in an interactive panel session at the Association of Information Science and Technology Annual meeting in 2019. The panel presenters described their various research activities in which they confront the challenges of the computational and social perspectives of the data continuum. This paper provides a summary of this interactive panel.


Weed Science ◽  
1998 ◽  
Vol 46 (6) ◽  
pp. 635-635
Author(s):  
Robert L. Zimdahl

This symposium is a first in the history of our society. We have never before devoted a portion of the annual meeting to formal consideration of the ethical aspects of our work. It is significant to me that after 38 annual meetings, 42 years of existence, and 45 volumes of our journal, we have begun to discuss the ethics of weed science. I applaud the vision of the Board of Directors that provided funding to bring two of our speakers to the meeting. The Board has always provided capable management of the society's affairs. By management, I mean that we have been well organized to proceed in the direction we are headed. Voting to hold this symposium and providing funding is, in my view, an act of leadership, by which I mean, thinking about moving in a new direction, in a direction not dictated by the past. When disciplines proactively begin to examine the ethical dimensions of their science and technology, society may begin to believe that scientists recognize and act upon their social responsibilities. This would be a welcome and refreshing development in these days when public distrust and disillusionment with science may be as high as they have ever been (Lockwood 1997).


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